Trash Disney Remakes

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  • čas přidán 29. 09. 2022
  • Ayy it's Disney Remake time. Gonna talk about Pinocchio. Gonna talk about other stuff. Visit curiositystream.com/bigjoel and get thousands of exciting documentaries and access to my streaming service Nebula, where I have all my beautiful Nebula Plus videos.
    Support me on Patreon! / bigjoel
    Follow me on Twitter: / biggestjoel
    Edited by Mothcub: / mothcub_
  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 4,3K

  • @BigJoel
    @BigJoel  Před rokem +468

    Go to my patreon if you want! www.patreon.com/bigjoel.

    • @jmarch_503
      @jmarch_503 Před rokem +5

      Bruh I missed ya

    • @Liliputian07
      @Liliputian07 Před rokem +9

      so have you officially come out of the closet

    • @MarbleCellar
      @MarbleCellar Před rokem +4

      how many patrons until you get a mic stand

    • @TheScarletSlayer
      @TheScarletSlayer Před rokem +3

      13:19 wait they made last and the tramp? When?

    • @loregoblin3854
      @loregoblin3854 Před rokem +5

      I actually really love that Mulan chose to go home at the end of the original movie... because like. idk, I think Mulan is a wonderful example of goals over roles. and I think it only makes sense to talk about this in terms of how Mulan relates to her character foil, Shang.
      basically, Mulan is a woman raised under feminine standards, and she finds her situation challenging. she faces the matchmaker and is declared unfit as a woman. but she is trying her best to fit in, as a way to do right by her family, because she loves them. she mostly seems frustrated by her inability to naturally do what they would prefer, right up until her father is called upon to serve in the army. Mulan will put up with a lot of things, but not the threat of losing her father, who she loves. so, in the face of an unbearable alternative, she takes his place. given this, it makes total sense that she would go through the entire rest of the movie, looking for a way to secure her family's safety, but also return home, and make them happy. her focus always stays squarely on what she loves, how she's going to protect it, and what she needs to accomplish to that end. and this creates the trend, throughout the movie, of Mulan looking past the pageantry of how things are supposed to be done, and doing what makes sense in order to accomplish the end result that she's really after. you see it in the scene where she climbs the pole with the weights, and when she causes the avalanche in the mountains.
      what's interesting is that both Mulan's father and Shang's father are military men, and both feel compelled to serve as soldiers by masculine expectations. Shang is raised in these same expectations, and he carries a lot of anxiety over whether or not he can measure up to them. he is constantly watched by the emperor's attendant, who questions whether he is competent as a man. and this pressure to perform actually blinds Shang to the situation that will eventually bring him grief later on. he tries so hard to please his father by training his soldiers well, but then they come upon that village and find his father dead. this is exactly where masculine expectations were always leading his father, and Shang followed along, trusting that this is how it's supposed to be, until he lost him. and it nearly gets Shang too. he nearly dies in the mountains, in battle... but he is saved by Mulan. once again, she has a goal in mind: the safety and protection of the people she cares about. and when she's found to be a woman, and she explains why she's there, it makes perfect sense that Shang won't kill her. Mulan's father is alive, and Shang can't say the same for himself. Shang is alive, and he wouldn't be if she hadn't been there. all of his soldiers are alive, and that was her doing as well. Mulan has gotten everything she wanted because she was thinking about her goals first and foremost, and was willing to break away from her given role in order to accomplish the things she's achieved. how can Shang critique that? she's done everything he couldn't.
      I also think it's interesting how Mulan and Shang reverse the gender roles of traditional spousal arrangements at the end of the movie. not only does Mulan get to come home from war with honors, the way a successful male soldier would, but her family gives her total affirmation that she is loved independent of any of this. she is the same imperfect daughter they always loved, and no amount of accolades were ever needed to prove that she was worthy of that love. and for as much as her love compelled her to keep her family safe from harm... they only ever wanted that for her as well. it's reciprocal. and then, Shang shows up. and traditionally speaking, when a man and a woman were married, the bride would typically become part of the groom's family, and go to live with him. but at this point, we've heard no mention of Shang having any surviving family... it's possible that he may not have a home that he feels particularly pulled to return to. and when Mulan asks if he'd like to stay for dinner, her grandmother asks if he'd like to stay forever. it's Shang who presents himself to Mulan and her family for appraisal, rather than Mulan who must subject herself to judgement as a bride.
      and the remake is barely worth mentioning when it comes to any of this, because Shang isn't even there.

  • @QueenSoledad
    @QueenSoledad Před rokem +7904

    I feel like Mulan becoming a general or whatever is actually a sadder ending weirdly. Mulan’s reason for leaving home was to save her father, and in the original she goes back home to be with that family she left to save. In the remake she presumably spends the rest of her father’s life away from her family serving the government that threatened to tear them apart in the first place. It’s a girl boss distopia for sure.

    • @ashikjaman1940
      @ashikjaman1940 Před rokem +2

      But now she gets to tell a bunch of guys -(but not girls since they're not magic like her)- to go die in the desert! That's totally feminism!

    • @st0rmyTrash
      @st0rmyTrash Před rokem +559

      I thought the same! Her going back home and hopefully being bale to live a free life there would have been a much better ending. Maybe using her new found confidence to take over leading the family to help her dad some more or something. But becoming a general seems so out of chracter

    • @PauLtus_B
      @PauLtus_B Před rokem +701

      Original was:
      Mulan saves the world and the emperor bows down to her, her father fully accepts her and is in a sense proud of her disobedience.
      Remake is:
      Mulan has special magic powers and saves the world and that's what it takes to be allowed to be among the boys.

    • @PersephoneDarling28
      @PersephoneDarling28 Před rokem +19

      Rather be a Girlboss than a Dad Girl

    • @Rusty_Spy
      @Rusty_Spy Před rokem +318

      The whole thing is a twisted subversion of the originals thesis. Mulan in the original actively rejects and goes against the societal norms and power structure and by doing so saves the day, in the remake Mulan saves the day by better CONFORMING to said societal norms and power structure. She's more hung up about not being able to live up to the military's code of honor than she is about actually surviving the war or stopping the enemy.

  • @m.f.3347
    @m.f.3347 Před rokem +6052

    I would rather Disney just straight up re-released their old movies in theaters instead of these shitty remakes. I think it would actually be kinda sweet if kids had the chance to watch the original movies in theaters like their parents did

    • @mimi-fm7hz
      @mimi-fm7hz Před rokem +292

      That’s actually such a good idea

    • @kendomyers
      @kendomyers Před rokem +219

      I miss the days of re-releases.
      Now that I live in LA Ive gotten to see some re-releases, but outside of a city like this its just not a thing anymore.

    • @jits8767
      @jits8767 Před rokem +159

      they used to do that with the disney vault (you could only buy the dvds for a limited time and then that allowed disney to draw crowds to rereleases of their films in cinema) but then disneyplus totally changed that strategy. but i feel like you know this

    • @EidoEndy
      @EidoEndy Před rokem +37

      They used to do that all the time. Haven’t done it in a long while though.

    • @Cruizinelli12
      @Cruizinelli12 Před rokem +91

      That, and they should focus on new stories that haven’t been told yet.

  • @ali3nfr3ak83
    @ali3nfr3ak83 Před rokem +1131

    I just love that the critique of the Lady and The Tramp remake is just "They made him a loner. he's no longer a big filthy SLUT"

    • @MizterMissile
      @MizterMissile Před 6 měsíci +5

      Hella hahahaha

    • @Crackpot_Astronaut
      @Crackpot_Astronaut Před 6 měsíci +4

      Are you guys all joking? Am I missing the joke? I feel either stupid or 1000 years old, because "tramp" didn't mean "slut" in the movie.. it means, like, a vagrant.

    • @ZeranZeran
      @ZeranZeran Před 6 měsíci +74

      @@Crackpot_Astronaut Tramp was sleeping around but they didn't show it. This is implied by the scene where he gets ecstatic after getting his STD results back.
      I'm sorry I have no idea what im talking about

    • @gregjayonnaise8314
      @gregjayonnaise8314 Před 5 měsíci +50

      @@Crackpot_Astronauta tramp is slang term for someone who sleeps around a lot. Slut is a bit of a harsher way of putting it, but it’s not a far off thing to say. At least in the states it’s a common, if old fashioned, term.

    • @donqueshot2217
      @donqueshot2217 Před 2 měsíci +20

      ​@@Crackpot_Astronaut he "breaks a new heart every day" is kinda suggestive

  • @bebo2629
    @bebo2629 Před 6 měsíci +188

    22:15 I like how they pretend that Geppetto selling his clocks is a great tragedy when Geppetoo's job is litteraly selling clocks.

  • @Moeller750
    @Moeller750 Před rokem +3293

    the greatest moment in Disney history is the reprise of "Be a man" from the original Mulan, when the other soldiers dress up as women to get to the emperor. Those 60 seconds makes the entire movie come full circle. It completes the theme of gender as a performance, and at the same time, it shows Mulan's friends accepting her as a woman and a soldier. it's perfection, and that's a rock I'll die on

    • @crosseyedcat1183
      @crosseyedcat1183 Před rokem +602

      This scene alone made the original Mulan far more progressive than any movie that Disney has made in a long while. The point of this scene was to show how feminism isn't just about allowing women to do masculine things, but also about showing how masculinity itself is overvalued and isn't a dominant mode of expression. It's not like "Masculinity good. Everyone should be masculine!" (I'm looking at you Mulan 2020)... Can you even imagine Disney in 2022 having a positive portrayal of crossdressing that doesn't emasculate the men involved?

    • @Moeller750
      @Moeller750 Před rokem +200

      @@crosseyedcat1183 of all the classic Disney movies, Mulan is by far, the one that has aged the best

    • @gwencere9383
      @gwencere9383 Před rokem +159

      @@crosseyedcat1183 With Disney's growing queerphobia I'm not very surprised tbh

    • @crosseyedcat1183
      @crosseyedcat1183 Před rokem

      @@gwencere9383 I think in general Disney has a problem where the people there in the recent years are increasingly conservative and are struggling to adapt the historically progressive takes they used to have. They just don't understand themselves.

    • @marocat4749
      @marocat4749 Před rokem +144

      And it shows that they are manly enough to not be over crossdressing to do what they have to. And have healthy masculinity.

  • @Mystemo
    @Mystemo Před rokem +8486

    I hate that the entire discourse about the Little Mermaid remake has become "the movie will be awful because Ariel is black now" or "the movie will be amazing because Ariel is black now". The movie IS probably going to be awful but Ariel's skin color will have nothing to do with it.

    • @robofistsrevenge3288
      @robofistsrevenge3288 Před rokem +1

      Yes, but when it fails, Disney will _insist_ it was because of racism and/or sexism. It's a very easy "get out of criticism free" card they've been using for years, why stop now?

    • @ElPayasoMalo
      @ElPayasoMalo Před rokem +869

      I don't understand why anyone gives a fuck about the skin color of a type of creature that doesn't even exist. Not even sparkling vampires garnered this kind of hate.

    • @belughlegosi
      @belughlegosi Před rokem +554

      Yes nothing makes me feel better as a black woman than hearing everyone berate the black mermaid for being black

    • @morbidsearch
      @morbidsearch Před rokem +682

      They're like "but it's a Danish fairytale" when the original had flamingos and palm trees

    • @mikemorro140
      @mikemorro140 Před rokem +109

      Yeah that's my take as well like with almost every live action Disney film the internet would've spent a month crapping on it but now there'll be a massive discorse based more on having a black Little Mermaid

  • @averynelson1186
    @averynelson1186 Před rokem +2097

    What's funny about the Lion King remake is that real life animals are actually more expressive than in the film

    • @loturzelrestaurant
      @loturzelrestaurant Před rokem +9

      B-Joel-Fans,
      want Recommendations? For no particular reason, i wanna recommend Stuff.
      Its just Fun for me. It genuinly is.

    • @explodingdynamite7319
      @explodingdynamite7319 Před rokem +44

      Prehistoric Planet Did These Animals Better!

    • @fabtrash
      @fabtrash Před rokem +109

      And night sky are really colorful too ! They could've had starry skies, and a red sky during "Be Prepared"

    • @theaveragecomment1014
      @theaveragecomment1014 Před rokem

      @@loturzelrestaurant Sure

    • @starchaser777
      @starchaser777 Před rokem +47

      @@fabtrash and if they're so concerned with looking real, my guy they're in the middle of a savannah, not much trees or clouds to close the view of the sky, it would've made so much sense.

