Sykes...ruined a street lamp, crashed into a subway, pulled his break to shreds and burned the rubber off of his tires to connect with the tracks. He's no loan shark, he's a loan Megalodon.
As I said earlier, it is lucky that nobody was walking down those stairs or waiting at the platform, it would have ended up with a lot of innocent deaths.
That moment when you realizeTito is the actual hero of Oliver and Company because he straight up drove that tiny scooter off the rail and saved everyone. And he's a chihuahua. woaw
And Sykes inadvertently saved Oliver and Dodger by throwing them off of him and his car (and out of the path of the subway train.) Had he not done so, all three of them would have perished.
One of the best, understated aspects of the film is how simply they portray the monster inside of Sykes. He only speaks when absolutely necessary, and yet you can tell how enraged and uncontrollable he is when angered, just by the fact he breaks the gear shift stick and window of his own car.
Yeah, Sikes is slept on as a Disney villain. The dude is not romanticized with a sad backstory or anything else to make him "sympathetic" like many other Disney villains; he's legit just an ugly sociopath who will kill others because he might get some money. It's such a blunt and simple characterization that I can't help but love how much of a monster he is.
Legit, I always underappreciated how amazing Oliver and Dodger were here: Jenny gets grabbed by Sykes, a man so huge that he could easily crush the life out of Oliver, but the kitten (not cat: kitten) still leaps onto Sykes' hand and fucking *bites* him. The hiss before the bite was a perfect cherry on that little muffin. Dodger, seeing that Oliver was in danger, and despite knowing he's going up against two dogs easily twice his size, Dodger tackles one of them and forces the fight out of the back window. Bonus points for him realizing that all he had to do was duck his head and get the headscarf off. Dodger is getting pushed onto the tracks by DeSoto, the same dog who threatened to eat Oliver at the start. Oliver jumps onto his head, knowing that he might get flown onto the tracks himself. But he obviously trusts Dodger enough to catch him in time (or he doesn't care and is willing to trade his life for Dodger's). Then the two of them go directly after Sykes themselves so Jenny has enough time to jump to Fagin's cart to (relative) safety. Fucking badass.
The gearstick shattering in Sykes’ grip and the wheels of the car grinding to nothing but metal against the rails are images that have stuck in my head for almost 25 years. Glorious.
It's similar to the final car chase in '101 Dalmatians': The villain's (Cruella in '101,' Sykes in this) once- magnificent luxury car rapidly deteriorating over the course of the final chase symbolizing the villain's rapidly- deteriorating sanity.
It was not disney's best film but it was definitely a good one it's like people pretend this movie and the great mouse detective just never even existed. they're both really funny and have sweet endings =)
When I first watched it, I had multiple issues with this movie because of the climax isn’t great and the elements aren’t actually enjoyable compared The Great Mouse Detective, Encanto, Lady and the Tramp and Alice in Wonderland. Unlike Jenny and Oliver, all of the characters are annoying and it has the worst Disney plot ever and the animation is super bland just like The Sword in the Stone.
@@hobomike6935 Both TGMD and O&C are great Disney movies like no other in my opinion. They're the only ones I go back to on a regular basis. Many people dislike both them because of the flaws and how some of them are slow or have bad storylines, etc. I definitely see some of the flaws, the middle of TGMD in my opinion is very slow and the climax happens maybe a bit too quick in both of these, and it's kind of overwhelming. There's also some flaws in the subway segment of this one like how it's kind of difficult to tell what is happening with shaking, foreground animation, and quick shots that are difficult to see, as well as how the Brooklyn Bridge, (where Sykes' gets hit by the subway train) is inaccurate, as Subway trains were not supported by the bridge after 1944 (movie takes place in the 80's), but I can't help but love both of them kind of biasedly.
@@NealMouse9140 The music would fit Dante's Peak Chase scene with the Volcanic Cloud chasing the heroes as they try to escape the Volcano as it explodes.
One detail I noticed about the way Roscoe and DeSoto died is that it matches with their personalities. Roscoe, being the more level headed of the two, tried to use logical survival by hanging onto Dodger's cloth until it came off. DeSoto, the most sadistic of the two, was torturing Dodger instead of outright killing him, and this arrogance is what caused his Death as well. Ironically, by the same cat he had picked on ay the start of the film.
They remind me of two characters I created in my comic series with similar personalities. They’re called The Dope Bros. Adicto is more like Roscoe while his brother Syringe is more like DeSoto. Thanks for pointing it out.
Only someone as insane as Bill Sykes would drive his car into a subway station and onto the tracks with his two dogs in chase of a hobo driving a scooter/shopping cart hybrid holding a bunch of dogs, a kitten and a young girl.
Like How The Heck Can a Car roll into a underground Subway station and jump on the Tracks??? I bet It was People waiting at the station and Probably they ran from the Car.
@@NealMouse9140 Also is the entire neighborhood and subway blind deaf and stupid How can they not see or hear that chase scene happening right outside? Yeah They're not the main focus but this shows how useless and cowardly background characters really are
That's some angry driving Sykes was doing in this chase scene. So angry he pulled the whole gear shift off. You can't get high quality stuff like this anymore. Oliver and Company will always be a favorite because apart from the talking cat and dogs it shows a grand deal of realism.
A lot of movies nowadays aren't very realistic anymore. I get that completely. They're still good, they just don't have enough realism to be very relatable.
For me as a kid, this whole movie was made the moment he slammed it in low and sheared the tires off. The detail on the electricity was incredible too! OwO
Sykes truly is one of the scariest Disney villains: He's a loan shark/bookie/mobster who does his own enforcing and he will literally stop at nothing to get paid.
This whole scene gave me chills when I first saw it. Seeing Sykes willfully tear up his car and seeing it downright destroyed when a train hits it was just heartbreaking to watch. This scene was on a par with the car chase from 101 Dalmatians. Even after his death, Disney knew how to create a scary situation in a movie that ends with a heartwarming win.
Wayne MacFarlane The only villains I feel bad for are Roscoe and DeSoto yeah they may have been villains themselves like Sykes but the way they cry out as they die doesn't help but make me feel bad. Even Dodger and Oliver are both rightfully horrified by what happened to them.
@@katelynthewhitewerewolf6376 You know they were complete psychos (hell, had Sykes simply *not followed* Fagin's completely *insane* stunt of escaping on the metro tracks, and simply put a bounty on Fagin's head the next day, he'd have... Well, he'd be alive and gotten the last laugh, which, compared to the way things actually went down, would have been a huge win in my book), but still, these were brutal ways to go for the three of them, and ruthlessly efficient kills using the environment too.... That's hard to watch, really.
@@katelynthewhitewerewolf6376 Yeah, they may have had it coming, but hot damn, these were brutal and ruthlessly efficient environment kills. I don't blame Dodger and Oliver for feeling queasy after doing that.
