The scene with all of the supers holding each other's hands made me cry. Something about them all mourning the death of a close friend and fellow super while comforting each other is so sad. I wish this scene would have stayed in the movie
The fate of Gazer-Beam could have happened to any hero, it would have happened to every hero. Those that define themselves in action are never comfortable while at idle. Gazer-Beam worked with them, helped his fellow man, and most likely saved lives. To lose such a kindred spirit is to lose a part of one’s self.
It would of gone great before they went to the game, maybe a day or so before the underminer attack, it would of been another cool opening, though Dickers scene erasing the boys mind was also cool to see return as well, Gazorbeam was the one in the end that helped Mr Incredible find out what happened to the other supers
Finally a scene where they acknowledge how bad Syndrome was. It was basically a superhero genocide through exploiting the superheroes' desire to bring the old days. Wish they kept it.
@@lewisaino to be fair she would have been what I presume as a high priority target if known. So she probably isn’t commonly known and Syndrome didn’t know of her
I wouldn’t really call it a genocide, as he wasn’t wanting to outright exterminate every single super. He just wanted to test his machine on the strongest supers he knew about, to see if it could kill his intended target, Mr Incredible. All of those supers were just victims of a psychotic murderer. He even said that he wanted to sell his technology so that everyone could be super, and in doing so no one would be. He has a grudge against supers but he has a unilateral hatred for Mr Incredible
@@TheOriginalPoon he basically just wanted to kill off the supers because of Mr. Incredible, but he realized he didn't have to _kill_ all the supers to achieve his goal
@The_boyz452 ! After over a decade waiting, it's kinda hard to accept THAT was the best Brad Bird could come up with. Unless the heads at Disney/Pixar wouldn't allow him to be more adult and screwed his vision.
Gazer beam's death not only saved mr. Incredible, it potentially saved the world. His corpse hid mr incredible when the drones were after him. And with his dying breath, he carved out the password to syndrome's computer. Without that, Mr incredible would likely have never discovered syndromes plot.
How did he know the password though? Also, in the time that passed, did Syndrome or his men not bother checking the crime scene, and realizing to change their damn password?
I don’t think it’s a fake skeleton I think it’s a goons skeleton, and I believe that gazer beam might be goon on the island and to really think about it, we only see that gazerbeam is Injured now not saying the last bit could have show him dying but still it’s a sketching so we only guess if he was just putting his head down. And remember how his suit was very torn I think to believe that he used a piece to cover the womb , he maybe he was found by a goon to fight it him and kill him ( not intentionally) and by his beams he could have blazed off the flesh to be only bone left ( which sounds dark but the movie is dark already) and give the skeleton a ripped piece of his suit beamed out KRONOS on the wall to help further coming supers and since it’s very easy to break back into the laboratory’s he could snuck back in and pretended to be a guard since him and the others have similar chin lines and helped in the background while mr.incredible was there or could had a plan to take Down syndrome from the background at any given chance but incredible came around a time when started pretending. It’s sound pretty far fetched but to be honest it would probably be a hard plan to come up with you have nothing to use after being defeated the first time round, and maybe he was taking care of things (taking down the robots and laboratory) on the island while syndrome was in the city Still far fetched but I figured since your like the more recent person to say something On this topic I thought it would be a cool thing to share thoughts :)
I’m actually mad this scene got deleted . It carries a lot of the maturity and sublimeness that the second movie lacked compared to the first. Also having a brief nod to Syndrome would’ve been so cool.
its weird looking at most animation there was definitely a shift in the higher ups around 2006 or maybe it was the new creators that finally went into the industry. After ratatouille animation definitely lacked the subtle notes of 'adult moments,' it all become very played down in favour of puns and watered down jokes that would have more appeal to children first and foremost. I think a huge part of that shift was creators coming in with alot of there childhood being mostly anime and 90s toons, just a clear path of each generation of animators being more and more inspired by purely animation and not outside references like hollywood's 50-60-70's blockbusters. Current animation really pushes that thought for me personally, like while i love this rebirth of noodle arm and dynamic animation i think alot of that is a result of animators feeling unfulfilled with the inspiration they draw from, so they look back at the start of animation which was purely driven by the animators drive to experiment, 3d was such a foreign territory until recently. With that out fo the way and most in the industry being quite experienced, hopefully we come full circle this decade and see versatility and scripts that deserve a movie
@@hued2542 Coco and Soul are really the only two Pixar movies since Up that have had any sort of maturity to them. Inside Out was close but I think it's weaker compared to Coco/Soul. There may be hope for Pixar at least, Pete Docter recently said they weren't doing any sequels for awhile and focusing on original films for Disney+. Since it's for streaming and not theaters, as well as new, younger and fresher directors taking the helm, we may see a new batch of animated films from Pixar that take risks and have maturity and adult moments to them that aren't random jokes that go over kid's heads. Luca looks like it's going to be very down to earth and emotional, and Turning Red has promise. I hope that we can return to an era of animation where films aren't made solely for children- animation is not a "kid's genre", it's a *medium* that can do anything and everything. Adult animation doesn't just have to be sex jokes and swears, animated movies don't have to be fart jokes and loud noises for easy laughs- I really do believe that the new generations of animators will help push a change for more mature and "all-ages" animations. (That said I'd also love for 2D films to make a mainstream return) I'm an animator right now at the start of my career, and the project I'm working on now feels like a step in the right direction for that goal. Hopefully someday I can make something of my own that'll speak to people of all ages, not just one group.
This film is a complete failure of a sequel. It feels like Disney was actively trying to ditch every element from the original incredibles asn created this forgettable amalgam. A complete aesthetic and tonal failure of a sequel from the largest film company on earth
I think it would be too sad to be the first scene, also it happens after the battle with the Underminer, so I think it would be better after the main titles.
@@Alejandroigarabide To be fair Pixar hasn't been too shy about doing sad scenes in the past. Also it would've been a nice little recap on what happened in the first film.
@@PipeGuy64Bit Well, on one hand you have a good point. On the other hand, even Finding Nemo and Up with their dramatic prologues give us some light-hearted imagery before the death of the wives.
@@Alejandroigarabide Yeh I getcha. Though I remember that scene in Finding Nemo kinda slamming into the audience like a brick wall but I understand the point still.
The second movie never addressed that VERY RECENTLY, Bob and Helen learned that a lot of their old friends had been MURDERED. It never came up and it should have hung over this film like a shadow
It’s a kid movie the first one was still a kids movie but was also aimed at little bit older audience I mean I would been shocking if parents took their kids to see this movie and then had to explain the concept of death and all that however that doesn’t mean I wouldn’t have wanted in the movie just saying why it wouldn’t happen
@@criscabrera9098 I mean death still comes up in the second movie, and that’s what made the first one so beloved, it doesn’t hold back and respects its audience, those make the best “kids” films, this scene just reminds me of the first one, wish it was included
I think overall the second movie really messes up how adult oriented the first one was. Cause the first one was funny to kids but for adults it sometimes very relatable since having kids and having a marriage was shown pretty realistic with the good parts but also the bad parts. The second one sadly was more a superhero movie with family aspects than a realistic family movie in a superhero setting.