  • @masterplusmargarita
    @masterplusmargarita Před rokem +1151

    Saying the phrase "Stop gaslighting your cat, you dark triad freak" to Gepetto Disneypinocchio is one of the most delightful things one could possibly do.

    • @Graphomite
      @Graphomite Před 6 měsíci +7

      Agreed. That line made me laugh out loud at my screen.

    • @topphatt1312
      @topphatt1312 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Personally I think the line about him being a soulless, conscienceless freak to be as funny if not funnier

    • @dilanrajapaksha
      @dilanrajapaksha Před 27 dny

      He hated the Pinocchio remake so much more than I was expecting like goddamn

  • @mordecai5225
    @mordecai5225 Před rokem +1993

    I did not realize Disney remade so many movies so every time he said "let's talk about..." it got funnier to me

    • @chuckbatman5
      @chuckbatman5 Před rokem +166

      Seeing a video that goes into each one in depth just made me realize how fucking many of these there are like Disney STOP

    • @rickardkaufman3988
      @rickardkaufman3988 Před rokem +36

      The first few remakes weren't bad. And then it got worse.

    • @Chillaxes
      @Chillaxes Před rokem +19

      Disney is planning to remake every one of their animated films. They've already been budgeted for for I think the next 3 years or so

    • @allanromeo360
      @allanromeo360 Před rokem +9

      yo it’s mordecai the bird from reguler show

    • @Doctor_Straing_Strange
      @Doctor_Straing_Strange Před rokem +10

      Bro I thought we were done after Maleficient and then I realized we were at the HALFWAY POINT

  • @jennayisartsay
    @jennayisartsay Před rokem +3304

    Joel took more artistic risks in this video than Disney did in all these movies combined

    • @reid.7680
      @reid.7680 Před rokem +59

      This isn't necessarily a scathing critique of the video, I liked it. I like the strange visual gags, and I liked the nice cohesion in the jaded delivery and the attitude towards Disney remakes. But the video wasn't risky or challenging, Joel's expressed this before but in greater detail. This one is just rehashed in list format. It's not necessarily an artistic risk, it's safe content and easier for Joel to write than tackle other subject matter. Which all-in-all adds to the entire meta of the video, and I like that a lot, I'm just being pedantic

    • @jennayisartsay
      @jennayisartsay Před rokem +106

      @@reid.7680 Still more than Disney

    • @aazhie
      @aazhie Před rokem +39

      @@reid.7680 still more interesting, creative, and new than the Disney remakes, though... XD

    • @epeeypen
      @epeeypen Před rokem +7

      this is the comment i thought at 9mins and 45 seconds into this video.. lmao.

    • @jeromealday614
      @jeromealday614 Před rokem +33

      ​@@reid.7680 umm climbing out the closet is not an artistic risk? 🤔

  • @adrien9918
    @adrien9918 Před rokem +443

    Wouldn’t it rule if live action Jiminy cricket was just a real half inch cricket? Like Pinocchio would be doin bad shit and then id just cut to footage of a real cricket.

    • @vlad5042
      @vlad5042 Před 9 měsíci +46

      that would definitely fit the surreal vibes of live action pinocchio

    • @jakethedragonymaster1235
      @jakethedragonymaster1235 Před 6 měsíci +18

      They do it for The Little Mermaid when they shouldn't have...and they didn't for Pinocchio when they should have. Odd.
      Does remind me of that being a joke in one of the Halloween Shrek specials tho

    • @MizterMissile
      @MizterMissile Před 6 měsíci +1

      Hahahah I like that

    • @metaknight3116
      @metaknight3116 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Then Pinocchio just steps on him

  • @PrincessNine
    @PrincessNine Před rokem +688

    I was generally under the impression Mulan acted out of love for her family, not out of defying gender. So her going home was her like "I really didn't do this for a lofty reason" she got what she wanted and is happy.

    • @vlad5042
      @vlad5042 Před 9 měsíci +86

      well she explicitly states at one point that an additional part of her motivation was wanting to prove to herself and her family that she could be someone worthwhile. and then the ending is her going home and finding out that her father always thought of her as worthwhile, so its a perfectly satisfying ending moreso than her becoming a general and not even seeing her father again as far as i remember.

    • @alexandercandicedad1355
      @alexandercandicedad1355 Před 6 měsíci +7

      Thanks for writing this out so i don't have to!

    • @kamuyking551
      @kamuyking551 Před 4 měsíci +27

      every time I remember the Mulan remake, I always get so heated, because they also remove Li Shang as Mulan's character foil. at the beginning of the movie, we see everybody pressuring Mulan into being an ideal woman... a perfect bride, a perfect daughter. and there's even a character that's explicitly meant to judge her and find her lacking... the matchmaker. in terms of gender roles, Li Shang being assigned his first leadership role in the army is a similar test of his proficiency as a man. and he even has a character that's explicitly meant to judge him, and find him lacking... the emperor's advisor.
      but one of the things we can see about Mulan from the very beginning, is that she's a results-driven problem solver. as she's wandering the town, she solves a guy's chess game, gets a boy to stop bullying a girl by getting her doll back for her, and writes notes on her arm so she'll do well with the matchmaker. she's trying to take something non-functional, and make it work. and so, when her father is called away to serve in the army... she doesn't see the situation in terms of honor, duty, and social obligation. she has a problem. her father isn't going to survive if he serves as a soldier again. and even though she has failed at the honor, duty, and social obligation part of being a woman... she doesn't need that right now. she needs a solution.
      Mulan is willing to do anything to save her father... including things he wouldn't approve of. and that's when we introduce her to the army, and to the character of Li Shang.
      the important part about Li Shang, is that he still thinks that he can succeed at the demands of manhood. demands that are all the steeper for him specifically, because his father is a high ranking officer in the military, and Li Shang is supposed to honor his father's legacy, and prove to any doubters that he isn't just here because of nepotism. Li Shang feels a lot of pressure to do a good job here, and that's why he's originally such a hard ass. and at first, Mulan seriously struggles, and doubts her ability to conform to masculine standards either. honestly, she has every reason to sympathize with Li Shang's struggle here. she recognizes the difficulty of trying to conform to one's expected gender roles... and it's actually a very heartfelt moment when she tries to tell him that, regardless of what anyone else says, she sees his effort and thinks he's doing a good job. it's what she would've wanted to hear when that was her struggle. in a way, it still kind of is.
      already, we're being shown that both the standards for women _and_ the standards for men are very difficult for any person to truly achieve. things may be unfairly weighted, but neither side of the fence has greener grass. not as long as people are being forced into the roles they play, without being allowed any other option.
      but the real kicker, is what happens to Li Shang's father. when they come upon the burned out husk of a village, we learn that Li Shang's father died there. and when you think about it... here is a man who did all of the masculine things right. here is a man who joined the army, had an illustrious, enviable career, was a role model for his son, and then did what soldiers often do, and now he's gone. to the grief of many, but to the surprise of no one. it's eerie, knowing that Li Shang wants, so badly, to follow in his father's footsteps. and in the very next battle, he would've... if it weren't for Mulan.
      the fact that Mulan saves his life is not surprising either, nor is it an accident. she's our out-of-the-box thinker. she solves problems. we've been seeing it throughout the movie. the test with the weights and the pole. when she tries to stick tomatoes on the ends of her arrows. even just noticing that Li Shang is worried about his performance as their captain. and of course, her decision to join the army in the first place, so she could save her father from the exact same fate that Li Shang's father just met. and now she's saved Li Shang too.
      when Mulan is revealed to be a woman, this is why Li Shang can't kill her. Mulan has accomplished something important here, and Li Shang is very sympathetic to it. just by being there at all, Mulan calls into question what Li Shang has been doing this entire time. his father couldn't be intercepted on the path to his death, and Li Shang himself needed Mulan to intercept his own demise. honor, duty, and social obligation could've literally killed him.
      and yes, at the end of the movie, Mulan's main problem is solved. she has taken away the situation that would've threatened her father's life, and now she gets to go back home and see him. her reward at the end of the story is going to enjoy the benefits of everything she ever protected... which includes Li Shang. I love that he shows up at the end, because yeah, him being alive at all was another of her accomplishments. and it also handily puts to rest any lingering concerns about how Mulan will land a husband. it's purely incidental, but Mulan does better than just finding someone to marry... this is also a man who, past this point, won't leave her to go off and die in a war. if they learned anything from this movie, it's how to solve that sort of problem.

    • @jace_d
      @jace_d Před 3 měsíci +1

      Dude... Your meta is so insanely good, I really enjoyed reading it

    • @mammoneymelon
      @mammoneymelon Před 3 měsíci +2

      ​@@kamuyking551 i love youtube comment essays

  • @doughnuthead8757
    @doughnuthead8757 Před rokem +874

    These remakes market themselves as darker than their 'cutesy' animated counterparts, but at the same time they're softer and more tame.

    • @Thomasmemoryscentral
      @Thomasmemoryscentral Před rokem +10

      @@makeitthrough_ anytime someone thinks that about animation, ask them.if say The Simpsons and Futurama then have to be passed up because they're animation too?

    • @Nocturnalux
      @Nocturnalux Před rokem +10

      @@Thomasmemoryscentral I say, Neon Genesis Evangelion.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Před rokem +16

      @@Nocturnalux it’s Bojack Horseman for me now, which I was surprised by compared to when only the first season existed

    • @Omnywrench
      @Omnywrench Před rokem +41

      The only way they're "darker" is that they're all so poorly lit. Every other shot looks like it was filmed in my grandma's attic.

    • @ts4gv
      @ts4gv Před rokem +3

      Darker is poor word choice but I get the point. Lol

  • @Genevievealicex
    @Genevievealicex Před rokem +1030

    I'd like to add that the music in mulan actually highlights the horror of war. Its only a musical for the first half. The last song being a girl worth fighting for, which is honestly just a fun song where we get the guys making jokes and having a good time but the song is suddenly cut short by them coming across the ransacked village. And there are no more songs in the film.

    • @ItsmeInternetStranger
      @ItsmeInternetStranger Před rokem +272

      I like that Girl Worth Fighting For is a counterpoint to Honor to Us All. In Honor to Us All, a bunch of women sing "Men want girls with good taste. Calm, obedient, who work fast paced. With good breeding and a tiny waist." Reversely, girl worth fighting for has actual men singing about what they want in a woman, and it's things like "I couldn't care less what she wears or what she looks like" and "my girl will think I have no faults. That I'm a major find."
      It's an often overlooked point about the society in the film, that not only does Mulan not fit into it, but that the society is itself fundamentally flawed. It trains women to live up to a standard for men that the men themselves don't actually like or care about. The men, while not perfect, mostly just want someone who likes them and will cook for them, that's kind of it.
      So while yes, Girl Worth Fighting For is a fun song about guys having a good time before being crushed by the horrors of war, I think it also has thematic weight and importance and serves as a counterpoint to the first song, much in the way I feel Make a Man Out of You is the counterpoint to Reflection.

    • @camipco
      @camipco Před rokem +83

      That moment is artistically maybe the best thing Disney has ever done. It's just plain brilliant.

    • @NotoriousLightning
      @NotoriousLightning Před rokem +17

      I don't think you're the real king of Sweden.

    • @ramonadalsalan5759
      @ramonadalsalan5759 Před rokem +114

      In my opinion the meaning of the phrase Girl Worth Fighting For instantly changed as soon as they saw the carnage of the war, Like at first they were singing about wanting a partner a girl to fight for, but when they saw the devastating sight left from the war, I like to think that the girl that's worth fighting for is the girl who used to own the doll that Mulan placed next to the sword.
      Just a little detail I like to believe.