@@ElodieHiras Yeah and I would like to see The Sonic 3 Movie do a Final Battle similar to this one with Shadow Sonic Silver Tails Amy Knuckles Cream Rouge Tom Maddie and Ozzy getting chased by GUN Commander Walters into a Subway Train System with Tom driving and GUN Commander Walters as the main antagonist of Sonic 3 and Shadow being the secondary main protagonist with Sonic
When Dodger was carrying Oliver & that he wasn't moving, I literally thought that Oliver died for his precious Jenny in order to save her. I was bawling my eyes out, but as soon as Jenny hugged him, he opened his eyes & meowed to her & I immediately cried tears of joy to know that Oliver was alive. This scene still makes me cry even after all these year's
I'm actually really impressed with Jenny's character. Most kids wouldn't pick up a cat they thought might be dead and start rubbing their faces against it xD
Sykes eyes of "Oh Jeez!" just as the impact happens at 2:32 (when you pause it at the right frame) is too good. Thats a hell of a way to go in a Disney animated picture.
When I was a little girl watching this part I remember crying so much and holding my kitty. I remember singing that song to him. “me and you together forever you’ll see”. He’s gone now for 6years and still brings tears to my eyes thinking of him.
I remember when I was 4 years old and I was watching this movie several times because I loved this scene and how brutal the deaths of Roscoe, Desoto and obviously Sykes were.
As much as this movie is one of my most beloved of all time...this entire scene is the literal definition of child endangerment and I knew it from a young age
I've always loved how the film's composer quotes the melodic line from "Once Upon a Time in New York City" at 1:16 and resolves it in a dissonant chord when we see the Dobermans. Really adds to this moment's intensity and horror
I haven't seen this movie in almost 20 years.. I watched it for the first time today with my niece. The way he yelled Fagin, and they way he ripped the whole gearshift off on the subway tracks gave me chills. Good, good movie. I was today years old when I found out it was made in 1988. I wish they made movies like this still.
Me too because I wasn’t even born in the ‘80’s but now I knew this movie overall since the first thing I’ve watched it from Disney+ x2 already and I love that New York City adventure
Bill Sykes is one of the cruelest antagonists in disney movies due to him being a loan shark. Whenever he doesn't gets his way someone is going to either die or get hurt for that but he's one of the scariest characters in disney movie history and I like it
Along with Judge Frollo and Mother Gothel. They are all scary altogether, because they don't need magic powers nor are they powerful magic beings. They're just regular human beings who are willing to go to extremes to get what they want, including kidnapping and murder. What else could be scarier than knowing that a human being capable of the evil things that we know we are capable of exists in real life?
@@dafilmqueen556 Along with Madame Medusa. She straight up kidnapped an orphan to do dangerous mining and had no intention of letting her live. Unlike Cruella de Vil, there’s no real comedy behind her.
One problem I have will Sykes is that he doesn't have that much screentime in the movie. He's first seen when he wants his money from Fagin, but he's not seen again until Fagin goes to his warehouse.
@@joshmontemayor6098 or even better, the *second* toy story (when they're chasing with the pizza truck to the airport) but those are pixar movies, so they don't count compared to movies that were solely disney. this is definitely one of the best they made without pixar
I literally thought Oliver died after Sykes death back then. When Dodger gave Oliver to Jenny & feared the worst, I started crying. And when I saw his eyes opened & he meowed to Jenny, I bawled my eyes out to see that he was alive. After all these year's, this scene still gets to me.
Yea now all they make are movies that appeal to China and to the Twitter feminists.No more talent.Just a medium to insert their stupid political agendas and identity politics.Oh and don't forgot pleasing the oh so might China.There's very little movies that are good now cause all Hollywood cares about is stuffing their "movies" with feminism propaganda rather than making actually good movies.
Hadn't seen it in about 16 years, until I saw it on Disney Plus in lockdown in July, and when my sister came in there was 20 minutes left, and I wasn't able to start the movie again immediately when it was over, because we worked on a marble project in our house. I watched it on VHS in October, and that time I did get to watch it twice!
Me too. Im TIRED of animation-studios only using computers to create animated movies & tv-shows. I want more traditional animated movies too & less CGI & less flash-animated movies & tv-shows. CGI is OVERUSED nowadays in my oppinion & if theres something ive learned from Lisa Simpson from The Simpsons its that better technology dosent mean better story-telling. And i AGREE. 💙
I agree. If anyone can bring back 2D Traditional Animation, Disney could. The problem they had during the early 2000s was bad marketing, hence why great films like Atlantis, Treasure Planet, Brother Bear got overlooked. I would love to see what Disney could do now with traditional animation, and I feel they could use Disney+ to their advantage with that.
Sykes is a creepier villain than I remember watching as a kid. Probably because from a kid's point of view you just see a mean man who wants money, but as an adult you see that he's a loan shark/mafia guy and the implications of that are...scary
And Disney didn’t make him child-friendly with a song. During his meeting with Fagin at his office, you can hear him on the phone with someone discussing their methods of torture and murder.
@Rachel yeah that's true. And if you listen closely at the scene when Fagin was in Sykes warehouse, you'll hear Skyes on the phone giving somebody tips on how to kill/torture somebody
I like how Oliver jumps to save Jenny and bites Sykes' hand. Shows how he goes from being a helpless kitten to a brave one. And also the fact that he KILLED DeSoto, a Doberman with razor-sharp teeth twice his size.
@@TheLatiosnlatias02 It was poetic irony, that the very cat DeSoto threatened to eat ended up being the death of him. And it was fitting that Roscoe would die fighting Dodger, they were "rival alphas" and came to blows before.
@@TheJDLonline I can just imagine the engineer of that train panicking for dear life, blaring the horn like crazy, praying that these guys will get off the tracks before he/she hits them.