@@Ulymaldo Also the first one had a man trying to commit suicide and they used sentences like “I saved your life!” “No you ruined my death”, which I as a kid for the most part ignored but jeez it is pretty dark for a kids movie
@@mediatorraptor3349 Other than the fact that he was completely sidelined for most of the X-Men movies in favor of Wolverine and got less and less screen time until Apocalypse? He's supposed to be the fearless leader of the X-Men but all we got was a whiny crybaby whose girlfriend was stolen by Hugh Jackman.
Kroxldyphivcs yeah I always hated that about the fox movies. It felt really cringe when they started to push mystique as the leader, as if he never existed. We can only hope the MCU does him justice
Apparently, Gazerbeam died of his injuries when he fell off a cliff during his battle with the Omnidroid. There’s a deleted scene that shows this. You’re right that an Omnidroid would be unable to fit inside the cave. You bring up a good point as to why his body was not removed or why his carving wasn't erased by Syndrome, yet it is likely he made no attempt to look for his body, similarly to how he presumed Mr. Incredible was dead after his gauntlet probe reported no life readings back to him.
@@imdanumber1 like I thought one of syndromes modified weapons like that drone followed and found gazer beam inside the cave somehow and disintegrated him until he was just bones
Honestly shocked this wasn't included. The first Incredibles was one of Pixar's most mature films and the second one feels considerably lighter without scenes like this one.
Makes me wonder how much other supers kept in contact with each other after going underground. Like Mr. Incredible and Fro-zone did, but I guess Mr. Incredible and Gazer-beam didn't?
@@heythatguyalex I think the objective of Syndrome was to capitalize on supers going underground. A lot of supers might not have had a chance to keep in contact because they were wiped out so quick.
@@jakelee7083It's said Gazerbeam was an outcast and likely resorted back to his old ways in hiding, however judging by the fact the massacres happened over 15 years and especially he was declared missing almost immediately before Mr Incredibles assignment he was likely murdered and didn't get noticed until Mr Incredible found the body.
But then we wouldn't get such important scenes with raccoon fights, Mr. Incredible having to figure out how to parent his kids despite being a parent for years, Jack Jack Attacks again, and redoing Violet's crush subplot.
The best part of the first movie was when Elasta Girl had a somber conversation with her kids about how the could be killed if they weren't careful and that this wasn't like Saturday Morning Cartoon villians. This scene has that same heaviness and it's what the 2nd movie needed
Something that wasn't immediately obvious about Gazerbeam was that he actually managed to destroy TWO Omnidroid variants in a row before being mortally wounded by the third one he faced. He was the only other Super who actually had that achievement outside the Incredibles.
How do you know that? In the scene where they show the terminations, gazerbeam and a few others were heavily zoomed in to show how close Those supers were to Incredible
@@lettuce1626 @Lettuce When the screen zooms in to Gazerbeam's name, the "Terminated" ping actually rings three times as it pans to Gazerbeam's portrait, the third one being Gazerbeam's death. This means that Gazerbeam was responsible for two repeated Omnidroid kills before the third one killed Gazerbeam.
Come to think of it, after Gazerbeam took out the second one he must have been at least a little suspicious of where the droids were coming from, if not completely clued-in. He probably went poking around in Syndrome's lair when he got the chance, which explains how he knew the password. Imagine how terrified Syndrome was when he realized that the guy who just took out two of his droids might be getting suspicious. He was probably racing to get that next omnidroid ready and get rid of Gazerbeam before all his plans were blown wide open.
Another detail I found in this clip was at 1:58 you can see the final Omnidroid that killed him was the 6th version. Notice the spherical shape and 3 legs. Which means Gazerbeam actually destroyed Omnidroids versions 4 and 5 and Gamma Jack actually destroyed version 6 and was killed by version 7. That scene where Mr. Incredible discovers Operation Kronos had a ton of computer errors
This makes the scene where Mr.Incredible finds GB's corpse even sadder. It wasn't just a superhero icon. It was somebody that only became a superhero because of him. GazerBeam would have never even become a superhero if Mr.Incredible hadn't taken him under his wing and helped him realize that he could do good for the world. And if he had never become a super, Syndrome wouldn't have had his sights on him.
Good grief this scene hits like a brick, it shows that Gazerbeam wasn't just a skeleton and a name. He was Simon Paladino, and he was Lucius and Bob's friend.
It also showed that the wider community reached out to help and be inclusive in a time when being something Other was often frowned on, and that they are stronger together rather than seperate to get preyed on.
Man, this scene NEEDED to be in the film. I'm bummed how the death of 20 superheroes and Gazerbeam, one of Mr Incredible's closest friends was just tossed away and never brought up again by anyone, considering how dark and evil of a deed it was and nobody even seemed to know about it besides Bob and Syndrome's henchmen. Also kind of unsatisfying how Syndrome was never mentioned ever again.
Can’t believe they made a hero that died in the first movie who we didn’t even see besides his corpse into a Character that is Unique and a Backstory which fits “Incredibly” Well
@@alfonsoramos3527 to be fair that was simply one of the last straws we were shown. There could possibly have been other factors we have no clue about to top it off.
@@potatoexe5410 Yeah. I find it hard to believe that Bob was the only one making mistakes that brought bad public opinion on them. A public that reliant on super heroes probably wouldn't have shunned ALL of them for the deeds of just one, at least not for long.
@Nine One One I do agree Cyclops is a clever name but I've spoken to many people who actually didn't understand why Cyclops was called that meanwhile Gazer-Beam is pretty self explanatory
@Nine One One Yeah, it is true, it's a curious fact of the Spanish translation. I think that Cyclops does not fit that well because that name was already taken by the character of X-Men, I would stay with Gazarbeam too.
I wish this wasn't deleted. What I've been thinking is this: It be used to open a cartoon show about the Incredibles. I think the Incredibles should get a show like Big Hero 6 did. The sequel set down the necessary foundations for one. And this would be a great opening.
whats really sad is that you realize he had a life, a family, something to live for. and yet, despite all odds, he had his rightfull place in the world. When his place was removed, he just . . . died.
As I see it, purpose is something that surpasses the temporary nature of life. Family is great and worthwhile, but it’s still a job; and like any job, it comes to an end. Or at least you end up giving minimal support. To do something that gives you a lifelong purpose is something no one else can give you. Find your passion and purpose, only than can the effort you put into life becomes something worth living for.