    • @justineberlein5916
      @justineberlein5916 Před rokem +28

      Only mostly true, actually. There's also a brief reprise of Be A Man toward the end while they're breaking into the castle dressed as courtesans

  • @EC2019
    @EC2019 Před rokem +844

    Re: "Lady and the Tramp" - the song "He's A Tramp" is absolutely NOT out of the blue and NOT without reference in the plot afterwards. This song is the hinge point of the entire story, not just an excuse for a musical number. To break it down:
    Lady is a sheltered privileged girl who falls in love with a street dog and runs away with him when she is feeling neglected by her humans. She in her naivete believes this tramp is as starry-eyed as she is. The strong implication is that Tramp has deflowered 6-month-old Lady on their "Bella Notte", in which the Italian chef notably advises Tramp to "settle down with this one" with a knowing chuckle. When Lady asks what that means he just blows it off but there's a "phew" moment where he's SO glad he wasn't caught. After they have slept romantically together under the stars, poor Lady then ends up in the pound because Tramp has not taken proper care of her - he bounds away to save his own skin but doesn't take notice that Lady is more vulnerable than him and can't escape in time. In "prison", Lady comes to find that she is NOT his true love but only one of a long long string of conquests for this absolute cad, a concept or lifestyle which has never occurred to her as a thing until that moment. She is absolutely crushed and humiliated. When she next sees him, tethered to her kennel by Aunt Sarah in shame and disgrace for having run away, she berates him for his deplorable two-faced behaviour and lists off his conquests angrily to his face so that he knows the jig is up. He responds in panicked embarrassment but has no real defence. She banishes him, never wanting to see him again, but after he helps her save the baby from the rat and risks his own life in the process she realises he must care after all so she accepts him. Which is just as well because she soon gives birth to their mongrel litter. At the end, we see Tramp feeling resigned to a life of confinement complete with a collar and tag, and basically stuck in the gilded cage of his new domestic life after his shotgun wedding. Simple-minded Lady is blissful as before, back to the starry-eyed love of the early days. Meanwhile Tramp has had his wings clipped permanently almost like as a kind of comeuppance for his sleeping around and for making this well-bred little rich girl the canine equivalent of a teenage mother after he groomed her. He will never fit in with the kennel club set, even if Lady doesn't realise it, but there he will have to stay. It's kind of like a 1950s era morality tale. It's not as simple a movie as people think.

    • @lizcl6857
      @lizcl6857 Před rokem +141

      I've always had such a hard time getting through the original movie because I just don't really understand what is happening at times and when that happens I get distracted into whatever nonsense I find.
      So, your comment is really really helpful, now I kinda want to finish it and notice those little details you mentioned.

    • @dragonfan8647
      @dragonfan8647 Před rokem +210

      Her old neighbours even offer to marry her after when she's back home to prevent her from being disgraced by having babies out of wedlock. Quite a shock for teenage me when I finally understood what that scene was about

    • @dragonfan8647
      @dragonfan8647 Před rokem +73

      One correction, though. Lady is 18, not 6, months old during the bella notte

    • @glupik1234
      @glupik1234 Před rokem +98

      Istg i didn't expect to read "Tramp has deflowered 6 month old Lady" on the internet today but here I am 💀💀💀 I've never watched the original but had a VHS with Lady and the Tramp 2 but I don't remember a thing from that one

    • @luiysia
      @luiysia Před rokem +35

      damn then that makes the change to this scene even worse lol

  • @mussarela2d
    @mussarela2d Před rokem +673

    Something that really bothers me is how they changed Mulan in the remake. In the original, she's a normal woman who is struggling to find her place in the world. She's isn't the strongest in the beginning, or even in the end. But she has a lot of will power and gets physically stronger during the training. She's is also very smart, and the movie wants us to know that. She solves a lot of problems because of her intelligence, and it is how she wins at the end. I think this is a very interesting message: women can also performance "masculine" tasks that envolve strength, but that isn't the most important thing. Being smart and creative also means a lot. In the remake, however, Mulan is very special from birth. She doesn't learn or makes a lot of effort to get stronger. She's the strongest simply because. I don't think that is feminism, it's the opposite: women can occupy the same spaces as men, ONLY IF they're somehow special or different.

    • @kkurova9345
      @kkurova9345 Před rokem +19

      It's not about feminism, it's about appealing to a Chinese audience and the expectations of that culture

    • @wrestlinganime4life288
      @wrestlinganime4life288 Před rokem +54

      ​@@kkurova9345 well they failed the Chinese hated the movie

    • @MiloKuroshiro
      @MiloKuroshiro Před rokem +33

      @@kkurova9345 that's why all the screenwriters and the director aren't Chinese or even remotely related to China.

    • @vlad5042
      @vlad5042 Před 9 měsíci +14

      @@kkurova9345literally what singular aspect of mulan's character in the remake appeals to chinese cultural expectations? her magic qi powers that women arent allowed to use?

    • @Polygraphice
      @Polygraphice Před 3 měsíci

      Americans believe that if you (anyone) work hard you can achieve big things and change the world. Chinese culture does not really follow that same idea -- it's something more like, only exceptional people are worthy of exceptions to the rules of society, thus Mulan has to be shown exceptional from the start. @@vlad5042

  • @acastanza
    @acastanza Před rokem +1059

    "They are fundamentally terrified of making interesting artistic choices. These movies can't be pretty or clever or weird..."
    Proceeds to cram as much weird artistry as possible into a 50 minute video. Iconic.

    • @blarg2429
      @blarg2429 Před rokem +77

      It's like he's compensating for all the movie footage, or perhaps for his own experience of watching the remakes.

    • @arandomguy4478
      @arandomguy4478 Před rokem +7

      I mean, 50 minutes of 10 hours isn't that good

    • @harrylane4
      @harrylane4 Před rokem +27

      @@arandomguy4478 they’re talking about all the weird camera choices and scenery nonsense in the shots of Joel himself around his house, not any of the shots from the films themselves.

  • @dillononeill9379
    @dillononeill9379 Před rokem +512

    About the ending of Mulan-I never thought it was strange that she did not continue her military career only because I never saw her as a character that wanted to join the military in the first place. She joined out of necessity to protect her family, but it was not her ultimate goal for her future.

    • @Gloomdrake
      @Gloomdrake Před rokem +67

      Most people in real life also only join out of necessity, so it's not that hard to believe

    • @caremiccats
      @caremiccats Před rokem +111

      i completely agree, not only do i think its in line with her character & important for the resolution but also like...i relate on a personal level bc if i just saved my entire nation i would want nothing more than to go home and hug my parents😭

    • @justalostlocal
      @justalostlocal Před rokem +26

      I actually thought it would be weird if she joined on the spot. The remake made her a girl boss born with superhuman martial talent. As a normal person like the og Mulan, if you were drafted and facing possible injury/death for months on end, you would want to go home to safety for a while.

    • @jaynestrange
      @jaynestrange Před rokem +23

      I think the changes made in the Mulan remake kinda show that whoever made it didn't really *get* the original movie. Sure, it's a movie about feminism, but equally importantly it's about family, parental expectations, and queerness. Mulan doesn't go to war because she wants to fight, but because she wants to protect her father & sees proving herself as a son as a way to make up for her failure to fill the role expected of a daughter. And she doesn't go home because she wants traditional woman's life, she goes home because she loves her family, and she's able to go back to her family happily now that she doesn't feel torn between the different aspects of herself.

    • @PanAndScanBuddy
      @PanAndScanBuddy Před rokem +17

      And further, she accomplished all her goals, so like many a male hero, she goes home and such. It's gonna be a weird fit for a while but the desire to return to a place of comfort is very human.

  • @cepheid-variable
    @cepheid-variable Před rokem +212

    I disagree somewhat with your interpretation of the ending of the original Mulan. She doesn't just simply go back to playing the same "woman's" role she felt trapped by in the beginning. She's been changed by her journey, and her family has been changed by her journey, and her society (even if it's in small ways) has been changed by her journey. When we see her at home again at the end of the movie, she's wearing different clothes that she feels more comfortable in, her father treats her like a person rather than like a problem, and she generally seems more confident in making the choices she wants to rather than just doing what she's "supposed" to do.
    If Mulan had become a general at the end of the film, it would have just been trading one set of outside expectations (the proper "woman") for another set of outside expectations (the proper "war hero") and that wouldn't truly be a fulfillment of her character arc. The fulfillment of her character arc is her ability to proudly say no to others' expectations (with that no being respected) and find her own space in life. Which for her is back home, with a vastly improved relationship with the family that she loves.
    That's not a regressive anti-feminist ending. It has a lot more nuance than a simplistic "girl boss" narrative would.

    • @andginisin
      @andginisin Před 7 měsíci +5

      i always assumed everyone read the scene this way

    • @jorgeloredo100
      @jorgeloredo100 Před měsícem

      As far as i remember the father never treated her as a problem. He was very supportive of her, and the only time he was a bit of a dick was when he was drafted and Mulan spoke out of place.

  • @goose1120
    @goose1120 Před rokem +140

    the "when you wish upon a star" pinocchio cry was the most joyless passionless emotionless thing ive ever seen

    • @NosebleeddeGroselha
      @NosebleeddeGroselha Před 5 měsíci +8

      It even breaks some unwritten rules about musicals, doesn’t it? I’m not an expert. But I’ve never seen a song in a musical being delivered in full ugly crying, it feels terrible to watch. Take Coco for example, when Miguel sings with Mama Coco, he’s on the verge of tears and his voice falters a bit in a few parts, but he’s still singing. I’ve seen broadway musicals where the character is full crying before and after the song, but they still sing normally, just in a saddened tone. This happens in Moana when she meets her grandma’s spirit and in Frozen at the end of Do You Wanna Build a Snowman, and they were literally grieving in those scenes yet sang normally. The closest I can think is in Tangled, Rapunzel has Eugene dying in her arms and tries singing to heal him, but she’s so broken she chokes and doesn’t even keep trying, it’s much more emotional

    • @sirvalhart7464
      @sirvalhart7464 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@NosebleeddeGroselha I hope you don't watch the Les Mis movie then, cus MANNN...

  • @Meningocockhole
    @Meningocockhole Před rokem +1355

    "Stop gaslighting your cat, you dark triad freak" is an incredible line

    • @Tethloach1
      @Tethloach1 Před rokem +3

      lol

    • @liamtristanzuhlke1066
      @liamtristanzuhlke1066 Před rokem +8

      I whole heartedly agree, more than 100 percent

    • @colliwer
      @colliwer Před rokem +11

      Made me audibly crack up

    • @muticere
      @muticere Před rokem +17

      I’ll never forget that line. It’ll be the sort of thing I’ll randomly remember 2 or more years from now and feel compelled to rewatch the whole video.

    • @witmoreluke
      @witmoreluke Před rokem +5

      Well I was on the fence about committing an hour to this video but now I HAVE to.

  • @chaseowen2998
    @chaseowen2998 Před rokem +517

    "There's just something cosmically horrifying about that, that I honestly have trouble articulating. Lion King 2019 almost feels like it shows us a world without art - a world where we are all dead and the AI are left generating purposeless content for no one and nothing."
    This ^ genuinely sent a cold shiver down my spine. Disney is just churning out dystopic drivel at this point.

    • @WeatherInOrlando
      @WeatherInOrlando Před rokem +13

      There Will Come Soft Rains by Ray Bradbury

    • @ThEjOkErIsWiLd00
      @ThEjOkErIsWiLd00 Před rokem +15

      Yeah, it's not often that a line from a CZcams video makes me gasp out "Holy shit!" and pause it to fully contemplate what was stated, but that was one of them.

    • @angelsartandgaming
      @angelsartandgaming Před rokem +15

      That was powerful to me because as someone who adores zoology and can recognize a lot of animal body language and facial expression (yes, animals can have facial expressions) and who loves doing nature photography, it felt so lifeless. I have taken more lively and pretty pictures and videos on my 3 year old cracked android phone than the entire movie!!
      And this whole quote summarizes my feelings.

    • @liviwaslost
      @liviwaslost Před rokem +1

      And gets mad at creators when they try to break the status quo.

    • @wolfetteplays8894
      @wolfetteplays8894 Před rokem +1

      Absolutely! Never thought about it that way before

  • @andyghkfilm2287
    @andyghkfilm2287 Před rokem +158

    Simba looking up at the sky and seeing just clouds is such a perfect metaphor for the creatively bankrupt and miserable experience that is the Lion King remake

  • @SolidSpadesIsANerd
    @SolidSpadesIsANerd Před rokem +278

    Another interpretation of the "I forgive you" scene in cinderella. Is that in a way it was a fuck you to her step mother. "You have no control now, you do not even have my hate"
    Which to someone controlling like that, is crushing.

  • @Methus3lah
    @Methus3lah Před rokem +1037

    “Maybe you should stop gaslighting your cat you dark triad freak” you absolutely destroyed him

  • @TheJasonmanguy
    @TheJasonmanguy Před rokem +1954

    Another big problem with the Mulan remake is that she was born with magical chi powers that make her badass without even trying. In the 1998 version we see from the get-go Mulan is smart and crafty. She feeds the chickens in interesting ways and uses cheats to get through the tea ceremony.
    She uses this craftiness throughout the movie to get the advantage on enemies and challenges in her path. She thinks outside the box and inspires others to do so as well.
    The new Mulan is just magical girl strong and has plot armor for days so she gets away with whatever bullshit they contrive for her. It’s honestly pathetic and makes her character arc trivial.