The sad thing you realize about this movie, is that out of all of them (the animals), Oliver is gonna be the one who outlives all of them and lives into the 21st century without his pals anymore by his side
This is, without a doubt, the best scene of the movie. It's climactic and intense throughout, and they really spent time making sure that this scene is where Bill Sykes is truly a monster, who will go to any length to make sure to kill the animals and Fagin, while taking Jenny away. It also shows how aggressive he is, especially as you see him destroying his car slightly, without any care (0:56). The scene as a whole really keeps you on the edge of your seat. The events that happen during the chase keep you watching, like where Oliver and Dodger go to save Jenny and kill DeSoto and Roscoe (1:36, 1:47) , which Sykes once again, shows no care about what is happening. Sykes really has no intentions of letting Jenny go from his grip, and he is at this point downright insane (2:06). The scene, whilst already being the most intense scene in the movie by far, only gets much more intense, as the group sees the train ahead (2:12), and is only saved when they climb up on the railing of the bridge in mere seconds avoiding the train (2:26), without Oliver or Dodger, who are both accidently saved (sort of) by Sykes who throws them off of his car, who only sees the train when it's too late (2:30). This is a well deserved death for one of the more unstable villains of Disney. It's also probably one of the more screwed up. The intensity drops immensely and this death is one of the most relieving moments in Disney, I'd say. I also enjoy the cinematography and the music for the shot above the crash (2:34). Speaking of music, in this scene, without the music this scene would be entirely different. It wouldn't be the same (Major examples of intense music I have is 2:06, 1:30, 2:22, 1:01 - 1:09, and many more examples throughout.) This scene, if it was more easy to tell what was happening, would be maybe the best climactic scene in Disney, for me. The only problem with it is that the fast shots, at least for me are difficult to tell what is happening, especially with shake and foreground details. Also notable that if I am having trouble seeing what is happening, then the directed age demographic for the movie wouldn't be having it much easier, though it is justified in some ways. With the fast shots, it makes the scene more dramatic, with shake it really puts you in the shoes of the animals/Fagin in this particular scene. Foreground adds claustrophobia to the indoor subway segment, so in my opinion, though the scene is difficult to perceive what is occurring, I think the smaller, more unnoticeable events aren't really important enough to need to be seen the first time through. The main thing you need to tell is happening is that the animals/Fagin are escaping the train and Sykes gets killed from it, which is easy to tell. Therefore, I think it works good how it is, despite the difficulty to read in some parts, most notably the indoor subway section of it, which doesn't even take up the majority of the scene, or the important major parts, besides DeSoto and Roscoe getting killed. This scene is my personal favorite scene in my personal favorite Disney movie.
The Triplee But even if he succeeded in murdering Dodger and his friends and family in cold blood for no reason that's not going unnoticed without anyone getting suspicious. And it's not going to get him what he wants as it's just going to get him found out and they didn't even do anything to deserve that.
all these years later and I still get goosebumps and chills throughout this whole scene. I still get tears waiting to find out if Oliver lived, and even more so when it turns out he did. :-) I feel like a monster for actually feeling bad when I hear both Roscoe and De Soto whimper when they fall to their death even though they totally deserved it after what they did to dodger.
Shoutout to Fagin's incredible arm strength, able to grab that lampost and 180 not only the weight of his bike, but another passenger and a pack of dogs!
Man, seeing Sykes' car get slightly damaged and then downright destroyed always hurts to watch. That Lincoln Continental is an honestly beautiful, yet very expensive car, and seeing it get slightly torn apart, its gear shift broken off, its tires shredded, its windows shattered, and then the whole car itself literally smashed to pieces after an oncoming train hits it are all just heartbreaking to watch. These are reasons why I think Bill Sykes should NOT have a driver's license. He's too reckless when it comes to driving. As Matthew Broderick once said, "A man with priorities so far out of whack doesn't deserve such a fine automobile."
Well said and it's thanks to this movie that I have a love for the 70's models of the lincoln continental. Just watching such a beautiful piece of automotive art and history just get damaged and down right destroyed is just ow I love Sykes' car before this scene happens but as disney does best this car is seen somewhere else with a good owner and jasper and whoris' van/truck had the same thing happened to it but anywho it is painful to watch a good looking car demolished
@@jazzykingjack2846 Imagine if Sykes jumped from his car before the train hit it and he saw it get demolished, he'd be like, "MY CAR!!! MY BEAUTIFUL CAR!!!"
I don't know what a D-2 gear does, but when Sykes shifted to that gear and floored that gas pedal all the way and burning rubber off his tires until they were nothing but metal rims, his car took off like a rocket! He was hauling ass!
Great movie and of the last great Disney villains that I can remember. Sykes and his dogs are scary and right before this scene it shows him loading up his pistol Disney would never show something like that today.
Can we talk for a second about how the chihuahua just bunny hopped this scooter like five feet into the air loaded up with like 400+ pounds of animals and people?
Shoot yeah. Einstein alone is a Great Dane, whose average weight for a male is usually 120-200 pounds. Add in the other three dogs, Fagin, and Jenny, and there you go.
@@haydencains I can only imagine that perhaps he hit a bump at _just_ the right angle to get up there. there's no way that little 3 pound chihuahua jumped a 200lb bike, and 300lbs of passengers up onto a weight cable.
@@Ray_Shabaz i wonder if the damages to his car and losing 2 dogs were really worth what fagin owed him, or if he really just completely lost his mind and was determined to finish him off as blind revenge
@@waynemacfarland1546 I think she would if the Dalmatians want to the subway instead besides she literally drove her car up a hill to rocket out of the ditch, only to collide with a tree but doe’s she stop? No she rocketed away faster then ever before with the V24 engine pumping out flames.
Ikr, yeah they were bad dogs, but at the same time they didn't deserve it. Truth is, there are no such thing as bad dogs they are bad owners + environment.
My heart always broke for Roscoe & DeSoto at the very end their little high pitch yelps of pain show they were both deep down just scared pups. I think it was meant to show mean animals aren’t ever inherently evil it’s their owners who are evil and also Disney just loves stomping on my emotions
I agree to a certain extent. It’s only when I see Oliver get thrown in the backseat with both of them that I see they are super cruel. They could have killed Oliver then and there with a single thought but probably said to themselves no we’re going to take our time and enjoy this throughly. Cruelty they no doubt picked up from their master and something that cost them dearly.
@@jordanschruder2260 another big clue as to their cruel treatment: this is probably the only entertainment they're allowed to get, because Sykes ain't giving them any. Therefore they have to make their own - Dobermans are VERY smart. It would cost them dearly.
Sykes...ruined a street lamp, crashed into a subway, pulled his break to shreds and burned the rubber off of his tires to connect with the tracks. He's no loan shark, he's a loan Megalodon.
And just like them he's now gone
@@dreameater8548 huh. Is it me, or does that rhyme?
"He's a loan megalodon,
And now he's gone."
Yeah, that was illegal driving!
Boom.
As I said earlier, it is lucky that nobody was walking down those stairs or waiting at the platform, it would have ended up with a lot of innocent deaths.
That moment when you realizeTito is the actual hero of Oliver and Company because he straight up drove that tiny scooter off the rail and saved everyone. And he's a chihuahua. woaw
Tito = a good boi who deserves treats and ear scratches.
To be honest, the movie can't decide who should be the main hero due to it having multiple protagonists, Oliver, Dodger, Fagin, or Jenny
But Tito’s More Like A Fennec Fox-
And Sykes inadvertently saved Oliver and Dodger by throwing them off of him and his car (and out of the path of the subway train.) Had he not done so, all three of them would have perished.
I had to slow down this scene because as a kid I always wondered how the heck they even shifted rails to avoid the train and kill Sykes lol
*“Hey get off my back woman, I’m driving!”*
I did NOT appreciate how funny this line was as a kid! 😂😂😂
I love that line
Now you know never to ask for directions from her. Lol.