This scene is so raw and emotional, I can't believe it didn't make it into the final cut. The holding of hands at the funeral; Gazerbeam's life story; Helen and Bob reluctantly packing away their super suits as they settle their family into a normal life. Disney really injected so much substance into a supporting character AND the main characters in this one scene and just threw it away. Truly, TRULY tragic.
I think they should do a series about all of the Supers that were "Terminated". The beginning would be how they became a Super and finish when Marage approaches them.
@@tunacap children deserve more than bright colors and explosions in their media. I was a kid when I saw the first Incredibles, and I loved all the dark moments the best. All the mature and emotional moments helped me and others form a firmer understanding of those concepts later. We need more movies and shows like this Pixar's Soul is a fine example
This funeral scene is truly Pixar-level writing here! This scene should've been included in the sequel from the very start. I hope one day Gazerbeam's way of life and tragic death will be shown onscreen in the upcoming Incredibles threequel.
Honestly if this was kept in, it you've deepened so many concepts in the movies. How supes other that the Parrs felt about not being superheroes anymore, set the idea of superheroes coming back into society. It even recontextualizes Gazerbeam's character into not only an acquaintence of Bob from the "good old days" into an actual teammate, companion, family friend, someone close to Bob and a beloved member of the superhero community as well as giving more insight into how those born with superpowers see the world and how hiding has left them. Moments like this is what the sequel sorely needed
It’s funny how the Cyclops character is Shaffer from the spotlight they deserve... whether it be Disney or FOX or even the recent comics, Cyclops as a whole has been pushed to the sidelines ):
At 1:56-1:58 that was syndrome watching the fight on the island and it look he was inside the base. Also yay this since should be in the 2nd flim. Like it would show how supers lifes were hard. Mr.Incredible finding out after they went underground later found that all his friends/supers got killed. What worse the world wants them gone.
Probably (for movie drama) he would have gotten none, since he was on his privately owned island and as far as he could claim, they should never have been there in the first place. It would have been a heart wrenching scene as the Incredibles were forced to watch him walk free, smirking at them, thinking of the next chance he’ll have to grab their baby.
When they mentioned Syndrome drawing in the superheroes I think I'd almost like to hear the names of them again, pointing out how he started with those with the fewest powers and worked his way up, making his machine more durable, both as a compliment to Gazerbeam being high on the list and also to see the audience and the other supers reaction to the names of the other fallen heroes, it'd go well with the supers holding each others hands
The underminer was a good ending and beginning to a movie but I agree. They both had their ups and downs. The Underminer one led straight into the last movie but this would be a nice somber moment on a mostly upbeat and goofy movie
I think it would’ve been good if they had done a marvel kinda thing, where they end with this, but there’s an end credits scene, that shows a shortened version of the ending of the first movie. That way they can still Segway into the second movie
@@ΑΡΙΣΤΟΤΕΛΗΣΛΑΧΑΝΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ it wasn’t bad, but it was just a superhero movie unlike the first one that had consequences with living with superheroes. All in all the first one had a deeper story.
2:54 I always knew Violet was the most intelligent of the family but reading War and Peace at that young is incredible . Edit: I just realized I made a pun.
@@JohnLeeDoes most of the chars who appear are already modeled and modeling characters isn't as time consuming or expensive as drawings. That said, Disney and pixar have been very conservative in their approach of dark tone in their movies, i wouldn't discard the possibility that they were just feeling this could be too dark for a pg movie.
Gazerbeam’s death was probably the saddest to Mr Incredible. He was the one who helped him join the group and gave him his name. He practically raised him into being a superhero, and was also to some extent the cause of his death
I'll never understand why this scene was scrapped.... its such a strong introduction that nods to the first movie and its characters/supers while paving the way for the 2nd's plot.
I don't know why this was cut from the second film. This would've set everything up almost perfectly. Wouldn'tve fixed a lit of issues with it, but wiuld've been an amazing set-off for the story; really get the theme started.
This was a very sweet and tragic moment, even though I personally didn't see it fitting anywhere in the second movie. I pray that a potential third movie furthers the worldbuilding by giving us more info on the glory days and showing us how deep the impact Syndrome left with their deaths. Gazerbeam was just one of many.
I adore the fact that, through an in depth view of The Incredibles, we have all developed and even bigger deal of respect for someone as Gazerbeam. I truly love how important he has become to all this story. This scene encompasses it, truly.
Gazerbeam was definitely my favorite character. Although he didn’t have much screen time I really liked his costume and his powers. This helped to give me a better insight toward what type of civilian and hero he was. Rest In Peace Simon J Paladino, AKA Gazerbeam
I was an outcast for a while with severe mental issues until I started working with a bunch of oddballs. Now I consider them family, I’m living a comfortable like in my new home and a stable outcome with newly gained self confidence, and purpose of helping people in my work. I feel very, very lucky. Even though gazerbeam perished, he still had purpose, with the help of his “family”
@@markerikson7423 sure it would. Immediately after defeating syndrome they hold the memorial since it's still close enough to his death to be believable and go back into hiding then they come back for the events of 2. It wouldn't make sense for them to wait for ALL of the even of 2 to talk place and THEN hold the memorial for something that happens quite possibly months ago
I understand why this scene was removed (it’s a bit tangent to the flow of plot points), but it’s still a great scene, and I really appreciate the melancholy tone they put into it. Woulda brought emotional weight to the deaths of the heroes in the movie
Another thing, it was really cool to have to super hero’s restored and the only supers left from the glory days are incredible elstagirl and frozone but now we have new supers. The NSA can be now known as the New NSA. Never forgetting the previous supers and keeping the legacy.
Gazerbeam was my childhood hero. Growing up I didn't read any marvel or DC comics. The only super heroes I knew were the ones from the Incredibles. and Gazerbeam was my idle. Learning more about him here...What a great man he actually was...It hits pretty hard.
The movie needed this It gets you close to the supers, and shows you how they still hide Its good to see Gazerbeam again, and to see the supers there comforting each others This should nit have been cut out More scenes like this was what the movie needed
It would be interesting at Disney Plus made an Incredibles prequel television show based on how they got their powers and I think they should have the show on for at least three or four seasons and the final episode should lead to where Mr Incredible proposes to Elastigirl
Crazy how when I was younger I didn’t realize the Gravity of the situation with syndrome. He almost mass murdered the supes just because of Mr incredible shunning him. He took advantage of there dreams of still wanting to feel super. Mr incredible probably felt a great bit of responsibility for all his comrades dying
And then it cuts to 15 years after the events of the first movie, am Earthquake is shattering a bridge (or building), people are running in fear, and right as rubble is about to fall on a citezen, a devilish creature shatters it, protecting them. The creature turns into a human, with the citezen giving their thanks. The super turns around, wearing the Incredible suit, and flees the scene before any law enforcement arrives. As they make their getaway and the police and ambulance show up, we see a figure in a dark suit and blond hair watch. In an instant, they zoom away to.. Title Card
The second movie needed more scenes like this. Losing a year of development hurt the overall product, which was enjoyable but nowhere near as good as the first film.
the scene of him crawling into the cave, leaving the message for some other unfortunate superhero to read was exceptional. ithis whole scene builds Gazerbeam's character realy well, and it ties into the scene of Mr. Incredible finding his message in the cave; like he knew him well enough to discover it.