    • @erniefofernie
      @erniefofernie Před rokem +126

      Yesss I was looking for this comment! It completely erased the feminist message of the movie. She’s not clever or strong, she can just do magic.

    • @jspaingreene6350
      @jspaingreene6350 Před rokem +58

      Yes....they might as well have said she has midi-chlorians in her body. She's got the Force. Why not? They own both properties...LoL

    • @madsgrams2069
      @madsgrams2069 Před rokem +48

      I mean...there's an entire subgenre of Chinese movies where everyone basically has magical powers from...doing kung-fu really well, apparently. But that is obivously not what Mulan should be about. They tried to turn it into Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon...and it DOES NOT WORK.

    • @ripvanwinkle6449
      @ripvanwinkle6449 Před rokem +47

      Dude no doubt. Like the scene that comes to mind is when she uses the last fire-work launcher and hits the mountain, and mushu is like "He was 2 feet in front of you, and YOU MISSED" while the avalanche sweeps over the ENTIRE MONGOL ARMY. She wasn't aiming for the big bad, she was thinking ahead. She was a very crafty, albeit weaker (like the water bucket scene where the boss dude, forgot his name, had to carry her weight) but consistently pulls through because of her intellect, rather than her super powers.
      Look at how they massacred my girl...

    • @Tirgo69
      @Tirgo69 Před rokem +18

      I don't necessarily have a problem with concepts like chi/ki being included in a work, it's all over battle shounen anime and they generally make it work well enough, I just don't think it was really necessary to introduce these elements into the remake.

  • @joyceshiver6622
    @joyceshiver6622 Před rokem +312

    I think the original pink elephants was just an excuse for the animators to go off and have a great time in the drawing room! And you can really tell

  • @dmr11235
    @dmr11235 Před 6 měsíci +7

    They really picked a bad time to start making Disney movies diverse. Like, they made them diverse at the same time they made them garbage unoriginal poorly-conceived dumpster fires and so a lot of people take away “this movie is terrible because it’s diverse” instead of the much more accurate “this diverse movie is terrible”

  • @CrashBoomson
    @CrashBoomson Před rokem +971

    " I'm not saying I don't like Pinocchio as Christ, but I am saying I don't understand it" may have been the funniest thing I've seen all week

    • @silverish9081
      @silverish9081 Před rokem +102

      "Stop gaslighting your cat, you dark triad freak" takes the cake for me

    • @lostmedia4u189
      @lostmedia4u189 Před rokem +17

      @@silverish9081 I was just about to reply with that line. It sums up Big Joel's strange sense of humor perfectly.

    • @dingus2k
      @dingus2k Před rokem

      that one freaking killed me

  • @WrexsolToob
    @WrexsolToob Před rokem +583

    "It hates fun and is bad" seems to be Disney's ethos nowadays.

    • @jaywhangmakes
      @jaywhangmakes Před rokem +4

      Disney is Neil Druckmann of media company.

    • @justineberlein5916
      @justineberlein5916 Před rokem +48

      I still like Lindsay Ellis' take from her Beauty and the Beast review, that they seem to be trying to make their videos CinemaSins-proof, as if Jeremy's a good-faith reviewer

  • @jaimayy
    @jaimayy Před rokem +311

    Seeing Del Toro’s masterful interpretation of Pinocchio and all the work put into it, then seeing Disney’s remake really makes you appreciate del toro even more.

    • @sanguillotine
      @sanguillotine Před 8 měsíci +35

      Del Toro saw Disney’s remake and was like “Pinocchio as a Christ figure? I like it!” And then instead of walking on water he had Pinocchio crucified.

    • @traviscunningham7062
      @traviscunningham7062 Před 4 měsíci +2

      VeggieTales also did a better job on making a parody of Pinocchio then the live action Disney remake.

  • @sethdahoodedbandit
    @sethdahoodedbandit Před rokem +186

    I would argue that the original "He's a Tramp" song, about him being a manwhore, is pretty integral to part of the movie and comes back up, since the movie is essentially an allegory for an upper-class young woman being taken in by a lower-class somewhat older man, and knocking her up! She kicks him to the curb after hearing from the pound dogs that he has this reputation that he never told her, loving and leaving. Even her friends are essentially acting as bodyguards against a "bad man" who shouldn't have been involved with a "high-bred woman" in the first place, only accepting him when he proves he doesn't have crooked motives.
    Not a Lady and the Tramp stan or anything, but I feel like this point isn't really focused on when anyone talks about it lol.

  • @invadernav3422
    @invadernav3422 Před rokem +641

    I never took the ending to the original Mulan as her just embracing those traditional roles again, I just saw it as she made the decision to join the army to protect her father and her people, out of love, determination and confidence that grew. She's got nothing left to prove to anyone - she saved them, she made her family proud. Now she just wants to see them again. It's why she shows her father the trophies of her actions, and he tosses them aside just to embrace her.
    She never wanted to be general. She did what she set out to do, and just wanted to come home to her family.

    • @joannamarieart
      @joannamarieart Před rokem +148

      Also, it's not like she didn't want to be a wife/mother, she just couldn't conform to society's strict rules about how to achieve that, and she wanted to have a say in it, not just be matched with some random stranger.

    • @luiysia
      @luiysia Před rokem +31

      that's why it doesn't work with the movie. the movie adds the feminist element to the original story but still kept the ending which is obviously about filial piety and traditional confucian values which are at odds with the idea that mulan doesn't fit her family's expectations

    • @HexyGoblin
      @HexyGoblin Před rokem +63

      The theming of the original work feels more like a commentary about breaking tradition for the sake of those you love than a feminist tale. You can derive feminism from that theme but it's not as cut and dry as Mulan being a girlboss.

    • @Ingestedbanjo
      @Ingestedbanjo Před rokem +119

      I think it makes Mulan more powerful that her final choice was to keep doing what she wanted. She spent the whole movie up to that point rejecting the role that her society has placed upon her. The emperor - the ultimate patriarchal figure of her society - recognises that she has broken free of her role as a woman... but then immediately turns to his advisor and says, "see to it that this woman is made a member of my council", assigning her a new role. He doesn't even address her directly, and refers to her as "this woman".
      To concede to his wishes would be to go straight back to surrendering to conformity. By rejecting even the emperor's expectations, Mulan fully asserts her independence and free will far more strongly than if she'd submitted to his will and agreed to serve him as a council member.

    • @Nuvizzle
      @Nuvizzle Před rokem +24

      Yeah seriously it's not like Mulan's backstory was how cool she thought militarism was and how much she wanted to wage war. Why would she wanna be a general after experiencing the horrors of war first hand lol

  • @EmissaryofWind
    @EmissaryofWind Před rokem +2540

    One thing to add about Mulan and the songs in the original: they actually give the story more gravity than it would have without them. The very joyous "A girl worth fighting for" is abruptly ended when they stumble upon the ruined village, and after that point the movie stops being a musical. It creates a much greater contrast in tone and really makes the scene more intense than it would be if it was preceded by another serious and grim scene.

    • @silverblue73
      @silverblue73 Před rokem +218

      Right the songs aren’t just music breaks, they’re doing a lot of narrative lifting

    • @msjkramey
      @msjkramey Před rokem +180

      You made me just *hear* and *feel* that moment just by bringing it up. That's the power of good story telling

    • @SoicAngellis
      @SoicAngellis Před rokem +57

      PLUS it essentially being a 'marching song'

    • @melissaf4712
      @melissaf4712 Před rokem +34

      Wow I never realized that. I always thought that scene was brilliant and as a child it was haunting.

    • @ameerhamid89
      @ameerhamid89 Před rokem +5

      Thanks for the goosebumps

  • @corvidcall1025
    @corvidcall1025 Před rokem +270

    My personal favorite disney movie is the Hunchback of Notre Dame. Can't wait until they do a live action remake of that one. It'll be UNWATCHABLE

    • @baguettegott3409
      @baguettegott3409 Před rokem +101

      Ooh, it will be horrible! Will they have the courage to make Quasimodo actually significantly disfigured when it's live Action and they can't give him big Anime eyes anymore? Absolutely not! Will they stage the brilliant songs in interesting ways that make for great imagery like in the original? They will not! Will they somehow find a way to be racist about the Romani people in the movie? Probably.

    • @parkermccalip8386
      @parkermccalip8386 Před rokem +59

      @@baguettegott3409 I wouldn't be surprised if they heavily sanitized Frollo as a character. Hell, if the remade Lilo and Stitch they'd probably remove or downplay the whole part there Lilo and Nani are indigenous Hawaian.

    • @TheWavytree
      @TheWavytree Před rokem +36

      ​@@parkermccalip8386 you were blessed with the gift of prophecy

    • @parkermccalip8386
      @parkermccalip8386 Před rokem +11

      @@TheWavytree Thanks and now I hate it. (The Prophecy part.)

    • @highjumpstudios2384
      @highjumpstudios2384 Před rokem +2

      @@baguettegott3409 they're gonna credit it to the Turkish government or some shit

  • @featherfae2875
    @featherfae2875 Před rokem +118

    Literally in SHOCK from the Pinocchio scene that’s literally a shot for shot remake of the climax of tangled,,,,,,,,, utterly incredible the tear on the cheek and everything exactly the same holy shit

  • @malcolm32
    @malcolm32 Před rokem +1197

    I think the confusion about Mulan's choice to return home rather than accept the Emperor's offer in the original story and movie stems from a misunderstanding of Mulan's motivations. Mulan doesn't join the army to fight the patriarchy or because she has military ambitions. She has to navigate these complications to achieve her goal, but that goal is to spare her father from returning to service in a war that will almost certainly kill him given his age and old injuries. She takes her father's place because she can and because she has to, not because she wants to. Once she accomplishes that task she has no reservations about returning home.
    The film's feminist message has more to do with how her actions change the expectations of the people around her. She has proven to her society that women are capable of being warriors, and when she returns home there is no pressure on her from her family to pursue a marriage or slip back seamlessly into established gender roles. Her agency is acknowledged and respected.
    There's nothing wrong with rewriting the film so that Mulan DOES genuinely want to be a warrior, but to suggest that the original film sacrifices its strong feminist message by showing that Mulan doesn't want a military life just misses the point of the story.

    • @JumpTossCatch
      @JumpTossCatch Před rokem +53

      I literally paused the movie to rant about that when he said it and lo and behold, I scroll to see that you've summed up my sentiments quite nicely! Well said! 👏🏽

    • @benlewis4241
      @benlewis4241 Před rokem +5

      Well said!

    • @superclarendon8648
      @superclarendon8648 Před rokem +8

      I haven’t seen the ‘98 Mulan in years so I’d have to view it again to confirm for myself what you’ve said; but just based on what I *can* remember I’d say this is a pretty good analysis of the story and character.

    • @GwyndolinOwO
      @GwyndolinOwO Před rokem +3

      I think part of why they might have changed it is because in a lot of chinese adaptations of the mulan story she doesn't really have a goal to "be a woman at war" but she feels a reason to keep fighting for her country.
      I do like the original Disney adaptation though. Its not the best at keeping things totally authentic to a Chinese story, so its not 100% perfect if that something that matters to you, but it tells a good story. So if you wanna ignore all of the Chinese stories of Mulan and treat it like its own thing then yeah- having Mulan stay is a bit of an odd choice. I just wouldn't say the change came out of left field if we want to assume that Disney looked into the other Mulan stories that already exist and wanted to add in elements from those stories. If they wanted it to work they could have given more reason in the new movie that helped sell why she really wants to stay other than she's good at what she does, or revenge.
      But yeah overall i agree, even if other adaptations of Mulan have her stay, in the 1998 animated movie it made sense for her to go home. The movie is already different enough from chinese culture that having someone be able to leave like that doesn't break everything, and she didn't NEED to stay.

    • @sonya6191
      @sonya6191 Před rokem +1

      YEAH, the whole point is she cares about her family the intro to the movie keeps hammering that in that she really cares about her family and wants to make them happy and feels like she’s not living up to their expectations even if they just love her unconditionally. She returns home because her goal was for her dad to get to see her and his family again.
      New Mulan has a different story and some may prefer it but it shouldn’t steal the name of old Mulan

  • @crypticcomms
    @crypticcomms Před rokem +3805

    i'm not going to be able to sleep now without imagining you climbing out of my closet to aggressively talk to me about disney movies

    • @GuyNamedSean
      @GuyNamedSean Před rokem +46

      I think that might help me sleep.