2:32 Fatality
i loved it
@@anthonyislas5414 that why you single?
One of the best, understated aspects of the film is how simply they portray the monster inside of Sykes. He only speaks when absolutely necessary, and yet you can tell how enraged and uncontrollable he is when angered, just by the fact he breaks the gear shift stick and window of his own car.
Yeah, Sikes is slept on as a Disney villain. The dude is not romanticized with a sad backstory or anything else to make him "sympathetic" like many other Disney villains; he's legit just an ugly sociopath who will kill others because he might get some money. It's such a blunt and simple characterization that I can't help but love how much of a monster he is.
@@libRteedude WOW. I'm glad to see people still like the movie in 2022!
@@maxalotl2932 Yep, it's such an underrated Disney piece
Not to mention how he completely destroyed his tires on the tracks and didn't reach at all when his dogs are killed.
Yeah you never see his face yet you can pretty much completely see how angry he is
Back when Disney villains' were terrifying & happy endings felt earned.
@DEFCON ZERO same
@DEFCON ZERO respect
I’d say the recent terrifying one I seen was dr facilier being dragged to hell alive
mother gothel lol
@@patricioperez7323 True but it's still unclear whether or not he died
Sykes got one of the most underrated brutal villain deaths.
At least he's sleeping with the fishes
@@TheImaginator972 YOU CAN SAY THAT AGAIN
Why’s he the most underrated
How does of the brutality of the death of Sykes compare with that of Captain Hook?
@@vahe2391 😂
Legit, I always underappreciated how amazing Oliver and Dodger were here:
Jenny gets grabbed by Sykes, a man so huge that he could easily crush the life out of Oliver, but the kitten (not cat: kitten) still leaps onto Sykes' hand and fucking *bites* him. The hiss before the bite was a perfect cherry on that little muffin.
Dodger, seeing that Oliver was in danger, and despite knowing he's going up against two dogs easily twice his size, Dodger tackles one of them and forces the fight out of the back window. Bonus points for him realizing that all he had to do was duck his head and get the headscarf off.
Dodger is getting pushed onto the tracks by DeSoto, the same dog who threatened to eat Oliver at the start. Oliver jumps onto his head, knowing that he might get flown onto the tracks himself. But he obviously trusts Dodger enough to catch him in time (or he doesn't care and is willing to trade his life for Dodger's).
Then the two of them go directly after Sykes themselves so Jenny has enough time to jump to Fagin's cart to (relative) safety.
Fucking badass.
With out a doubt, this is a underrated comment
Oliver & Dodger are brave.
bro this is a cartoon
@@Luca-ee6lx 🤣🤣🤣
@@Luca-ee6lx really?! And here I am adjusting the picture on my phone. Lol
The gearstick shattering in Sykes’ grip and the wheels of the car grinding to nothing but metal against the rails are images that have stuck in my head for almost 25 years.
Glorious.
Powerful stuff.
Yeah it caused me to like GTA I guess
It's similar to the final car chase in '101 Dalmatians': The villain's (Cruella in '101,' Sykes in this) once- magnificent luxury car rapidly deteriorating over the course of the final chase symbolizing the villain's rapidly- deteriorating sanity.
"Hey you're ugly!
And you're uglier than him!
And you're ugly part 3!
And you're Revenge of the ugly!"
Kinda ironic how the villain is a loan SHARK
Jaws and its sequels
Well it is New York you only have a few choices for a villain a mobster or crooked politician or even a bad cop 👿👿👿👿
Wow what a funny joke I love Cheesy cliché Jokes that were made for Kids movies
*sykes' car begins chasing fagin and his gang with Jenny and Oliver*
Well it's New York city loan shark central
Another underrated and almost forgotten Disney movie
rw:this Disney film is never forgotten to me cause of the music,cause "Why should I and we Worry ">_O get it? ^_^
It was not disney's best film but it was definitely a good one
it's like people pretend this movie and the great mouse detective just never even existed. they're both really funny and have sweet endings =)
I'll never forget this film. It gave me my love for cats. I named my ginger 10 year old cat Oliver because of this film.
When I first watched it, I had multiple issues with this movie because of the climax isn’t great and the elements aren’t actually enjoyable compared The Great Mouse Detective, Encanto, Lady and the Tramp and Alice in Wonderland. Unlike Jenny and Oliver, all of the characters are annoying and it has the worst Disney plot ever and the animation is super bland just like The Sword in the Stone.
@@hobomike6935 Both TGMD and O&C are great Disney movies like no other in my opinion. They're the only ones I go back to on a regular basis. Many people dislike both them because of the flaws and how some of them are slow or have bad storylines, etc. I definitely see some of the flaws, the middle of TGMD in my opinion is very slow and the climax happens maybe a bit too quick in both of these, and it's kind of overwhelming. There's also some flaws in the subway segment of this one like how it's kind of difficult to tell what is happening with shaking, foreground animation, and quick shots that are difficult to see, as well as how the Brooklyn Bridge, (where Sykes' gets hit by the subway train) is inaccurate, as Subway trains were not supported by the bridge after 1944 (movie takes place in the 80's), but I can't help but love both of them kind of biasedly.
damn three deaths in less than three mins!!
Classic Disney baby!!!
Actually I used to like it When Sykes (Bad guy) got killed by the Subway, He deserved it
@@NealMouse9140
The music would fit Dante's Peak Chase scene with the Volcanic Cloud chasing the heroes as they try to escape the Volcano as it explodes.
Yeah i hate Bill Sykes
Scary thing is they happen so fast before u even grasp what happened
"Hey get off my back woman, I'm driving!" Tito is so funny! One of my favourite lines of the movie
He reminds me of someone I used to know
@@TheBeatlesShow, Tito's voice actor, Cheech Marin, was also in The Lion King (1994) & the Cars movies.
Hilarious!!!
He was very funny so Funny That I wanna shoot myself so I could stop listing him
@@joshmontemayor6098 And Cheech Marin was also on Spy Kids as Felix Gumm.
One detail I noticed about the way Roscoe and DeSoto died is that it matches with their personalities.
Roscoe, being the more level headed of the two, tried to use logical survival by hanging onto Dodger's cloth until it came off.
DeSoto, the most sadistic of the two, was torturing Dodger instead of outright killing him, and this arrogance is what caused his Death as well. Ironically, by the same cat he had picked on ay the start of the film.
I love how people notice details before I do so I can be endowed with knowledge.👍
They remind me of two characters I created in my comic series with similar personalities. They’re called The Dope Bros. Adicto is more like Roscoe while his brother Syringe is more like DeSoto. Thanks for pointing it out.
@@MalleySimpson What are you creating?
@@Jejking a comic book series
*Kitten
Oliver’s not a cat yet. He’s still a kitten. A child. Not an adult.