0:53 Is that Gamma Jack? Damn, when he was among the "terminated" list, i thought Mr. Incredible was just mourning the death of another fellow super, the fact that he was a close acquaintance must have hurt a lot. Also, i like how Edna has such a humble-looking store, interesting to see the fashion designer/former supersuit maker's beginnings
This is what made the first movie a masterpiece of animation, the tone, yeah, is a colorful superhero movie, but that doesn’t necessary imply that the themes will be happy stuff and funny moments, moments of tragedy like this is what makes the movie feel real and human, you connect so well with the characters, you understand their suffering and you actually suffer with them, the first movie wasn’t afraid of showing this dark aspects and that’s one of the main reasons why is so amazing. The second movie needed this scene, to remind us that the colorful superheroes we see on screen are people like us. I wish Pixar had the guts to add dark tones if necessary, you must go with everything to make a masterpiece.
The scene with all of the supers holding each other's hands made me cry. Something about them all mourning the death of a close friend and fellow super while comforting each other is so sad. I wish this scene would have stayed in the movie
Same
It felt so real
I honestly think they should’ve kept this scene. 😔😔😔😔😔
The fate of Gazer-Beam could have happened to any hero, it would have happened to every hero. Those that define themselves in action are never comfortable while at idle. Gazer-Beam worked with them, helped his fellow man, and most likely saved lives. To lose such a kindred spirit is to lose a part of one’s self.
It would of gone great before they went to the game, maybe a day or so before the underminer attack, it would of been another cool opening, though Dickers scene erasing the boys mind was also cool to see return as well, Gazorbeam was the one in the end that helped Mr Incredible find out what happened to the other supers
Finally a scene where they acknowledge how bad Syndrome was. It was basically a superhero genocide through exploiting the superheroes' desire to bring the old days. Wish they kept it.
I wonder if he would have hunted Edna.
@@lewisaino to be fair she would have been what I presume as a high priority target if known. So she probably isn’t commonly known and Syndrome didn’t know of her
@@lewisaino He probably would only do to see if she has records on the heroes and their identities.
I wouldn’t really call it a genocide, as he wasn’t wanting to outright exterminate every single super.
He just wanted to test his machine on the strongest supers he knew about, to see if it could kill his intended target, Mr Incredible.
All of those supers were just victims of a psychotic murderer. He even said that he wanted to sell his technology so that everyone could be super, and in doing so no one would be. He has a grudge against supers but he has a unilateral hatred for Mr Incredible
@@TheOriginalPoon he basically just wanted to kill off the supers because of Mr. Incredible, but he realized he didn't have to _kill_ all the supers to achieve his goal
Gazerbeams was a hero by leaving Mr. Incredible a clue. His death and legacy wasn't in vain.
He saved his mentor's life leaving that clue since it was Mr. Incrodible, Frozone and Gamma Jack that helped him become a hero
He got the last laugh.
@@lewisaino This clue help Mr. Incredible to find out the villain's plans
2:08-2:17 disney pixar gli incredibili
Hold on, it’s been awhile since I watched this movie, explain who gazerbeam was and who’s mentor he is or what is going on? Pls
This is what the 2nd movie needed, somber and melancholy moments to contrast the rest of the film's tone.
AGREED
@@artof99 it was trash
@The_boyz452 ! After over a decade waiting, it's kinda hard to accept THAT was the best Brad Bird could come up with. Unless the heads at Disney/Pixar wouldn't allow him to be more adult and screwed his vision.
@The_boyz452 !
It really wasn’t.
@@APinchofBazel It was good, quit exaggerating.
Gazer beam's death not only saved mr. Incredible, it potentially saved the world.
His corpse hid mr incredible when the drones were after him. And with his dying breath, he carved out the password to syndrome's computer. Without that, Mr incredible would likely have never discovered syndromes plot.
Thank god for him
How did he know the password though? Also, in the time that passed, did Syndrome or his men not bother checking the crime scene, and realizing to change their damn password?
@@gbrogo7139 he probably found it somehow but they probably didn’t change it because they didn’t think anyone would know it
@@gbrogo7139 He could see through walls and clothes. He could probably see into the computer room.
It’s official, we need a Disney+ short of Gazorbeam infiltrating Syndromes base
2:00 I never really realized how sad his death was. He was all alone in that dark cold cave, knowing very well no one's coming to help him.
but he had enough HOPE that he used what little energy he had left...to leave that clue.
Those are the thoughts sequels should bring forward to audiences.
This scene proves that Gazerbeam's death in the cave is real, because a lot of people were speculating that that was a fake Gazerbeam skeleton.
I don’t think it’s a fake skeleton I think it’s a goons skeleton, and I believe that gazer beam might be goon on the island and to really think about it, we only see that gazerbeam is Injured now not saying the last bit could have show him dying but still it’s a sketching so we only guess if he was just putting his head down.
And remember how his suit was very torn I think to believe that he used a piece to cover the womb , he maybe he was found by a goon to fight it him and kill him ( not intentionally) and by his beams he could have blazed off the flesh to be only bone left ( which sounds dark but the movie is dark already) and give the skeleton a ripped piece of his suit beamed out KRONOS on the wall to help further coming supers and since it’s very easy to break back into the laboratory’s he could snuck back in and pretended to be a guard since him and the others have similar chin lines and helped in the background while mr.incredible was there or could had a plan to take Down syndrome from the background at any given chance but incredible came around a time when started pretending.
It’s sound pretty far fetched but to be honest it would probably be a hard plan to come up with you have nothing to use after being defeated the first time round, and maybe he was taking care of things (taking down the robots and laboratory) on the island while syndrome was in the city
Still far fetched but I figured since your like the more recent person to say something On this topic I thought it would be a cool thing to share thoughts :)
@@mr.aaronworld8194 he used all his energy to spell out kronos and the beam probably burnt his Injured body
@@atomic-art injured his body enough to turn into a skeleton?
@@mr.aaronworld8194 idk syndrome could have also just thrown away the body and kept the skeleton to taunt people that got into his cave
@@mr.aaronworld8194 he was tooinjured, died and decomposed, what don´t people get about it ?