    • @crypticcomms
      @crypticcomms Před rokem +5

      @@GuyNamedSean absolutely fair

    • @Magmagan
      @Magmagan Před rokem +12

      What a dream that would be 🥰

    • @thewizard1
      @thewizard1 Před rokem +13

      @don't be surprised your end is coming

    • @TayTayMakesBeats
      @TayTayMakesBeats Před rokem +29

      I love Large Joel's style of delivery, he seems sweet, polite and docile but also highly neurotic and on the verge of snapping. I feel like he's talking to a very confused person tied to a chair behind the camera.

  • @Maschinengoth
    @Maschinengoth Před rokem +84

    Pinocchios VFX looks like Toy Story. Its genuinly baffling that they somehow spent millions on this movie and the best wood material they could render was something out of Jimmy Neutron

  • @arturoaguilar6002
    @arturoaguilar6002 Před rokem +94

    The talk about an AI generating content after humanity already has perished immediately made me recall "There Will Come Soft Rains", a post-apocalyptic story about a fully automated smart house doing all his programed chores and playing automated entertainment, completely unaware that the residents had been long ago vaporized on the backyard by a nuclear strike (their last moments singed on the outside wall as silhouettes).

    • @hahahahahahahahaa6580
      @hahahahahahahahaa6580 Před 6 měsíci +8

      Went and read the story you mentioned after skimming your comment. It's definitely one of my new favorites.

    • @alexv3375
      @alexv3375 Před 6 měsíci +5

      _"Today is August 5, 2026. Today is August 5, 2026. Today is..."_

    • @rhubarbdude3347
      @rhubarbdude3347 Před 5 měsíci +1

      The entire Martian chronicles is a fantastic book

    • @nexona08
      @nexona08 Před 4 měsíci +2

      I remember reading “There Will Come Soft Rains” in high school. It’s really interesting.

    • @Matt_the_pirate
      @Matt_the_pirate Před měsícem +1

      I love this story. It's horrifying.

  • @corvuscrux
    @corvuscrux Před rokem +617

    This really feels like he got an Airbnb and needed to justify the cost by using every single possible shooting space.
    It's perfect.

    • @janeeyre1990
      @janeeyre1990 Před rokem +44

      Work in entertainment? Make that vacation/holiday tax deductible, bay-bee!

    • @moniquemoen7125
      @moniquemoen7125 Před rokem +2

      I was thinking something along the same lines.

  • @nervousbreakdown711
    @nervousbreakdown711 Před rokem +292

    Okay, wait, why does Disney feel the need to explain Pinocchio's name as an English pun when THE NAME IS ITALIAN

    • @silverish9081
      @silverish9081 Před rokem +19

      Tbh, isn't pine in Italian something with a very similar root as well? I don't know if Pinocchio is derived from that though. Either way this absolutely doesn't justify the unfunny joke explained three times.

    • @midaboll
      @midaboll Před rokem +17

      It's anti-Italian discrimination

    • @muzzycosmos9400
      @muzzycosmos9400 Před rokem +12

      @@radisk5973 as an italian,im confused but both of these translations.
      But still, they could be accurate and I'm just translating them bad. Pine in Italian is Pino, so it might be its origins, but I have no idea what is the actual meaning of Pinocchio is.

    • @ppdoodle
      @ppdoodle Před rokem +4

      @@muzzycosmos9400 i heard Pinocchio reffers to pinecones, newly grown pine trees, there's not a really clear significance but it refers overall to pine trees?? really confusing

    • @sikkableeat5614
      @sikkableeat5614 Před rokem +19

      Even if that is his name's origin, who gives a shit? Same goes for Cinderella being named for cinders. If you want to have it as trivia in an interview or DVD extra or something, that's fine. But making a blatant explanation in the film itself, when it was never needed in the original, is annoying.

  • @emexdizzy
    @emexdizzy Před rokem +172

    Big Joel has the objectively correct take here, The Jungle Book is the best remake. The animals are actually facially emotive, and also the new story is better. I like that the plot is about this little human child adopted by a family of wolves finding his place in his adoptive home and not the story being like "nah, these animals may be sapient but the fact they're animals means they can't be the adoptive parents and community this kid needs, lets abandon him twice" the way the original was.

    • @spritingk6879
      @spritingk6879 Před rokem +18

      It was a growing up metaphor, te original, Blatantly so, which is why the ending is so out of place on an narrative sense, but makes perfect sense if you consider the man village as just, adulthood, and even if you try to refuse to grow up, you will anyway, which makes the ACTUAL main charachter's arcs (Baloo and Bagheera's) much more complete and interesting than in the remake.
      I haven't watched the remake in a while, but though I can agree that some things it does better, I think it's much more generic in presentation and storyb than the original, which people generally miss was trying to actually go for something.

    • @agentcallisto
      @agentcallisto Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@spritingk6879Right, Mowgli being drawn away from the jungle by a pretty girl is basically a puberty metaphor.

  • @kennyeatsthedirt
    @kennyeatsthedirt Před rokem +109

    I watched the Pete’s Dragon remake while in a mental hospital and it really did not help my case 🤕

  • @nicholasdanner628
    @nicholasdanner628 Před rokem +814

    “Neither of you freaks have worked a day in your lives,” said the real adult man to the two fictional animated dogs

    • @noviatoria2436
      @noviatoria2436 Před rokem

      @u know me no one is looking for air fryer potato wedges you sick little demon

    • @NanneEsqui13
      @NanneEsqui13 Před rokem

      @edgar allan hoe I think it was more just because Joel is kinda losing it this video

    • @janeeyre1990
      @janeeyre1990 Před rokem +18

      "Get a job, dogs!"

    • @gagrin1565
      @gagrin1565 Před rokem +34

      Cheered on by the virtual crowd, their approval delayed by the unnatural process of content consumption. "Judge those dogs for us," they cried. "And find them unworthy!"

    • @frufrujabenderps5300
      @frufrujabenderps5300 Před rokem +6

      yeah dogs don't even have drivers licenses!

  • @charismartin1169
    @charismartin1169 Před rokem +849

    I'm literally only like 8 minutes in but I HAD to comment on the biggest atrocity I personally saw in Beauty and the Beast: the original animated film was about being odd, different, and a social outcast, and the story was largely influenced with gay music writer Howard Ashman who poured so much of himself into the Beast - society viewed him as a monster because he had AIDS and it was the height of the AIDS crisis. Gaston was the conventionally attractive epitome of straight cis masculinity and he expected Belle to conform to her role as a conventionally attractive straight cis woman. But she couldn't do that, she knew she was different and even though it made her a social outcast she was not about to change. Instead she found her partner in another social outcast, and she taught him that he wasn't a monster, he didn't have to be angry and strong all the time, he could be gentle and soft and kind and affectionate. It was a movie about rejecting the status quo and finding yourself, it was a movie about masculinity and femininity, and it was a story told by a gay man who died of AIDS before he could hear how many awards his movie won. The remake sanitized the whole story - they changed the message and ruined the villain and I can't think of a single reason why they felt the need to do that. It's the biggest reason why I hate it so much (although Belle's ballgown in the remake was also hideous enough to make me never want to watch it again).

    • @charismartin1169
      @charismartin1169 Před rokem +191

      NOT TO MENTION that Disney's remakes have sanitized the queerness (or the influence of queerness) out of some of the most iconic Disney villains of all time. Andreas Deja, who is an openly gay man, was a supervising animator at Disney for Gaston, Jafar, and Scar. Jafar and Scar are queer coded in both their designs and mannerisms, and Gaston stands as a clear antithesis to queer presentation. In the remakes, Scar and Jafar are dulled down to boring, run of the mill, cold and calculating villains with no real personality, no flair, and nothing to make them stand out. And Gaston's character, while still an image of straight maleness, is removed from being a symbol of toxic masculinity and is instead portrayed as a literal attempted murderer - one dimensional, dull, and blatantly evil.

    • @pleisha
      @pleisha Před rokem +56

      This made me cry, beautiful analysis, I never noticed how much of mr Ashamn was on the Beast, and now I cant unsee it (in a good way) I have to rewatch it again for sure (also, yes, the new ballgown was absolutely horrible in every aspect, it also didn't helped that Emma Watson refused to use a corsé and it looks kind of weird/lame because of that, unlike the Cinderella one, that was stunning)

    • @HanQ28
      @HanQ28 Před rokem +44

      Couldn't have said it better. Btw that ballgown was a huge disappointment. The original golden dress was one of my favourite Disney princess dresses. I can accept the blue dress in the Cinderella remake (even though it was silver/white in the original animated film) because blue is objectively a great colour, plus the design of the dress was breathtakingly beautiful. But Belle's dress was just all wrong, from colour to shape to material etc.
      I could tolerate almost everything else if that ballgown was done right. They managed to cast an actress who looked 99% the same as Belle, but somehow couldn't make the exact same dress as the original animated one. The laziness and audacity. Unforgiveable.

    • @johannageisel5390
      @johannageisel5390 Před rokem +29

      @@HanQ28 I was hoping so much they would put her into an all decked out rococo dress. With a metric ton of bows, silk drapery, embroidery and lace engageantes. And of course actual elipsoid panniers underneath.
      It would have been okay to add a scene in which she slips off the panniers and the dress and rides to the aid of her father in just her petticoat and stays.

    • @Attmay
      @Attmay Před rokem

      C-s is a slur. Flagged for hate speech.

  • @wattthefaqameye1146
    @wattthefaqameye1146 Před rokem +142

    Would also just like to point out that Pinocchio does not just mean pine head or pine boy, it actually has a literal translation from Italian and means pine eye, and they fucked it up so many times.

    • @ggrarl
      @ggrarl Před 11 měsíci +2

      I knew that already thanks to the 90s adaptation with Jonathan Taylor Thomas and Martin Landau (his Italian accent was far more convincing)

    • @rhubarbdude3347
      @rhubarbdude3347 Před 5 měsíci +5

      Hi, italian guy here, I just wanted to clear up the fact that Pinocchio does not mean "pine eye", but it's an archaic word that means "pine nut"; in the original story, anyway, Geppetto calls the wooden boy like that just because he knew a family that had the surname "Pinocchio", so he thinks the name will bring good luck to the puppet.

  • @azuill1126
    @azuill1126 Před rokem +73

    cruella could have so easily been an interesting story about how like, in pursuit of extra-judicial justice, estella becomes more and more like the person she's trying to stop, which would then serve as an actual believable reason anita would have ever been friends with her. could have had a really nuanced take on the "those who fight monsters" idea and set her up as a tragic villain in the same way maleficent did. uh but then the movie didnt do anything interesting at all

  • @rachelsongedits
    @rachelsongedits Před rokem +1754

    Very brave of you to come out of the closet publicly like this, truly an iconic move

  • @diegosanchez894
    @diegosanchez894 Před rokem +1400

    There is a quote by Georgia O'Keeffe "Nothing is less real than realism", and it definitely reinforced by the live action disney remakes. They should also have applied the "if I had more time I would've made a shorter book" philosophy.

    • @Gloomdrake
      @Gloomdrake Před rokem +70

      You really feel it with the Lion King remake. The "live action" CG animals are so devoid of emotionality

    • @Cruizinelli12
      @Cruizinelli12 Před rokem +31

      Absolutely. I don’t know who at the studio thought those of us who grew up with the Lion King wanted or needed to see this story through a hyper realistic filter. The original was damn near perfect, with the perfect villain- Scar.

    • @yuu34567
      @yuu34567 Před rokem +34

      @@Gloomdrake they could've stayed within realism and given them more emotion too. Like I saw it in theatres and was really confused by how they almost never made the lion's ears move. Simba barely reacts to Mufasa's death and I'm pretty sure they could've done a better job than that even within their stupid constraints

    • @eagleleft
      @eagleleft Před rokem +11

      @@Gloomdrake plus why do some things have to be realistic about the lions but not other things? And when do we know simba is afraid or angry or sad or happy?

    • @eagleleft
      @eagleleft Před rokem

      "Realism" sucks ass

  • @anjabartlog496
    @anjabartlog496 Před rokem +65

    I think the ending of the original Mulan makes more sense, as the movie is at least partially anti-war (the burned village scene, the plot point of her elderly father being drafted)
    In the original, Mulan's end goal is to preserve peace, and her family, and in the end she gets to enjoy the life she fought for(although the war is still going on, her village is safe).
    the ending of the remake is interesting because Mulan goes on to serve as a general, but this is still portrayed as the disney style happy ending of the movie, almost implying that the end goal of war is getting better at war.