Only someone as insane as Bill Sykes would drive his car into a subway station and onto the tracks with his two dogs in chase of a hobo driving a scooter/shopping cart hybrid holding a bunch of dogs, a kitten and a young girl.
LuiSon he must’ve had a lot of money riding on that ransom.
Like How The Heck Can a Car roll into a underground Subway station and jump on the Tracks??? I bet It was People waiting at the station and Probably they ran from the Car.
Sykes reminds me of Rupert Thorne, boss of Gotham's criminal underworld.
Agreed!
Sykes is a dangerous man!
@@NealMouse9140
Also is the entire neighborhood and subway blind deaf and stupid How can they not see or hear that chase scene happening right outside? Yeah They're not the main focus
but this shows how useless and cowardly background characters really are
That's some angry driving Sykes was doing in this chase scene. So angry he pulled the whole gear shift off. You can't get high quality stuff like this anymore. Oliver and Company will always be a favorite because apart from the talking cat and dogs it shows a grand deal of realism.
A lot of movies nowadays aren't very realistic anymore. I get that completely. They're still good, they just don't have enough realism to be very relatable.
For me as a kid, this whole movie was made the moment he slammed it in low and sheared the tires off. The detail on the electricity was incredible too! OwO
Sykes truly is one of the scariest Disney villains: He's a loan shark/bookie/mobster who does his own enforcing and he will literally stop at nothing to get paid.
Earlier in the movie, they showed him loading a handgun.
@@TraustiGeir he’d also stoop as to murdering a child.
Jenny saw his face and his base of operations, Sykes wasn’t gonna let her go…
This whole scene gave me chills when I first saw it. Seeing Sykes willfully tear up his car and seeing it downright destroyed when a train hits it was just heartbreaking to watch. This scene was on a par with the car chase from 101 Dalmatians. Even after his death, Disney knew how to create a scary situation in a movie that ends with a heartwarming win.
Wayne MacFarlane
The only villains I feel bad for are Roscoe and DeSoto yeah they may have been villains themselves like Sykes but the way they cry out as they die doesn't help but make me feel bad.
Even Dodger and Oliver are both rightfully horrified by what happened to them.
@@katelynthewhitewerewolf6376 You know they were complete psychos (hell, had Sykes simply *not followed* Fagin's completely *insane* stunt of escaping on the metro tracks, and simply put a bounty on Fagin's head the next day, he'd have... Well, he'd be alive and gotten the last laugh, which, compared to the way things actually went down, would have been a huge win in my book), but still, these were brutal ways to go for the three of them, and ruthlessly efficient kills using the environment too.... That's hard to watch, really.
@@katelynthewhitewerewolf6376 Yeah, they may have had it coming, but hot damn, these were brutal and ruthlessly efficient environment kills. I don't blame Dodger and Oliver for feeling queasy after doing that.
@@ElodieHiras
Yeah and I would like to see The Sonic 3 Movie do a Final Battle similar to this one with Shadow Sonic Silver Tails Amy Knuckles Cream Rouge Tom Maddie and Ozzy getting chased by GUN Commander Walters into a Subway Train System with Tom driving and GUN Commander Walters as the main antagonist of Sonic 3 and Shadow being the secondary main protagonist with Sonic
@@ElodieHiras
Also how the heck is no one seeing this happening for? This would cause wittinesses to notice
When Jenny hugged Oliver and he let out that little meow I cried. ❤
I almost broke down as well.
I love the meow he makes. It’s so cute!
Me too and I still do every time.
When Dodger was carrying Oliver & that he wasn't moving, I literally thought that Oliver died for his precious Jenny in order to save her.
I was bawling my eyes out, but as soon as Jenny hugged him, he opened his eyes & meowed to her & I immediately cried tears of joy to know that Oliver was alive. This scene still makes me cry even after all these year's
How does Dodger was the hero for Oliver? I mean What the FUCK!?!?!?
I'm actually really impressed with Jenny's character. Most kids wouldn't pick up a cat they thought might be dead and start rubbing their faces against it xD
She loves Oliver. If your pet ended up getting killed all of a sudden, then you’d probably want to hold them just like Jenny.
@@spenserfarman3045 same thing on Cats and Dogs (2001).
Last hug.
I have a few close friends who love cats and I'm sure they would do the same thing if they were in Jenny's position.
Oliver’s not a cat yet. He’s still a kitten. He’s a child.
Sykes eyes of "Oh Jeez!" just as the impact happens at 2:32 (when you pause it at the right frame) is too good.
Thats a hell of a way to go in a Disney animated picture.
More like, “Oh S***”
@@JeffreyBarkdull more like "oh poop"
T'was also satisfying as hell.
I'm glad he caught his train, he was on his way to a funeral.
I love how Georgette became so frightened that she was actually able to bend the shopping cart with her paws.
Same Gag from Planes, Trains and Automobiles (1987).😄😄😄😄😄😄
Yeah, adrenaline is certainly something at times.
0:36 😂😂😂😂😂😂
I like how Sykes got confronted by a towering train.
@@kajaymajay8233 And got the death he deserved.
You know what one of the best parts about this video is?
*It's taken from the classic 1996 VHS version of the movie. Nostalgia!*
First home video release too if I'm not mistaken.
Still have my original copy. Lotta nostalgia here
I guess you could say that...
(puts on sunglasses)
...Sykes had a train to catch.
YEEEEEEUUUUUUHHHHHHH
He did made sure to cover his tracks, because that is something he was trained in his profession.
When I was a little girl watching this part I remember crying so much and holding my kitty. I remember singing that song to him. “me and you together forever you’ll see”. He’s gone now for 6years and still brings tears to my eyes thinking of him.
Animals are pretty much our family
I watched Alice in Wonderland 1985, yesterday and I realised that Alice was Jenny.
I remember when I was 4 years old and I was watching this movie several times because I loved this scene and how brutal the deaths of Roscoe, Desoto and obviously Sykes were.
Same
Dude same
Me Too
Roscoe and Desoto die of electrocution from live subway tracks while Sykes dies of collision with oncoming subway train.
Same
As much as this movie is one of my most beloved of all time...this entire scene is the literal definition of child endangerment and I knew it from a young age
I've always loved how the film's composer quotes the melodic line from "Once Upon a Time in New York City" at 1:16 and resolves it in a dissonant chord when we see the Dobermans. Really adds to this moment's intensity and horror
Me Too Mate Me Too
I haven't seen this movie in almost 20 years.. I watched it for the first time today with my niece. The way he yelled Fagin, and they way he ripped the whole gearshift off on the subway tracks gave me chills. Good, good movie. I was today years old when I found out it was made in 1988. I wish they made movies like this still.