I’m actually mad this scene got deleted . It carries a lot of the maturity and sublimeness that the second movie lacked compared to the first. Also having a brief nod to Syndrome would’ve been so cool.
its weird looking at most animation there was definitely a shift in the higher ups around 2006 or maybe it was the new creators that finally went into the industry. After ratatouille animation definitely lacked the subtle notes of 'adult moments,' it all become very played down in favour of puns and watered down jokes that would have more appeal to children first and foremost. I think a huge part of that shift was creators coming in with alot of there childhood being mostly anime and 90s toons, just a clear path of each generation of animators being more and more inspired by purely animation and not outside references like hollywood's 50-60-70's blockbusters. Current animation really pushes that thought for me personally, like while i love this rebirth of noodle arm and dynamic animation i think alot of that is a result of animators feeling unfulfilled with the inspiration they draw from, so they look back at the start of animation which was purely driven by the animators drive to experiment, 3d was such a foreign territory until recently. With that out fo the way and most in the industry being quite experienced, hopefully we come full circle this decade and see versatility and scripts that deserve a movie
@@hued2542 well, there is soul that was just released. It’s not my favorite animation, but it definitely does a good job of having adult themes
@@hued2542 in many ways wall-e was the last of the really good Pixar films
@@hued2542 Coco and Soul are really the only two Pixar movies since Up that have had any sort of maturity to them. Inside Out was close but I think it's weaker compared to Coco/Soul.
There may be hope for Pixar at least, Pete Docter recently said they weren't doing any sequels for awhile and focusing on original films for Disney+. Since it's for streaming and not theaters, as well as new, younger and fresher directors taking the helm, we may see a new batch of animated films from Pixar that take risks and have maturity and adult moments to them that aren't random jokes that go over kid's heads. Luca looks like it's going to be very down to earth and emotional, and Turning Red has promise. I hope that we can return to an era of animation where films aren't made solely for children- animation is not a "kid's genre", it's a *medium* that can do anything and everything. Adult animation doesn't just have to be sex jokes and swears, animated movies don't have to be fart jokes and loud noises for easy laughs- I really do believe that the new generations of animators will help push a change for more mature and "all-ages" animations. (That said I'd also love for 2D films to make a mainstream return)
I'm an animator right now at the start of my career, and the project I'm working on now feels like a step in the right direction for that goal. Hopefully someday I can make something of my own that'll speak to people of all ages, not just one group.
This film is a complete failure of a sequel. It feels like Disney was actively trying to ditch every element from the original incredibles asn created this forgettable amalgam. A complete aesthetic and tonal failure of a sequel from the largest film company on earth
Man I wish this didn't get deleted. Could've been used to open the film, had the title appear and then show the family taking on the Underminer.
They could use it to open the incredibles 3 in 2034.
I think it would be too sad to be the first scene, also it happens after the battle with the Underminer, so I think it would be better after the main titles.
@@Alejandroigarabide To be fair Pixar hasn't been too shy about doing sad scenes in the past. Also it would've been a nice little recap on what happened in the first film.
@@PipeGuy64Bit Well, on one hand you have a good point. On the other hand, even Finding Nemo and Up with their dramatic prologues give us some light-hearted imagery before the death of the wives.
@@Alejandroigarabide Yeh I getcha. Though I remember that scene in Finding Nemo kinda slamming into the audience like a brick wall but I understand the point still.
The second movie never addressed that VERY RECENTLY, Bob and Helen learned that a lot of their old friends had been MURDERED. It never came up and it should have hung over this film like a shadow
Quite literally a Chekhov’s gun that never went off.
It’s a kid movie the first one was still a kids movie but was also aimed at little bit older audience I mean I would been shocking if parents took their kids to see this movie and then had to explain the concept of death and all that however that doesn’t mean I wouldn’t have wanted in the movie just saying why it wouldn’t happen
@@criscabrera9098
I mean death still comes up in the second movie, and that’s what made the first one so beloved, it doesn’t hold back and respects its audience, those make the best “kids” films, this scene just reminds me of the first one, wish it was included
I think overall the second movie really messes up how adult oriented the first one was. Cause the first one was funny to kids but for adults it sometimes very relatable since having kids and having a marriage was shown pretty realistic with the good parts but also the bad parts. The second one sadly was more a superhero movie with family aspects than a realistic family movie in a superhero setting.
@@Ulymaldo Also the first one had a man trying to commit suicide and they used sentences like “I saved your life!” “No you ruined my death”, which I as a kid for the most part ignored but jeez it is pretty dark for a kids movie
When Disney gives more respect to their off-brand Cyclops than Fox ever did with the actual character.
What wrong with Cyclops?
@@mediatorraptor3349 Other than the fact that he was completely sidelined for most of the X-Men movies in favor of Wolverine and got less and less screen time until Apocalypse? He's supposed to be the fearless leader of the X-Men but all we got was a whiny crybaby whose girlfriend was stolen by Hugh Jackman.
@@lodivt For some odd reason I thought you were talking about the comics but yeah they really ruined his character in the movies
Kroxldyphivcs yeah I always hated that about the fox movies. It felt really cringe when they started to push mystique as the leader, as if he never existed. We can only hope the MCU does him justice
@@thevisitor1012 Probably had something to do with Jennifer Lawrence playing her.
Amazing that Gazerbeam, Gamma Jack and Mr Incredible managed to defeat one of the robots on their first attempt
I really wish they will make a prequel telling us about the hayday of the super
Doesn’t Frozone also beat the last model before the final? It’s not shown but I think he destroyed the one that beat Mr. Incredible
Ethul Wulf nope, Frozone and the Incredibles all defeated the last Omnidroid
thelrgwashere no like bob defeated version 8, the one that beat bob was version 9, the last one is 10 right?
@@ethulwulf5351 Mr Incredible, defeated the V8, but was defeated by V9 and from that model, Syndrome created the V10
Apparently, Gazerbeam died of his injuries when he fell off a cliff during his battle with the Omnidroid. There’s a deleted scene that shows this. You’re right that an Omnidroid would be unable to fit inside the cave. You bring up a good point as to why his body was not removed or why his carving wasn't erased by Syndrome, yet it is likely he made no attempt to look for his body, similarly to how he presumed Mr. Incredible was dead after his gauntlet probe reported no life readings back to him.
I'm relieved to hear that cause ever since I was a kid I assumed and visualized his death was even more brutal
Eric Delgado wow really? Like how???
@@imdanumber1 like I thought one of syndromes modified weapons like that drone followed and found gazer beam inside the cave somehow and disintegrated him until he was just bones
thelrgwashere he was alive in the LEGO video game
@@FunnyChr1z but the games are non cannon
Honestly shocked this wasn't included. The first Incredibles was one of Pixar's most mature films and the second one feels considerably lighter without scenes like this one.
Didn’t expect to see you here, hi Cartoonshi, love your videos!
@AxWielder Sprigz Are you Ok?