  • @LaurenKarablabla
    @LaurenKarablabla Před rokem +53

    Didn't the drunk Dumbo scene also serve the utilitarian function of allowing Dumbo to realize his gift of flight? It serves a real purpose.

  • @congreve_cap
    @congreve_cap Před rokem +1183

    “Did you not have the budget for wood?” TOOK ME OUT I CANNOT 💀💀💀

    • @junkyvale
      @junkyvale Před rokem +53

      Yeah like wtf they had to model, texture, rig, animate, simulate, light, render, foley, and composite all that for that?

    • @Skallva
      @Skallva Před rokem +74

      Considering that Disney would have to go to practical effect designers, who have been under union for ages by now, that's probably not too far from truth.

    • @kristenyarbrough4287
      @kristenyarbrough4287 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Well they had the budget for wood in the Mulan movie lol

    • @malum9478
      @malum9478 Před 10 měsíci +16

      @@Skallva same reason for no practical she-hulk, and really the reason for excess cgi in general: digital effects artists ain't unionized and thus are easily and routinely exploited.

    • @Gromper7878
      @Gromper7878 Před 7 měsíci +10

      @@malum9478I know it’s stupid to say, “just unionize” but it actually really needs to happen bc digital artists and animators are so ridiculously overworked. Hopefully this would help people working on video games too

  • @dunsparce4prez560
    @dunsparce4prez560 Před rokem +525

    In 5 years i want a remake of this video, but with an actor doing a rather wooden impression of Joel.

    • @luccaladinig2783
      @luccaladinig2783 Před rokem +48

      I nominate Chris Pine, just to bring things full circle

    • @alanbareiro6806
      @alanbareiro6806 Před rokem +38

      Also decrease the saturation to a minimum so there are no bright colors and all looks drab

    • @amberhernandez
      @amberhernandez Před rokem +8

      @@alanbareiro6806 FUR GLOW

    • @MrDohers
      @MrDohers Před rokem +9

      With lots of needless exposition explaining why he is in a different room for each part.

    • @kata1261
      @kata1261 Před rokem

      The only thing I could think of upon reading this was Abby over at Philosophy Tube doing the maximum effort version of that exact thing, and remembering it made me happy, thank you :)

  • @doodlemunchkin2222
    @doodlemunchkin2222 Před rokem +59

    I personally like how the nail in the coffin for the stepmother was Cinderella saying that she forgave her. Considering “have courage and be kind” was told to her so much by her mom growing up, it just shows how the way her mother raised her served her well and got her through that hell. The step mother admits to her that she’s practically jealous over her unbreakable spirit and how she still manages to not give up hope and still show kindness to them, when in contrast, the step mother lost that part of her long ago when her life fell into shambles and it turned her bitter and cruel.
    She wanted so badly to force Cinderella to give in and be like her. She wanted to find satisfaction and validation in her horrible attitude by seeing it happen to Cinderella when attempting to bring her to her lowest too.
    But she failed, and was left with nothing.
    Kindness is bravery. To not give in and stoop down to your oppressor’s level in order to beat them. So many people assume being meek and kind is a sign of weakness and many try to prey on those who show it, but in reality, it’s a strength. U can overcome a lot with it and even change others sometime.
    That’s what that last scene was showcasing-and tbh-the story of Cinderella in general.
    And I think in a society that currently values feminism only when it…isn’t feminism and is often shown as just women abandoning those traits to take on aggressive masculine ones to gain respect and praise, I think Cinderella’s unchanging character and kindness when she could’ve easily given in and been cruel back, is super refreshing and important to see.

  • @mileskile9520
    @mileskile9520 Před 11 měsíci +23

    I love big Joel’s unique camera angles they really kind of show a brokenness of Joel after watching all the Disney remakes.

  • @camipco
    @camipco Před rokem +236

    The biggest problem with the Mulan remake is that she wants to fight and she's good at it. Both in the epic poem and the original movie, the reason Mulan as a character is admirable is she does something she doesn't want to do, something she expects will be hard and unpleasant and dangerous, because it is the right thing to do. She is doing her duty - acting ethically in the face of that being hard for her. In the remake, she's just achieving her personal goals in the face of some unreasonable barriers.

    • @adversary22
      @adversary22 Před rokem +19

      The Chosen One rework serves the interests of entrenched money. Old Mulan gave the message that anyone can work hard and become powerful and successful. New Mulan sends the message that one can succeed if they're *born with powers*. I think this negatively affects how young girls view themselves. They were not born with powers, and therefore they cannot hope to challenge those who want to keep them powerless.

    • @PersephoneDarling28
      @PersephoneDarling28 Před rokem

      She's a Girlboss in this new one and it's better for it

    • @grylltheonion
      @grylltheonion Před rokem +19

      @@PersephoneDarling28 A girlboss? Maybe, but only because of the magical powers. I would say the original is far superior in telling a more relatable story, and Mulan's wit and smarts makes for a better message.

    • @Thomasmemoryscentral
      @Thomasmemoryscentral Před rokem +4

      Not to mention the original 1998 version contained an entire training montage of Mulan and her 3 soon to be fighting partners failing with the other men as they began training. They all sucked and each of the 3 partners got their own verses in the song that are short and showed them specifically messing up at certain tasks. Remember that the song is sung by a now grown up Donny Osmond of all people!
      During the key change of the song, Mulan figures out a trick to get the arrow at the top of the tall pole and then everyone starts to get better with the montage of everyone impressing Shen. The song and visuals compliment each other building on another until it ends on that satisfying shot of them all kicking in the air holding their staffs. There is a start, buildup and payoff.
      What do they replace te songs with in their remake?

    • @MsLilly200
      @MsLilly200 Před 5 měsíci

      @@Thomasmemoryscentral The only comparing scene I remember is the one where originally Mulan couldn't carry 2 buckets of water up the mountain/stairs during training, so Shang gave her a condescending look and took hers so he easily carried 4.
      In the remake, Mulan is pretending to struggle, until she decided that, actually she's just gonna stop doing that. And easily girlbosses her way to success using her magic chi martial arts super strength she had since childhood.

  • @pavarottiaardvark3431
    @pavarottiaardvark3431 Před rokem +843

    Imagine having the budget of Disney and not making Pinocchio a using an advanced animatronic.

    • @FumbleBee1312
      @FumbleBee1312 Před rokem +202

      I think they’re cowards for not doing it with a real puppeteer

    • @patkohler9695
      @patkohler9695 Před rokem +77

      @@FumbleBee1312 You could just digitally remove the puppeteer.

    • @Gloomdrake
      @Gloomdrake Před rokem +167

      @@patkohler9695 it would have been funny not to, though. Just have this guy following Pinocchio around that no one ever addresses

    • @misirtere9836
      @misirtere9836 Před rokem +50

      Or at least god forbid an actual physical puppet

    • @Gustoberg
      @Gustoberg Před rokem +60

      @@Gloomdrake holy shit, the fairy is pinocchio's pupeteer! and in the end she appears again and says "I was aways with you" no one really knowing that the blue fairy was REALLY there all along lol

  • @OoglyWooglies
    @OoglyWooglies Před rokem +80

    I have a conspiracy theory that Tim Burton stole the idea of the Alice in wonderland remake from American Mcgee which is kinda upsetting bc 1) Mcgee actually cited Burton as an inspiration in the files of I think the first game and 2) Burton apparently said he never really *got* the original book which annoyed Mcgee and he said he didn't like the movie when he finally saw it lol

    • @johnnyjohnson6643
      @johnnyjohnson6643 Před 11 měsíci +15

      Seems highly plausible. Not because I think Burton's a gamer or has even SEEN this progenitor game in action, but because "Alice in Wonderland, but grim" became huge because of American McGee doing such an incredible job with it. Burton probably got a very superficial (Which is all he seems to be capable of, anymore) familiarity with the idea.

    • @andrewstepanek8933
      @andrewstepanek8933 Před 11 měsíci +6

      @@johnnyjohnson6643 "Alice in Wonderland, but grim" did not get big because of American McGee. There were entire series of novels and multiple movies about how fucked up Alice in Wonderland is dating all the way back to the 1940's.
      The first time you heard about something is not necessarily the first time it happened. American McGee took a very common thought, "Alice in Wonderland has some creepy shit" and made a video game about it. It's good, he made a good game, but he's not some innovating genius.

    • @maddieb.4282
      @maddieb.4282 Před 8 měsíci +3

      @@andrewstepanek8933I think you should relax a bit my friend

  • @pisscvre69
    @pisscvre69 Před rokem +99

    "I don't like.. movies anymore"
    Honestly huge mood but all media, the more souless media gets the less i even can see the good stuff we used to get as being worth while theyre just killing all my passion for anything LOL

    • @idot3331
      @idot3331 Před rokem +16

      There are loads of great movies and all sorts of great media being made these days, it's just that Disney in particular seem to be on a mission to destroy all of the passion and creativity that once made their movies beloved. The only problem with media today is digging through all the crap to find the good stuff, but there's plenty of it out there.

    • @drakep.5857
      @drakep.5857 Před rokem +7

      Modern movies don't get worse, we just see more and more shit ones filling the popular shelves and discourse.. I think we still have the same amount of great stuff being made. You just have to wade through shit to find it under all the hated popular stuff

  • @maskingtables
    @maskingtables Před rokem +407

    Disney is going through what Videogames went through in 2008. Studios doing their best to be "realistic" and thinking that gritty brown boring looking desaturated stuff is "realistic".

    • @VitalVampyr
      @VitalVampyr Před rokem +22

      Except some of the games following that trend were actually good.

    • @whynot6266
      @whynot6266 Před rokem +14

      That second part, are you sure that you meant "Shadow the Hedgehog" (2005)?

    • @zom-b4237
      @zom-b4237 Před rokem +17

      To be fair Dead Space and GTA 4 are amazing games.

    • @vortessence8607
      @vortessence8607 Před rokem +14

      Dont do Twilight Princess and Shadow rhe Hedgehog like this...

    • @SirEmrik
      @SirEmrik Před rokem +12

      @@zom-b4237 Yeah, but GTA 4 really worked that realistic, pessimistic shitty feeling through with the help of graphics. So in that sense, it was more than just realistic.

  • @mallninja9805
    @mallninja9805 Před rokem +229

    Dude, did I miss it? I don't think you mentioned that Pinocchio 1940s lesson is that _lying is bad_ but the remake literally shows us that Pinocchio lies to get himself out of a tight spot _and it works_ - in my mind that it's worst sin.

    • @thevioletbee5879
      @thevioletbee5879 Před rokem +11

      I mean to some extent that’s valid. Like… yes, if it will get you out of a kidnapping, please lie. Probably the least of that film’s problems.

    • @felixdaniels37
      @felixdaniels37 Před rokem +31

      @@thevioletbee5879
      The point was that lying got him IN that situation in the first place, and it was only getting worse the more he tried to cover it up. He lied to Jimminy so he can join the puppet show, and he tried lying to the Blue Fairy out of fear. Only by finally trusting his guardians that cared for him and being transparent with them was he able to be freed.

    • @SammEater
      @SammEater Před rokem +4

      Not only they completely broke the moral of the story by having Pinocch escape with his lies they stole that scene from Shrek. Lol

  • @ryhanon7
    @ryhanon7 Před rokem +34

    I actually really liked Cruella but mostly just because the costume design was some of the most creative awesome costume designs I've ever seen.

  • @bitchpuke
    @bitchpuke Před rokem +63

    my baby sister loves the Pinocchio remake, it's her current obsession so I have to watch it almost daily. thank you for perfectly explaining every problem I have with it that I can't express in fear of breaking my baby sisters heart

    • @kenetickups6146
      @kenetickups6146 Před rokem +17

      That's why children shouldn't be allowed to watch trash in the first place

    • @vlad5042
      @vlad5042 Před 9 měsíci +6

      just put the original on and hope she doesnt notice

  • @thedeepfriar745
    @thedeepfriar745 Před rokem +1697

    The original Pink Elephants on parade sequence was an incredible technical showcase of the talent of the Disney animators. It absolutely kicks ass.

    • @nueroptera
      @nueroptera Před rokem +46

      Really weird to watch as a kid, though.

    • @lapislazarus8899
      @lapislazarus8899 Před rokem +14

      @@nueroptera I never thought so. But I was raised by different generations who didn't feel they had to hide the world from me. My dad was nearly 57 when I was born; he was a WWII vet.