Me too because I wasn’t even born in the ‘80’s but now I knew this movie overall since the first thing I’ve watched it from Disney+ x2 already and I love that New York City adventure
I don’t live in New York, I still lived Bay Area CA next to San Francisco. I’m kinda Filipino American already
Bill Sykes is one of the cruelest antagonists in disney movies due to him being a loan shark. Whenever he doesn't gets his way someone is going to either die or get hurt for that but he's one of the scariest characters in disney movie history and I like it
Along with Judge Frollo and Mother Gothel. They are all scary altogether, because they don't need magic powers nor are they powerful magic beings. They're just regular human beings who are willing to go to extremes to get what they want, including kidnapping and murder. What else could be scarier than knowing that a human being capable of the evil things that we know we are capable of exists in real life?
@@dafilmqueen556 Along with Madame Medusa. She straight up kidnapped an orphan to do dangerous mining and had no intention of letting her live. Unlike Cruella de Vil, there’s no real comedy behind her.
@@amandadane868,ah,I forgot about Medusa. Thanks for the reminder!
He's so underrated
One problem I have will Sykes is that he doesn't have that much screentime in the movie. He's first seen when he wants his money from Fagin, but he's not seen again until Fagin goes to his warehouse.
Best car chase scene ever made in a Disney movie!
@@livingwithautism3789 stop repeating comments
RIGHT! its so badass cool!
What about the chase scene from the 1st Toy Story movie?
@@joshmontemayor6098 oh yeah that was a really good one as well
@@joshmontemayor6098 or even better, the *second* toy story (when they're chasing with the pizza truck to the airport)
but those are pixar movies, so they don't count compared to movies that were solely disney. this is definitely one of the best they made without pixar
Every time I hear Oliver meow at Jenny, I can’t help but bawl. Scene gets me every time
Animals in real-life deserve Jenny along with Penny (the Rescuers), Anne Marie (All dogs go to Heaven), Robin (Tom and Jerry)
I literally thought Oliver died after Sykes death back then. When Dodger gave Oliver to Jenny & feared the worst, I started crying.
And when I saw his eyes opened & he meowed to Jenny, I bawled my eyes out to see that he was alive. After all these year's, this scene still gets to me.
Me too it's amplified due to the fact that I have a cat now myself
@@NOs-1991Poor kitten went through hell if only this is how the world really was . Those who suffer getting happy endings.
holy fuck i forgot that old disney killed villains.
No swearing dipdoofus
Warner Bros & Disney The Two Times Oliver & Company Was Released Into Theaters 11-18-88 & Space Jam Into Theaters 11-15-96
Bill Sykes Robert Loggia
Mr. Swackhammer Danny Devito
And the deaths would happen on the screen instead of a quick swipe away
@@zacharyloizides6453 wow what a Comparison.
Georgette was terrified of that chase. Her reaction after that chase was the reaction of scared people after they been on a rollercoaster
The chase scene would be more suited in London on the London Underground or Tube on either the Piccadilly, District or Metropolitan Lines.
@@dtaylor4552 Oliver & Company takes place in New York. Not London
@@joshualowe959 he said It would look better in london dummy
Not to mention nearly dying.
@@ryanwilson9555 Yep. Sykes & the Dobermans weren't so luck
They just don’t make movies like this anymore... and it’s truly heartbreaking
@@livingwithautism3789 you just repeated Bendy's comment
@@katelynthewhitewerewolf6376 dr facilier: hold my cards
@@patricioperez7323 Correction not since Facilier.
Yea now all they make are movies that appeal to China and to the Twitter feminists.No more talent.Just a medium to insert their stupid political agendas and identity politics.Oh and don't forgot pleasing the oh so might China.There's very little movies that are good now cause all Hollywood cares about is stuffing their "movies" with feminism propaganda rather than making actually good movies.
@@Nexalian_Gamer Why are we doing what a foreign country wants. China should worry about their own damn work, not ours!
Haven’t seen this in over 20 years, but it’s always been a movie that stuck with me, thank you
Hadn't seen it in about 16 years, until I saw it on Disney Plus in lockdown in July, and when my sister came in there was 20 minutes left, and I wasn't able to start the movie again immediately when it was over, because we worked on a marble project in our house. I watched it on VHS in October, and that time I did get to watch it twice!
I related to this guy
A death very dark,
for an evil loan shark
who had two dangerous dogs
who can scare you with their bark
@Jacob Wood what? Did you like my poem??
Lame
Not bad kid
Yeah and not to mention a mean and badass car to boot
A very dumb loan shark, I mean driving on a live subway track what could happen
I wish Disney is still making traditionally animated films.
I heard that former Disney animator Don Bluth wants to revive 2D animation
Me too. Im TIRED of animation-studios only using computers to create animated movies & tv-shows. I want more traditional animated movies too & less CGI & less flash-animated movies & tv-shows. CGI is OVERUSED nowadays in my oppinion & if theres something ive learned from Lisa Simpson from The Simpsons its that better technology dosent mean better story-telling. And i AGREE. 💙
I agree. If anyone can bring back 2D Traditional Animation, Disney could. The problem they had during the early 2000s was bad marketing, hence why great films like Atlantis, Treasure Planet, Brother Bear got overlooked. I would love to see what Disney could do now with traditional animation, and I feel they could use Disney+ to their advantage with that.
I got bad news to tell you buddy 😔
@@adska3124 What is it?
Sykes is a creepier villain than I remember watching as a kid. Probably because from a kid's point of view you just see a mean man who wants money, but as an adult you see that he's a loan shark/mafia guy and the implications of that are...scary
And Disney didn’t make him child-friendly with a song. During his meeting with Fagin at his office, you can hear him on the phone with someone discussing their methods of torture and murder.
A very realistic villain that there is someone in fagins situation in this day and age in the real life that is facing someone like Sykes
@Rachel yeah that's true. And if you listen closely at the scene when Fagin was in Sykes warehouse, you'll hear Skyes on the phone giving somebody tips on how to kill/torture somebody
Sykes Was COLD AS ICE! ANIMAL KILLER!
LISTEN HERE BILL SYKES NOBODY MESSES WITH MY PALS/FRIENDS ESPECIALLY ME!
No That's Why I'm So Tough👊🏿👊
1:15 Oliver: "Nobody's gonna hurt my Jenny!!!"
1:25 Dodger "Those dopey Dobermans aren't gonna touch my pal Oliver!!!"
2:30 train: hello b####.
@@WigWagProduction Indeed, or perhaps, "Not so tough now, eh, bud??"
I like how Oliver jumps to save Jenny and bites Sykes' hand. Shows how he goes from being a helpless kitten to a brave one. And also the fact that he KILLED DeSoto, a Doberman with razor-sharp teeth twice his size.
Claws Oliver clawing DeSoto eyes
@@jonathanbarksdale4396
Ironically DeSoto vowed "I'll be back, starting with that cat." and the same cat finished him.
@@TheLatiosnlatias02 Talk about karma.