Agreed .-.
@AxWielder Sprigz ...What?
@AxWielder Sprigz what is ur problem man?
This makes him stumbling across his body in the first movie all the more crushing
Makes me wonder how much other supers kept in contact with each other after going underground. Like Mr. Incredible and Fro-zone did, but I guess Mr. Incredible and Gazer-beam didn't?
@@heythatguyalex I think the objective of Syndrome was to capitalize on supers going underground.
A lot of supers might not have had a chance to keep in contact because they were wiped out so quick.
@@jakelee7083It's said Gazerbeam was an outcast and likely resorted back to his old ways in hiding, however judging by the fact the massacres happened over 15 years and especially he was declared missing almost immediately before Mr Incredibles assignment he was likely murdered and didn't get noticed until Mr Incredible found the body.
Man I wish they kept this scene. Ever since I heard of Gazerbeam I hoped we’d get to see him and the team with Mr. Incredible, Frozone, and Gamma Jack
Could be a prequel idea
Gamma jack would make a great villian
But then we wouldn't get such important scenes with raccoon fights, Mr. Incredible having to figure out how to parent his kids despite being a parent for years, Jack Jack Attacks again, and redoing Violet's crush subplot.
@@samiamtheman7379 that's because Mrs Incredible handled the kids before the second movie
@@Crusader316 Gazerbeam had his own team. The thrilling three or something
The best part of the first movie was when Elasta Girl had a somber conversation with her kids about how the could be killed if they weren't careful and that this wasn't like Saturday Morning Cartoon villians. This scene has that same heaviness and it's what the 2nd movie needed
Exactly. That was one of the best scenes in the movies
Yep the first movie did a great job and avoided insulting the audience intelligence... That was Good. Incredibles 2 could have been a bit better
God that jet action sequence in incredibles 1 is still cool to this day. Idk how they missed so hard on the second film.
And the fact that it works as a real life advice too actually
I get why this scene was deleted. Too long, somewhat depressing.
But the nerd in me is just like " *WORLD BUILDING, UNGA UNGA* "
UNGA UNGA
AWOOGA
Haha funny exposition go sad
@@thx4chrckingin exposition, sexposition
@@NotThatUser yum
Something that wasn't immediately obvious about Gazerbeam was that he actually managed to destroy TWO Omnidroid variants in a row before being mortally wounded by the third one he faced. He was the only other Super who actually had that achievement outside the Incredibles.
How do you know that? In the scene where they show the terminations, gazerbeam and a few others were heavily zoomed in to show how close Those supers were to Incredible
@@lettuce1626 @Lettuce When the screen zooms in to Gazerbeam's name, the "Terminated" ping actually rings three times as it pans to Gazerbeam's portrait, the third one being Gazerbeam's death. This means that Gazerbeam was responsible for two repeated Omnidroid kills before the third one killed Gazerbeam.
Come to think of it, after Gazerbeam took out the second one he must have been at least a little suspicious of where the droids were coming from, if not completely clued-in. He probably went poking around in Syndrome's lair when he got the chance, which explains how he knew the password.
Imagine how terrified Syndrome was when he realized that the guy who just took out two of his droids might be getting suspicious. He was probably racing to get that next omnidroid ready and get rid of Gazerbeam before all his plans were blown wide open.
@@vidblogger12 The guy was a defense attorney for super hero rights, it wouldn’t surprise me if me managed to sus out the plot.
Another detail I found in this clip was at 1:58 you can see the final Omnidroid that killed him was the 6th version. Notice the spherical shape and 3 legs. Which means Gazerbeam actually destroyed Omnidroids versions 4 and 5 and Gamma Jack actually destroyed version 6 and was killed by version 7. That scene where Mr. Incredible discovers Operation Kronos had a ton of computer errors
This makes the scene where Mr.Incredible finds GB's corpse even sadder. It wasn't just a superhero icon. It was somebody that only became a superhero because of him. GazerBeam would have never even become a superhero if Mr.Incredible hadn't taken him under his wing and helped him realize that he could do good for the world. And if he had never become a super, Syndrome wouldn't have had his sights on him.
And Mr. Incredible would never have found out about Syndrome’s plan in time
And then even more impactful, now that we learned how distraught it must be for Bob to see Gazerbeam died on the superhero path he guided him to.
They were also friends. GB was in the first row at Bob's wedding
I kinda like the name "Viewpoint" for a superhero.
Not gonna lie, sounds pretty cool. Maybe not so much at the time the Supers were legal, though 😂
Viewpoint Is way better for a superhero with increased vision in my opinion
Or for a sci-fi tv show
@@Anonymous-73 One that nobody watches.
@@bezares9556 Or one that has visions of the future or something.
Good grief this scene hits like a brick, it shows that Gazerbeam wasn't just a skeleton and a name. He was Simon Paladino, and he was Lucius and Bob's friend.
It also showed that the wider community reached out to help and be inclusive in a time when being something Other was often frowned on, and that they are stronger together rather than seperate to get preyed on.
Man, this scene NEEDED to be in the film. I'm bummed how the death of 20 superheroes and Gazerbeam, one of Mr Incredible's closest friends was just tossed away and never brought up again by anyone, considering how dark and evil of a deed it was and nobody even seemed to know about it besides Bob and Syndrome's henchmen. Also kind of unsatisfying how Syndrome was never mentioned ever again.
Can’t believe they made a hero that died in the first movie who we didn’t even see besides his corpse into a Character that is Unique and a Backstory which fits “Incredibly” Well
Funny how superheroes didn't hide or anything. They could simply just have a room at the back of a diner where they all met in plain daylight.
It’s sad to think how their world flipped in no time, they were so happy
To think it could have all been avoided if Mr Incredible hadn't saved that guy from falling, and stopped the train
@@alfonsoramos3527 to be fair that was simply one of the last straws we were shown. There could possibly have been other factors we have no clue about to top it off.
@@potatoexe5410 Yeah. I find it hard to believe that Bob was the only one making mistakes that brought bad public opinion on them. A public that reliant on super heroes probably wouldn't have shunned ALL of them for the deeds of just one, at least not for long.
Or a cafe,a Super Cafe
Gazer-Beam is a much, much better name than Cyclops.
In Spanish is translated like Telescope, it doesn't sound that bad, I think that is original in a certain way.
@Nine One One It's cleaner and a lot better but Gazer Beam in my opinion is a cooler name.
@Nine One One I do agree Cyclops is a clever name but I've spoken to many people who actually didn't understand why Cyclops was called that meanwhile Gazer-Beam is pretty self explanatory
@Nine One One Yeah, it is true, it's a curious fact of the Spanish translation. I think that Cyclops does not fit that well because that name was already taken by the character of X-Men, I would stay with Gazarbeam too.