    • @nueroptera
      @nueroptera Před rokem +44

      @@lapislazarus8899 he perhaps should have tried to hide the psychedelics a bit better

    • @sidhackney8831
      @sidhackney8831 Před rokem +66

      @@lapislazarus8899 Interesting take on why psychedelic bipedal elephants would be a strange sight for a small child

    • @scootie_scoot
      @scootie_scoot Před rokem +14

      it’s super cool to see how small the team for that section is too. On Wikipedia it tells who laid it out and animated it, it’s about 6 people!!

  • @Sam_on_YouTube
    @Sam_on_YouTube Před rokem +563

    The problem I heard most about Mulan, which I also agreed with, was that it made her magical. It was a chosen one narrative. The original was explicitly and intentionally NOT a chosen one narrative. She got the buckets to the top of the pole with her brains, not with magic.
    It was one criticism in Xiran Jay Zhao's career launching video on it... among many others.

    • @jaynestrange
      @jaynestrange Před rokem +117

      It kinda feels like making her into a magical chosen one is *less* feminist? Like saying that a strong woman must be magic cause there's no way she could do it on her own.

    • @delusion5867
      @delusion5867 Před rokem +102

      @@jaynestrange Live action Mulan says "women can only stand up to and compete with men when given artificial advantages"
      Animated Mulan says "women are capable of standing up to and competing with (and can even surpass) men by using their natural wit and skills"
      I don't think I have to say which is the more feminist and empowering movie

    • @wildfire9280
      @wildfire9280 Před rokem

      @@delusion5867 some people think the latter is also bad for some reason

    • @crosseyedcat1183
      @crosseyedcat1183 Před rokem +29

      @@jaynestrange Consequently making her love interest not General Shang make her less... strong. Think about it. Mulan was such a strong woman in the original that General Shang had to be the one to come to *her* instead of the other way around as is typically done with a matchmaker (in the beginning). This is a fact that startles both her parents in a shocked silence at the end of the movie that is profoundly hilarious and sobering.
      There wasn't anything problematic with General Shang and Mulan's relationship because they didn't have one until after Mulan was no longer in the military and she was a decorated war hero that the emperor himself (and her commanding officer) both bowed down to. If anything Mulan was the one in a position of power at the end.

    • @crosseyedcat1183
      @crosseyedcat1183 Před rokem +18

      @@delusion5867 Not only that but in the live action Mulan, Mulan, despite her magical powers, still ended up fighting for the emperor, who they *also gave even more magical powers*. So what... a woman has magical powers so we should respect her, but don't forget that the emperor, a man, has *even more magical powers*.... because..... why?
      In the original the emperor was a wise ruler who didn't need to be strong, because he could use his brain. Mulan was shown in the movie to be like the emperor and even surpassed him when she defended his life. The original movie was about how the central core of society was formed from wisdom and how wisdom can come from anywhere. True wisdom is about how people see beyond simple appearances.
      The new movie is about how a woman is allowed to be a soldier because she's an exception to the rule and she does it to uphold "family values". What's the message here? You can be a girlboss only if you were born like that and only if you do it for conservative reasons? That's a pretty shitty message if you ask me.

  • @CaitieLou
    @CaitieLou Před rokem +22

    SO glad Joel made the distinction that the actors in Dumbo seem so wooden because of Tim Burton's directing. Burton seems to think the only way you can make a child seem intelligent and mature for their age is to make them dead-eyed, straight-faced, and speak in a monotone. I kind of feel sorry for the actors tbh. Got to be in a Disney movie and the performance isn't something to write home about, because they were told by the director to be as wooden and lifeless as possible.

  • @fluffcake
    @fluffcake Před rokem +64

    I think my favorite Disney remake is the Sorcerer's Apprentice because of how it takes this silly Mickey cartoon and then slaps Nicholas Cage and knock off Percy Jackson/Final Fantasy wizardry on it and it's amazing

    • @Awesomeasumpta13
      @Awesomeasumpta13 Před rokem +5

      I love that movie, i wish it had done better in theaters.

    • @pixelapocrypha
      @pixelapocrypha Před rokem +5

      I unironically love that movie, Nicholas Cage and Jay Baruchel getting up to shenanigans is the best.

  • @thegreen2504
    @thegreen2504 Před rokem +220

    I think ending of the cartoon Mulan and the ballad make plenty of sense. Her primary driving force is her love for her family, she wants more degrees of freedom in filling a traditional role not to drop it all together. At no point in the cartoon does she express masculine ambition to attain some high role, she wants freedom to be the most authentic version of herself

    • @jessicatatum7769
      @jessicatatum7769 Před rokem +47

      EXACTLY the whole point is that you should be able to choose your own life without being forced into hyperfemininity or hypermasculinity. I always felt like her choice made a ton of sense and kept her from falling into the "strong female character" stereotype where they're basically the exact same as Male characters.

    • @ExhaustedWombat
      @ExhaustedWombat Před rokem +1

      Yes! She is returning to her village with the new found knowledge and confidence from her experiences that steel her with the understanding that she can take on life on her terms and succeed.

  • @fourcatsandagarden
    @fourcatsandagarden Před rokem +1411

    I didn't even realize there was a Lady and the Tramp one cos I don't remember seeing it get any attention at all. Which is probably the greatest praise these movies can get. It wasn't bad enough to get attention.

    • @liviwaslost
      @liviwaslost Před rokem +50

      I haven’t heard of it either lol

    • @LikaLaruku
      @LikaLaruku Před rokem +82

      Same. This is the first time I've seen clips of it or heard anyone talk about it.
      Talk about flying under the radar.

    • @lapislazarus8899
      @lapislazarus8899 Před rokem +35

      I think I saw another review of it; the part with the "pound" is totally changed. It's not like I was emotionally scarred by the original. I think I hated the bad taste "oriental"-stereotype Siamese cats scene upset me more.

    • @jacob.c3326
      @jacob.c3326 Před rokem +29

      It was Disney+ exclusive so they only advertised it for like a week

    • @AHHHHHHHHHHHHl
      @AHHHHHHHHHHHHl Před rokem +5

      I read about in 2018, but by the next year, thought they just canceled the production

  • @alexskelofton
    @alexskelofton Před rokem +50

    I did think Cruella was fun actually, in a Hot Topic Devil Wears Prada Ripoff Heist kind of way. It would be a perfectly serviceable movie if there was no preexisting IP involved, since nearly everything weak and infuriating about the movie is a result of being unable to commit to what it is in relation to 101 Dalmatians. If it's supposed to show the origin of why Cruella wants to kill dogs, this fails because her character at the end of the movie would be completely against killing the dogs. If they are trying to imply that 101 Dalmatians is an unreliable telling of whatever the "true events" are, that also fails since there is no timeline overlap between films and it does not show nor suggest an alternate sequence of events, besides the events of 101 Dalmatians not happening at all. In any case, by the time people finish the movie and realize that the two stories don't make any goddamn sense together, disney has long gotten what it needed from the business interaction.

  • @TVlord5
    @TVlord5 Před rokem +25

    I feel that Mulan wanting to go home isn't that out of character. She didn't want to fight or go to war in the original, she just wanted to save her Father and because she's strong willed she did what needed to be done. She didn't want to escape her life she just wanted to be accepted and make her family proud, and she did that so now she wants to enjoy life with her family.

  • @magnusengeseth5060
    @magnusengeseth5060 Před rokem +510

    I can't convey how much I love the Big Sassy Joel character we got to meet during the Cinema Sins parody section.
    "Was your dead son a freak just like you, old man?"

  • @Matt-zu2lu
    @Matt-zu2lu Před rokem +476

    To be honest I didn’t see the ending of the original Mulan as her accepting social expectations but as her realizing that she wants a simple life

    • @happyllama1160
      @happyllama1160 Před rokem +198

      I sort of saw it as love for her family. The only reason she went out to war was because her father would have died, not because she had any passion about fighting. Though she did have societal expectations thrust upon her, her family weren’t awful, they just understood that this was how she could have a good life. She didn’t fit those hyper feminine societal expectations, but in the end she didn’t fit the hyper masculine military expectations either and saved China through her own mix of masculinity and femininity, using the skills she learnt in the army, as well as skills she learnt at home. In the end she and her family realises that she doesn’t have to fit into either box and she doesn’t try to, but finds happiness by just being herself.

    • @itsaUSBline
      @itsaUSBline Před rokem +4

      @@happyllama1160 isn't having love for your family a societal expectation, though?

    • @babahu15
      @babahu15 Před rokem +32

      @@itsaUSBline what?

    • @happyllama1160
      @happyllama1160 Před rokem +29

      @@itsaUSBline … I have no clue what point you’re trying to make, and I’m not quite sure I want to know. Having reflexes is a social expectation, but you’re not bravely defying social standards if you have to consciously blink every few seconds.

    • @OhioMan1854
      @OhioMan1854 Před rokem +8

      @@happyllama1160 thank you for putting into words how I felt watching Mulan as a kid. I couldn't say anything you haven't already.

  • @cityraildude
    @cityraildude Před rokem +45

    What you're missing about the end of the original Mulan movie is that she only joined the army for the sake of her father, which is why she went back home afterward

  • @theiammike123
    @theiammike123 Před rokem +63

    Not only does Prince Charming has actual chemistry with Cinderella. He also has an actual name: *"Kit"* .

    • @leileyaravencroft
      @leileyaravencroft Před rokem +2

      His name… is Kit? A Prince from the early… what… 1600-1700s is named… Kit? Ugh… there is so much wrong with that. From the name not fitting the era to the fact that “Kit” isn’t a name of a Prince.
      But with that aside Prince Charming wouldn’t necessarily fit the era either but that’s his English equivalent name. Have to remember Cinderella was a retelling of another country’s story. And unlike popular belief it actually was his name in a few retellings.

    • @theiammike123
      @theiammike123 Před rokem +1

      @@leileyaravencroft uh.... yeah. a retelling.... obviously.

    • @vlad5042
      @vlad5042 Před 9 měsíci +7

      its kind of a bizarre choice but i think the name kit is rly cute so i dont mind it

    • @vlad5042
      @vlad5042 Před 9 měsíci +11

      @@leileyaravencrofti would assume its a nickname for christopher or some variation of it

    • @maddieb.4282
      @maddieb.4282 Před 8 měsíci

      @@leileyaravencroftum it’s a Disney movie from the 50s, it’s not supposed to be culturally or historically accurate and critiquing it as such seems a little lame and pointless honestly

  • @andresirigoyen
    @andresirigoyen Před rokem +674

    Those Pinocchio sins are 10x more thoughtful than the actually cinemasins comments

    • @nashburt6635
      @nashburt6635 Před rokem +118

      - This movie has too much exposition (ding)
      - I don't know what's going on because I didn't listen to the exposition (ding)
      - *Creepy comment about an actress* (ding)

    • @menjolno
      @menjolno Před rokem +11

      I read it as pinnochet sin

    • @bunni2583
      @bunni2583 Před rokem +35

      Jiminy Cricket isn't giving me a lapdance in this scene *ding!*

    • @silverblue73
      @silverblue73 Před rokem +5

      yeah, that guy's just a loon with a schtick

    • @kittykittybangbang9367
      @kittykittybangbang9367 Před rokem +10

      Ngl, when I was younger I thought Cinemasins' videos were meant to be jokes, and not actual valid cinema criticism.

  • @leokim47
    @leokim47 Před rokem +322

    I think a schrafillas quote describes Disney best: “Disney’s hardcore dedication to heteronormality is disgusting. They’re not progressive; they’re just a conglomerate out for money.”

    • @SlapstickGenius23
      @SlapstickGenius23 Před rokem +7

      Same for me, bruh!

    • @thejuiceking2219
      @thejuiceking2219 Před 3 měsíci +4

      the ultimate problem is simple
      to make something great, you have to take a risk, and these big companies hate taking risks

  • @LogicGated
    @LogicGated Před rokem +20

    They really made a Chris Pine joke. That will definitely age well.

  • @CheddarDrip
    @CheddarDrip Před rokem +16

    42:18 Joel mentioning a "Big Lipped Aligator Moment" is so strange yet appropriate in a degrees-of-separation way. I mean Joel is tangentially related to Lindsay Ellis, he has mentioned her and they make similar content, Lindsay was the Nostalgia Chick, the term was coined in a Nostalgia Chick/Nostalgia Critic crossover Ferngully review, and Nostalgia Critic is a CZcams punching bag that also has reviewed Disney remakes. Nostalgia Critic and Big Joel are in the same cinematic universe, it's all circular, and that's just neat.

  • @Omnywrench
    @Omnywrench Před rokem +278

    I have literally never seen an animated film that would have worked better in live-action, but I've seen plenty of live-action films that I thought would work better animated.