@@christopherlewis2578
You could say that
@@TheLatiosnlatias02 It was poetic irony, that the very cat DeSoto threatened to eat ended up being the death of him. And it was fitting that Roscoe would die fighting Dodger, they were "rival alphas" and came to blows before.
2:00 I never appreciated it as a kid but now I'm watching it I love tito's chaotic good energy
RIH
Roscoe 1:35
DeSoto 1:46
and
Bill Sykes 2:31
Stephen Luke Triple Fatality
Sykes reminds me of Rupert Thorne.
Can you imagine how the engineer would've felt after the accident? He was blowing his horn in distress.
@@TheJDLonline I can just imagine the engineer of that train panicking for dear life, blaring the horn like crazy, praying that these guys will get off the tracks before he/she hits them.
@@ryanwilson9555: Unfortunately in real life, it happens all the time.🤷🏻♂️
The sad thing you realize about this movie, is that out of all of them (the animals), Oliver is gonna be the one who outlives all of them and lives into the 21st century without his pals anymore by his side
That bad?
Shut up
He’ll still have Jenny and Mr. Fagan though.
@@amandadane868 and the butler
@@robot_cg8702 no you
"Get off my back woman! I'm driving!" - favourite line
2:28 It was a pleasure doing business with you Sykes.
Fagan's debt is repaid
Fagan's debt is repaid
It is amazing that Oliver and Dodger survived that when Sykes and his two dobermans got killed.
Well he did yeet them to the sides off of him. Tossed em right onto the ledgework.
shocked
This is, without a doubt, the best scene of the movie. It's climactic and intense throughout, and they really spent time making sure that this scene is where Bill Sykes is truly a monster, who will go to any length to make sure to kill the animals and Fagin, while taking Jenny away. It also shows how aggressive he is, especially as you see him destroying his car slightly, without any care (0:56). The scene as a whole really keeps you on the edge of your seat. The events that happen during the chase keep you watching, like where Oliver and Dodger go to save Jenny and kill DeSoto and Roscoe (1:36, 1:47) , which Sykes once again, shows no care about what is happening. Sykes really has no intentions of letting Jenny go from his grip, and he is at this point downright insane (2:06). The scene, whilst already being the most intense scene in the movie by far, only gets much more intense, as the group sees the train ahead (2:12), and is only saved when they climb up on the railing of the bridge in mere seconds avoiding the train (2:26), without Oliver or Dodger, who are both accidently saved (sort of) by Sykes who throws them off of his car, who only sees the train when it's too late (2:30). This is a well deserved death for one of the more unstable villains of Disney. It's also probably one of the more screwed up. The intensity drops immensely and this death is one of the most relieving moments in Disney, I'd say. I also enjoy the cinematography and the music for the shot above the crash (2:34). Speaking of music, in this scene, without the music this scene would be entirely different. It wouldn't be the same (Major examples of intense music I have is 2:06, 1:30, 2:22, 1:01 - 1:09, and many more examples throughout.)
This scene, if it was more easy to tell what was happening, would be maybe the best climactic scene in Disney, for me. The only problem with it is that the fast shots, at least for me are difficult to tell what is happening, especially with shake and foreground details. Also notable that if I am having trouble seeing what is happening, then the directed age demographic for the movie wouldn't be having it much easier, though it is justified in some ways. With the fast shots, it makes the scene more dramatic, with shake it really puts you in the shoes of the animals/Fagin in this particular scene. Foreground adds claustrophobia to the indoor subway segment, so in my opinion, though the scene is difficult to perceive what is occurring, I think the smaller, more unnoticeable events aren't really important enough to need to be seen the first time through. The main thing you need to tell is happening is that the animals/Fagin are escaping the train and Sykes gets killed from it, which is easy to tell. Therefore, I think it works good how it is, despite the difficulty to read in some parts, most notably the indoor subway section of it, which doesn't even take up the majority of the scene, or the important major parts, besides DeSoto and Roscoe getting killed.
This scene is my personal favorite scene in my personal favorite Disney movie.
The Triplee
But even if he succeeded in murdering Dodger and his friends and family in cold blood for no reason that's not going unnoticed without anyone getting suspicious. And it's not going to get him what he wants as it's just going to get him found out and they didn't even do anything to deserve that.
Scary thing is loan sharks are still out there.
Yes true.
Are loan sharks part of the IRS??
@@joshualowe959 quite possible from the IRS. They can be anyone and all have a prison record
@@joshualowe959 no
@@joshualowe959 Probably those "IRS agents" who are nothing more than imposters.
2:17 Hey, get off my back, woman ! I'm driving !
One of my favorite lines of the movie!!!
Tito is a small fry
Save me, Alonzo!
Tito is the funniest character in this movie lmao
all these years later and I still get goosebumps and chills throughout this whole scene. I still get tears waiting to find out if Oliver lived, and even more so when it turns out he did. :-) I feel like a monster for actually feeling bad when I hear both Roscoe and De Soto whimper when they fall to their death even though they totally deserved it after what they did to dodger.
Yeah i think so too but than i remember they were trained to behave the way it wasn't totally their fault.
@@icecreamkitty2735 agreed 💯, SCREW YOU SYKES!!!😡
Shoutout to Fagin's incredible arm strength, able to grab that lampost and 180 not only the weight of his bike, but another passenger and a pack of dogs!
I love how towards the end of the rescue both dodge and Oliver jumped on Sykes to get him to let go of her ankle
This whole damage cost Sykes more than the money from Fagin is worth it ... :D
I forget how much did he owe him?
Sykes was after Jenny, he had actually pardoned Fagin's debt after kidnapping her for a huge ransom (probably many times the amount Fagin owed him).
I honestly feel bad for the dobermans. It’s not their fault they were trained by an evil owner.
Same
Who's Dobermans
@@sayedabdullahjawad6662 Sykes. The villain.
@@phangirl90 oh I thought it was the dogs
@@sayedabdullahjawad6662 the dogs are the Dobermans.
Tito was so funny in this classic, at 2:03 he was acting like a motorcycle skipping gears 😂😂
When I was younger I didn't know what Sykes was talking about but now that I'm older he is one of the scariest Disney villains.
He defently killed one before or more. I think thats why he has to Die because even in prison he would be a threat for fagin
2:17 - "Get off my back woman! I'm driving!" This scene never gets old 😂😂😂
Me: fucking LOL, Tito!😂
Not the best disney movie, but this is probably one of the best chase scenes ever and it gives me chills every time
That chase reminds me of watching Bond films
I tear up everytime Oliver leaps and bites Sykes
If you freeze-frame at just the right moment when the train hits the car, you can just barely make out a shape in the fire, like Sikes' screaming face
Man, seeing Sykes' car get slightly damaged and then downright destroyed always hurts to watch. That Lincoln Continental is an honestly beautiful, yet very expensive car, and seeing it get slightly torn apart, its gear shift broken off, its tires shredded, its windows shattered, and then the whole car itself literally smashed to pieces after an oncoming train hits it are all just heartbreaking to watch. These are reasons why I think Bill Sykes should NOT have a driver's license. He's too reckless when it comes to driving. As Matthew Broderick once said, "A man with priorities so far out of whack doesn't deserve such a fine automobile."