@@dizzyrascal5015 suprisijg to hear that
Man, I would kill to see short stories on the Glory Days. Those flashbacks to when all the supers were still alive.
Same
I wish this wasn't deleted. What I've been thinking is this: It be used to open a cartoon show about the Incredibles. I think the Incredibles should get a show like Big Hero 6 did. The sequel set down the necessary foundations for one. And this would be a great opening.
That’s what I’ve been dreaming of since I saw the first one
I mean, Incredibles 2 felt more like a TV pilot than a movie for me.
@@meep9231 yo! Ye got the same name
@Justin Moore ok
@Justin Moore sighs
whats really sad is that you realize he had a life, a family, something to live for. and yet, despite all odds, he had his rightfull place in the world. When his place was removed, he just . . . died.
As I see it, purpose is something that surpasses the temporary nature of life. Family is great and worthwhile, but it’s still a job; and like any job, it comes to an end. Or at least you end up giving minimal support. To do something that gives you a lifelong purpose is something no one else can give you. Find your passion and purpose, only than can the effort you put into life becomes something worth living for.
This scene is so raw and emotional, I can't believe it didn't make it into the final cut. The holding of hands at the funeral; Gazerbeam's life story; Helen and Bob reluctantly packing away their super suits as they settle their family into a normal life. Disney really injected so much substance into a supporting character AND the main characters in this one scene and just threw it away. Truly, TRULY tragic.
This makes me like Gazer-Beam a lot more. I didn’t really pay him much attention before
Watch the special features in the first movie. It has a hero database and you'll learn all about every hero
I got depressed in the first movie when I saw him
Same
Dammit, Pixar! You deleted THE BEST SCENE!
You owe us a short film about Gazerbeam or something to make up for it!
Yeah
Yeah! They probably don't care to be fair...
Why is Pixar deleting the best scenes? FIrst, Cars 3, and now this?
I think they should do a series about all of the Supers that were "Terminated". The beginning would be how they became a Super and finish when Marage approaches them.
This is... depressing
Good! Pixar is know for taking more bold dark tones in their movies
and boring for children
@@tunacap children deserve more than bright colors and explosions in their media. I was a kid when I saw the first Incredibles, and I loved all the dark moments the best. All the mature and emotional moments helped me and others form a firmer understanding of those concepts later. We need more movies and shows like this Pixar's Soul is a fine example
This funeral scene is truly Pixar-level writing here! This scene should've been included in the sequel from the very start. I hope one day Gazerbeam's way of life and tragic death will be shown onscreen in the upcoming Incredibles threequel.
The fact that this exists shows they were respectful enough to try it, and that matters.
alright #1: I like your comment
#2: I fucking love your profile pic, I'm wheezing rn
@@heyythatsprettygood8763 Thanks! My pic is relevant to my name so it kinda meshes together
He has the saddest story, he didn't just miss the golden old days, he missed having friends and fitting in
Honestly if this was kept in, it you've deepened so many concepts in the movies. How supes other that the Parrs felt about not being superheroes anymore, set the idea of superheroes coming back into society. It even recontextualizes Gazerbeam's character into not only an acquaintence of Bob from the "good old days" into an actual teammate, companion, family friend, someone close to Bob and a beloved member of the superhero community as well as giving more insight into how those born with superpowers see the world and how hiding has left them. Moments like this is what the sequel sorely needed
All the surviving Supers holding hands as Bob speaks is incredible and heartbreaking
I would not mind a prequel to the Incredibles, which plays off as the golden age of heroes and their fall from grace due to villains and politics
When Cyclops dies, but everyone cares.
I was just thinking, Gazerbeam is basically Scott if anyone actually liked him
It’s funny how the Cyclops character is Shaffer from the spotlight they deserve... whether it be Disney or FOX or even the recent comics, Cyclops as a whole has been pushed to the sidelines ):
They should’ve left this in.
At 1:56-1:58 that was syndrome watching the fight on the island and it look he was inside the base. Also yay this since should be in the 2nd flim. Like it would show how supers lifes were hard. Mr.Incredible finding out after they went underground later found that all his friends/supers got killed. What worse the world wants them gone.
I wonder what charges syndrome would’ve faced for killing all the supers? And destroying the city
Death penalty at worst. Life imprisonment in solitary confinement at least.
@@HardcoreBeta but as we know he’s dead as sh$t and yes it’s confirmed syndrome died with no chance of survival
3 life sentences probably. In fact I'd push that to 6
Probably (for movie drama) he would have gotten none, since he was on his privately owned island and as far as he could claim, they should never have been there in the first place.
It would have been a heart wrenching scene as the Incredibles were forced to watch him walk free, smirking at them, thinking of the next chance he’ll have to grab their baby.
@@theparzivalfilms Possibly MORE than that.
When they mentioned Syndrome drawing in the superheroes I think I'd almost like to hear the names of them again, pointing out how he started with those with the fewest powers and worked his way up, making his machine more durable, both as a compliment to Gazerbeam being high on the list and also to see the audience and the other supers reaction to the names of the other fallen heroes, it'd go well with the supers holding each others hands
this scene gives more a vibe of incredibles than the whole movie.
This is literally the best scene the film had, and they cut it.
I would have loved seeing this in theaters.
Me too.
I’m guessing this was an alternative opening, instead of the “Underminer” encounter.
The underminer was a good ending and beginning to a movie but I agree. They both had their ups and downs. The Underminer one led straight into the last movie but this would be a nice somber moment on a mostly upbeat and goofy movie
I’d watch it
I think it would’ve been good if they had done a marvel kinda thing, where they end with this, but there’s an end credits scene, that shows a shortened version of the ending of the first movie. That way they can still Segway into the second movie
Im actually furious that this deleted. Wtf this was sooo good
Is it weird that I actually enjoyed this one deleted scene more than Incredibles 2?
No Incredibles 2 was pretty bad
@@ΑΡΙΣΤΟΤΕΛΗΣΛΑΧΑΝΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ it wasn’t bad, but it was just a superhero movie unlike the first one that had consequences with living with superheroes. All in all the first one had a deeper story.
2:54 I always knew Violet was the most intelligent of the family but reading War and Peace at that young is incredible .
Edit: I just realized I made a pun.
Why was that scene scrapped? It looked good!
The tone doesn't exactly fit the film however the contrast is nice tbh
I think the contrast only makes it more impactful, and it's not offensively shocking either.
Designs and models for the other heroes in the background were expensive I guess.
@@JohnLeeDoes most of the chars who appear are already modeled and modeling characters isn't as time consuming or expensive as drawings. That said, Disney and pixar have been very conservative in their approach of dark tone in their movies, i wouldn't discard the possibility that they were just feeling this could be too dark for a pg movie.
I think the duration is too long.
Only this scene surely seems to be much better than "incredibles 2" entire movie!