    • @Wabajak13
      @Wabajak13 Před rokem +15

      Lord of the Rings would say otherwise (I know, it's kind of cheating)

    • @nickchambers3935
      @nickchambers3935 Před rokem

      Like what, out of interest?

    • @naikigutierrez4279
      @naikigutierrez4279 Před rokem +7

      @@nickchambers3935 Most super hero films and Cats come to mind.

    • @gota7738
      @gota7738 Před rokem +10

      @@Wabajak13 I dunno, the Peter Jackson films might be better than the Rankin Bass films, but I still think animation at it's best could even could top the Jackson films.
      The ability to push evocative imagery and atmosphere further in animation could still really play well to LOTR, even if Bakshi and Rankin Bass couldn't quite get there.

    • @joshuaamy3010
      @joshuaamy3010 Před rokem +3

      @@Wabajak13 funnily enough I grew up with the Bakshi version of LOTR and to this day it's the version I think of when remembering plot points

  • @spiralfairy
    @spiralfairy Před rokem +707

    I cannot stop laughing at the phrase "Pinocchio's nasty sins" whenever I think about it please save me

    • @starfall179
      @starfall179 Před rokem +19

      I guess his nose won't be the only thing that gets longer...
      I need help

    • @matthewv9169
      @matthewv9169 Před rokem +31

      Stop gaslighting your cat you dark triad freak is going to be stuck in my head forever now

  • @Snarl_Marx
    @Snarl_Marx Před rokem +16

    "Maybe stop gaslighting your cat, you dark triad freak" 💀

  • @SHYKOOPA
    @SHYKOOPA Před rokem +14

    "She tells him nobody gives a fuck about her, and I do agree" LMAO this is savage stuff

  • @alicedeligny9240
    @alicedeligny9240 Před rokem +486

    Honestly Cinderella being like "I forgive you" felt like she was actually saying "f*ck you, I'm better than you" and it sound, hem, petty funny, under a layer of courtesy and niceness.

    • @meltedmarshmellowpeep
      @meltedmarshmellowpeep Před rokem +55

      its a sign of closure and a huge 'fuck you' in that she has no power over cinderella anymore and we love to see it. she's more than the abuse she took, and she's above ever letting the step-mom emotionally control her ever again.

    • @RevolutionaryLoser
      @RevolutionaryLoser Před rokem +1

      If you liked that you might like Philomena, hands down one of the best biographical films I've ever watched.

    • @onetimeanswer
      @onetimeanswer Před rokem +9

      @ferret Well yeah there's obvious nuance irl, but in a storybook sense, it's easy to buy into the fact that the stepmother is so personally invested in her ability to cause pain to Cinderella specifically, that she'd only interpret such a response as a direct loss of control
      I mean they'd both have to be pretty stupid to think forgiveness is anything close to what either of them want. How differently would that scene have read if it was the very last thing the stepmother said to Cinderella?

    • @Tethloach1
      @Tethloach1 Před rokem

      lol

    • @LauraM-kr9wv
      @LauraM-kr9wv Před rokem +1

      @ferret this is stupid and implies that victims are responsible for their abuser's actions if the abuser goes on to hurt other people.

  • @superstone13
    @superstone13 Před rokem +255

    Loosing my shit at the Pinocchio segment. Its almost worth it for these monstrosities to exist just to hear Joel call Geppetto a dark triad little freak.

  • @splendidcyan
    @splendidcyan Před rokem +5

    "I feel that it tramples on the message of the original" is like, the perfect way to sum up every Disney remake.

  • @be_epbop
    @be_epbop Před rokem +160

    Was not at all expecting to tear up at a video trashing on Disney remakes but as a trans guy that Mulan rant about I'll make a man out of you really hit me. I've had a lot of arguments recently with my mom ever since I started testosterone with her usually saying that I'm making a mistake but taking T and it wouldn't make me happy since it can change the fact I wasn't born as a guy. Hearing Big Joel talk about how men are not born but made in the context of Mulan was just really comforting

    • @kenetickups6146
      @kenetickups6146 Před rokem +9

      @Vanilla Gorilla edgy teenager right here

    • @alim.9801
      @alim.9801 Před rokem +2

      ​@Vanilla Gorilla what do you mean?

    • @cheezorger
      @cheezorger Před rokem

      thats not how pronouns work

    • @starmanda88
      @starmanda88 Před rokem +8

      I’m sorry your mom is being so shitty. I hope she comes around.

  • @QueenDodogondo
    @QueenDodogondo Před rokem +275

    I think something that's important to note about the music in Mulan is that at a certain point it just stops, very deliberately and abruptly. "A Girl Worth Fighting For" is probably the most lighthearted and silly song in the movie, but it cuts off immediately when the characters realize the gravity of the situation they are facing. I don't think the music made the movie any less serious, or less able to handle heavy topics like war and death with any depth. In fact I think it worked in favor of the more serious tone later on. It very abruptly stops being a musical and starts being a war story.

    • @ashknight6696
      @ashknight6696 Před rokem +36

      genuinely one of the greatest scene transitions in cinematic history

    • @Genevieve1023
      @Genevieve1023 Před rokem +16

      And than they find the little doll. Showing that the real girl worth fighting for, is an innocent child victimized by conflict, not the perfect fantasy wife.

    • @chuckbatman5
      @chuckbatman5 Před rokem +4

      Yeah I always felt the decision to not have music in the third act was a deliberate and powerful choice to establish a tone shift into the seriousness of active war. Removing all the music to give the entire movie this tone is a fine choice, if the story is written around it, but applying that to the usual Disney remake formula of "follow the same plot beats so no one forgets that they are watching the NEW version of X classic Disney film" just leaves you with an empty movie that not only lacks the powerful tone shift of the original but also doesn't even have nostalgia bait to use!

  • @QuinnsIdeas
    @QuinnsIdeas Před rokem +197

    I dig the unhinged camera angles in this video.

    • @bascoaful
      @bascoaful Před rokem +1

      Hey man, love your channel 👌

  • @awandererfromys1680
    @awandererfromys1680 Před rokem +3

    Disney owns Muppets. I want Muppets remakes. Like the Beast is a handsome human in a world of Muppets who are scared of him and don't accept him until he turns into a creature of colourful felt and googly eyes.
    More Muppets!

  • @AdamGaffney96
    @AdamGaffney96 Před rokem +28

    Joel really is on his unhinged arc right now I love it.

  • @chuckbatman5
    @chuckbatman5 Před rokem +632

    The conclusion being "I hate all movies now but I love plugging my streaming service" is the most perfectly dystopian way to end a video on Disney live-action remakes

  • @ingeniousclown
    @ingeniousclown Před rokem +503

    I genuinely love how unhinged the cinematography is for this video. More bravery in each shot than in the entirety of the live action Disney remake catalogue.

  • @rosamy2017
    @rosamy2017 Před rokem +12

    I disagree about the ending of the original Mulan. Mulan wasn’t GOOD at all that trad fem stuff, but she didn’t hate it. She didn’t want to be a solider, she just knew it was wrong that she couldn’t defend her father. Mulan broke the gender conventions she disagreed with, but she doesn’t have to break all of them. Also, she returned home and married a man she picked herself. She broke the convention of arranged marriage AND with someone who sees her as his literal equal, intellectually and physically.
    This ending, in contrast to the 2019 ending, tells us “you can break tradition and do whatever you want to do, and still be a part of your family and community.”

  • @lich109
    @lich109 Před rokem +37

    I'm shocked you didn't have a problem that Pinocchio does NOT turn into a real boy in the remake.

    • @kristenyarbrough4287
      @kristenyarbrough4287 Před 10 měsíci +5

      He what.

    • @lich109
      @lich109 Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@kristenyarbrough4287 He doesn't, the end of the movie has the characters going "well, to me you're a real boy".

    • @kristenyarbrough4287
      @kristenyarbrough4287 Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@lich109 oh my God. I hate how literal movies are now. What is even the point?

    • @vlad5042
      @vlad5042 Před 9 měsíci +5

      @@lich109honestly thats kind of a funny idea on its own if the movie put in any effort to earn that as an ending

    • @lich109
      @lich109 Před 9 měsíci +7

      @@vlad5042 Del Toro's movie puts in effort to earn that as an ending, the Disney one just doesn't.

  • @altromonte15
    @altromonte15 Před rokem +381

    Pinocchio being heartbroken for his father is kinda weird when you realize that they've spent maybe a couple of hours together. He becomes alive, he gets sent to school, and that's all the time they've known each other for.

    • @dingdongism
      @dingdongism Před rokem +19

      Not if you accept that the actual little boy’s soul became embedded in Pinocchio. That’s the “real boy” lamenting his father. Not that I’m defending the film or even the scene, but I don’t think the hot take stands if you take the premise on its merits.

    • @harrylane4
      @harrylane4 Před rokem +57

      @@dingdongism but the idea that the boy’s soul is in Pinocchio ignores all of the rest of the film. Like, if there is a real boy deep down in there, he shouldn’t NEED to learn how to be a real boy. He shouldn’t NEED to justify his own existence.

    • @dingdongism
      @dingdongism Před rokem +11

      @@harrylane4 I don’t know why I’m playing devil’s advocate here but isn’t it possible that this “soul transfer” has some unexpected and weird consequences? I mean we’re already suspending disbelief for _any_ version of Pinocchio in that we’re watching a marionette come to life. Is it so beyond the premise here to accept that the boy’s soul loves his father, “knows” his father in some way, yet remains somehow unfamiliar with other features of being a corporeal being?

    • @MasterOphSky
      @MasterOphSky Před rokem +14

      Idk dude if I was very recently given the gift of life and the guy partly responsible for that through the power of pure love died, I'd be pretty bummed out too, especially if he was trying to be my responsible father figure and keep me safe
      Also in these types of movies people fall in love with each other with just mere hours together, so at least the type of love this time is platonic.

    • @cassandrajoiner9933
      @cassandrajoiner9933 Před rokem +2

      @@harrylane4Look at when the original film was made. Little boys are raised, not made. Pinocchio did need parenting wooden or not. The 'real boy' theme is really a moral ideal.

  • @jaredwillebeek-lemair5298
    @jaredwillebeek-lemair5298 Před rokem +146

    I feel differently about the ending of the first Mulan. To me, it doesn't feel like she's embracing tradition. Her role is to always do what's best for the family, she's the family guardian. When she goes to war, it wasn't for the purpose of proving anything, denying tradition. Her only consideration was saving her father, doing what was best for the family. The end of the film sees her choosing to stay with the family, as that's what's best for them. Just like when she chose to go to war, she chose based on her values and motivations, without considering traditional biases. I could be blowing hot butt up your ass but who knows

    • @jaredwillebeek-lemair5298
      @jaredwillebeek-lemair5298 Před rokem +33

      I feel like if she chose to join the military and be away from her family at the end of the film, it would feel more like her arc was "I went to war and found out I love killing and I'm really good at it" rather than "I found the ability to make and trust my own decisions"

    • @janettewong9900
      @janettewong9900 Před rokem +15

      It’s a folktale that is essentially propaganda. Details of it change over time and in different geographical locations but the story beats stay the same: she goes home because she has served her country in lieu of her father. She’s put in her time and earned the right to go home so even though she isn’t revealed to be a woman while she’s still in the military, she’s offered an appointment which she declines and chooses to return home - to serve her family
      The most noticeable missing motif is Mulan weaving at her loom - the ballad of Mulan starts with her working at her loom and it ends with her going home to resume that work. The reason this never works as feminism is because Mulan is as much a person as the meme Chuck Norris is - the 1998 animation, despite significant changes, manages to make her a complex character with understandable motivations rooted in human emotions rather than being a Confucian girlboss.

    • @Flavershum
      @Flavershum Před rokem +14

      This was what I was going to say! It wouldnt make sense for the animated Mulan to become a general and leave her family. She never wanted to go to war in the first place. The point of her character wasn't that she wanted to be masculine and fight in wars but her family and expectations wouldn't let her, the point was that she has the courage and strength to save her family even when others believed she couldn't. She accomplished her goal and saved her family, why would she leave them and become a general?

  • @StalwartTirith
    @StalwartTirith Před rokem +11

    Crazy to say, but speaking of the Pink Elephant scene one movie that handled a more modern take was the _Dora the Explorer_ movie of all things. There's one scene where reality just kind of falls apart and for a few moments everything is a more updated animation the way the original cartoon was animated. It was actually really effective at being a call back to the show in the way that the Dumbo movie failed at completely.