Well said and it's thanks to this movie that I have a love for the 70's models of the lincoln continental. Just watching such a beautiful piece of automotive art and history just get damaged and down right destroyed is just ow I love Sykes' car before this scene happens but as disney does best this car is seen somewhere else with a good owner and jasper and whoris' van/truck had the same thing happened to it but anywho it is painful to watch a good looking car demolished
@@jazzykingjack2846 Like I said, and I quote Matthew Broderick, "A man with priorities so far out of whack doesn't deserve such a fine automobile."
@@jazzykingjack2846 Imagine if Sykes jumped from his car before the train hit it and he saw it get demolished, he'd be like, "MY CAR!!! MY BEAUTIFUL CAR!!!"
3:37-3:41 all of us as kids after this scene was over
Heck yeah
Still one of the most underrated and brutal deaths in all of Disney.
True
Im having memories of watching this movie with my dad, who sadly passed away on monday
Condolences to you, hope you had good memories. ❣🌹
I watched this after 32 years, such a great movie then and now. 0
2:56 had me bawling my eyes out as a child, and still hits me, 25 years later.
We truly don't deserve cats or dogs.
I remember when i was 21,10 years old i started watching this video with pleasure!
Most 80's Disney animated movie ever
Yep it was already
I don't know what a D-2 gear does, but when Sykes shifted to that gear and floored that gas pedal all the way and burning rubber off his tires until they were nothing but metal rims, his car took off like a rocket! He was hauling ass!
Great movie and of the last great Disney villains that I can remember. Sykes and his dogs are scary and right before this scene it shows him loading up his pistol Disney would never show something like that today.
Can we talk for a second about how the chihuahua just bunny hopped this scooter like five feet into the air loaded up with like 400+ pounds of animals and people?
Shoot yeah. Einstein alone is a Great Dane, whose average weight for a male is usually 120-200 pounds. Add in the other three dogs, Fagin, and Jenny, and there you go.
On top of Fagin bunny hopping it down into the subway station and on to the tracks themselves
@@haydencains I can only imagine that perhaps he hit a bump at _just_ the right angle to get up there. there's no way that little 3 pound chihuahua jumped a 200lb bike, and 300lbs of passengers up onto a weight cable.
@@hobomike6935 I have no idea either
@@haydencains Tito thought very carefully
This is such an old movie I love it
Sykes was literally driving like a madman.
He's got very angry.
Swackhammer Was Insanely Driving Like A Raving Loon
Cause he is no correction WAS a madman
More like an angry man
Sykes Was COLD AS ICE!
Roscoe’s Death 1:35
DeSoto’s Death 1:45
Bill Sykes’ Death 2:32
0:38 He’s Crazy!!!😱😱😱
Most definitely 0^0
How evil and sadistic can a person like Sykes be to go THAT far?
That is destruction of city owned property right there
@@Ray_Shabaz i wonder if the damages to his car and losing 2 dogs were really worth what fagin owed him, or if he really just completely lost his mind and was determined to finish him off as blind revenge
I wonder why the police didn't chase after him
Sykes studied at the Cruella de Ville driving school.
Or Madame Medusa
Except Cruella didn't drive her car through a subway like Sykes did. Neither did Madame Medusa.
@@waynemacfarland1546 I think she would if the Dalmatians want to the subway instead besides she literally drove her car up a hill to rocket out of the ditch, only to collide with a tree but doe’s she stop? No she rocketed away faster then ever before with the V24 engine pumping out flames.
@@mobythemerpup1515
Speaking of Subway, Edgar (Aristocats) went in there for split seconds
Can’t help but feel bad for Roscoe and Desoto.
Ikr, yeah they were bad dogs, but at the same time they didn't deserve it. Truth is, there are no such thing as bad dogs they are bad owners + environment.
What a simp
My favorite childhood movie 🍿 🎥
I will always love this movie 🍿 one of my FAVORITES
1:35
Nostalgia Critic:
You know, FOR KIDS!
Dogs getting electricuted
A man getting hit by a subway train.
Fuck critic!
I felt like being penguinz0
My heart always broke for Roscoe & DeSoto at the very end their little high pitch yelps of pain show they were both deep down just scared pups.
I think it was meant to show mean animals aren’t ever inherently evil it’s their owners who are evil and also Disney just loves stomping on my emotions
I agree to a certain extent. It’s only when I see Oliver get thrown in the backseat with both of them that I see they are super cruel. They could have killed Oliver then and there with a single thought but probably said to themselves no we’re going to take our time and enjoy this throughly. Cruelty they no doubt picked up from their master and something that cost them dearly.
@@jordanschruder2260 another big clue as to their cruel treatment: this is probably the only entertainment they're allowed to get, because Sykes ain't giving them any. Therefore they have to make their own - Dobermans are VERY smart. It would cost them dearly.
Singlehandedly one of the greatest action climaxes Disney ever made.
We won't see movies like this anymore 😔
0:58 F-Zero GX Mr EAD Subway Race
0:17 Tito is just hilarious. He's great comic relief.
He does some pretty good driving too when he saves everybody.
This traumatized the FUCK outta me as a kid. My little brain was not prepared for stakes this high in a fuckin cartoon movie lol.
R.I.P. William Bill Sykes 1927-1988.
see death car crash 2:29
That bad boy sacrificed his life!
Taken From Oliver and Company 2002 VHS
0:14 Man, Sykes was PISSED when he shouted, "FAGIN!!!" at the top of his lungs!
This scene is so intense every time I watch it
Oliver's one brave, little kitty.
And Tito is one brave little dog as he saved everyone from that oncoming train
Dodger is one brave dog to save Oliver from the two Doberman.
This was epic. This was when Disney had guts
this scene must have given CinemaSins a heart attack
I haven,t sen this Movie FOR SOOO LONG. And i still love it 🥰
I always cried in this scene. I found it to be really sad. But with a happy ending. xxxx ☺ ☺ 💓 💓
0:55 *When I go for my first drivers license test*
Oh you pull a SpongeBob and floor it!
Haha
I don’t wanna be like Sykes
rip the shifters
I love it when Disney villains get very pissed near the end of the movie.
I aint crying my eyes are just sweating 😭😭😭
Absolutely love this movie! It's so underrated...but it's loveable. It truly is too bad we don't get movies like this anymore...
Also really digging the use of 2D visuals 3D effects. Makes it somehow satisfying to watch.
i love this scene ❤
Oliver and his best friend dodger vs the Evil Bill Sykes