¿?
@@scottchaison1001 Basically he's saying that this single scene alone is better than the entirety of the Incredibles 2
@@PeruvianPotato And I would say he is right
More or less
@@PeruvianPotato that's right
we need an incredibles prequel
That would honestly be so good if done right.
Agreed
Pixar made the monsters Inc prequel film, Monsters University
Gazerbeam’s death was probably the saddest to Mr Incredible. He was the one who helped him join the group and gave him his name. He practically raised him into being a superhero, and was also to some extent the cause of his death
Kids: That was a long scene. I can’t wait for flashy stuff and for things to go bomb!
Adults: World Building Tho!!
I love how he is everything Cyclops is, yet people still like him out of universe. Where did Marvel go wrong with you, Cyclops?
One word: Pryor
To be fair, if I had Cyclops’ life I’d go insane extremist too.
Jean
tbf fox did this not marvel
they shouldve kept this scene like CMON PIXAR
It's their choice.
This would had been a great alternative ending for the first film.
mr Incredible said Gazerbeam could see through materials. I think that is how he learned the password. He saw from another room Syndrome typing it.
I'll never understand why this scene was scrapped.... its such a strong introduction that nods to the first movie and its characters/supers while paving the way for the 2nd's plot.
I don't know why this was cut from the second film. This would've set everything up almost perfectly. Wouldn'tve fixed a lit of issues with it, but wiuld've been an amazing set-off for the story; really get the theme started.
R.I.P Gazerbeam and Bud Luckey
This was a very sweet and tragic moment, even though I personally didn't see it fitting anywhere in the second movie. I pray that a potential third movie furthers the worldbuilding by giving us more info on the glory days and showing us how deep the impact Syndrome left with their deaths. Gazerbeam was just one of many.
I adore the fact that, through an in depth view of The Incredibles, we have all developed and even bigger deal of respect for someone as Gazerbeam. I truly love how important he has become to all this story. This scene encompasses it, truly.
Sometimes I wonder why scenes are deleted. They can be so powerful and touching...
Rest In Peace Gazerbeam. You played your part.😔
Wow, an actual scene with emotional depth. I'm so glad it was in the final cut of this movie we waited 14 years for.
2:27 "Being separate, being hidden, weakens us"
This line hits pretty hard in a post-2020 world.
Gazerbeam was definitely my favorite character. Although he didn’t have much screen time I really liked his costume and his powers. This helped to give me a better insight toward what type of civilian and hero he was. Rest In Peace Simon J Paladino, AKA Gazerbeam
I was an outcast for a while with severe mental issues until I started working with a bunch of oddballs. Now I consider them family, I’m living a comfortable like in my new home and a stable outcome with newly gained self confidence, and purpose of helping people in my work. I feel very, very lucky. Even though gazerbeam perished, he still had purpose, with the help of his “family”
Scene felt real
A slightly better ending than what we got
I feel like it would've been a better intro than ending
@@Merc7734 wouldn't work there
@@markerikson7423 sure it would. Immediately after defeating syndrome they hold the memorial since it's still close enough to his death to be believable and go back into hiding then they come back for the events of 2. It wouldn't make sense for them to wait for ALL of the even of 2 to talk place and THEN hold the memorial for something that happens quite possibly months ago
@@markerikson7423 YOU don't work, son
@@doblet664 *OVER THE LINE*
I understand why this scene was removed (it’s a bit tangent to the flow of plot points), but it’s still a great scene, and I really appreciate the melancholy tone they put into it. Woulda brought emotional weight to the deaths of the heroes in the movie
Another thing, it was really cool to have to super hero’s restored and the only supers left from the glory days are incredible elstagirl and frozone but now we have new supers. The NSA can be now known as the New NSA. Never forgetting the previous supers and keeping the legacy.
Absolutely beautiful. I can see why it wasn't included in the film but thank you for bringing it to the light!
it truly makes that skeleton scene in incredibles 1 sad
Why the hell did this scene get deleted? Just adding this in would've bumped The Incredibles 2 from a 5.5 / 10 to a 6.6 / 10 easily.
LEGO The Incredibles had Gazerbeam alive, because the developers of that game wanted him for co-op purposes.
there was no need for this not to be included in the movie this.....was......amazing
Man I'm really glad I got to see this, I knew gazer beam always felt like he had much more to him, half I could see him in action
Gazerbeam was my childhood hero. Growing up I didn't read any marvel or DC comics. The only super heroes I knew were the ones from the Incredibles. and Gazerbeam was my idle. Learning more about him here...What a great man he actually was...It hits pretty hard.
The movie needed this
It gets you close to the supers, and shows you how they still hide
Its good to see Gazerbeam again, and to see the supers there comforting each others
This should nit have been cut out
More scenes like this was what the movie needed
These deleted scenes are always so well written it makes me wonder why they go unused in the first place.
It would be interesting at Disney Plus made an Incredibles prequel television show based on how they got their powers and I think they should have the show on for at least three or four seasons and the final episode should lead to where Mr Incredible proposes to Elastigirl
Actually Disney Plus is releasing a new show called Pixar Popcorn on Disney plus they have 2 New Incredibles shorts
i can imatiane gazerbeams have tears in his eyes right now and if he was alive wil hug mr.indicredibles whiile in tears and say thank you
Crazy how when I was younger I didn’t realize the Gravity of the situation with syndrome. He almost mass murdered the supes just because of Mr incredible shunning him. He took advantage of there dreams of still wanting to feel super. Mr incredible probably felt a great bit of responsibility for all his comrades dying
Damn this was good. It added emotion and closure to the lost heroes from the first movie. Thanks for sharing.
And then it cuts to 15 years after the events of the first movie, am Earthquake is shattering a bridge (or building), people are running in fear, and right as rubble is about to fall on a citezen, a devilish creature shatters it, protecting them. The creature turns into a human, with the citezen giving their thanks. The super turns around, wearing the Incredible suit, and flees the scene before any law enforcement arrives. As they make their getaway and the police and ambulance show up, we see a figure in a dark suit and blond hair watch. In an instant, they zoom away to..
Title Card
The film honestly needed more of this somber tone honestly, the contrast is what made the original film so good.
This scene should've been a must have. 😪
Pixar’s version of cyclops looks so cool. I wish we got to see that bit of him cutting that car in half.
Man, I really hope this scene is eventually animated as a short. Really breaks my heart that it'll probably never come to fruition.
I actually found this whole scene better than the actual movie we got.
The second movie needed more scenes like this. Losing a year of development hurt the overall product, which was enjoyable but nowhere near as good as the first film.
the scene of him crawling into the cave, leaving the message for some other unfortunate superhero to read was exceptional. ithis whole scene builds Gazerbeam's character realy well, and it ties into the scene of Mr. Incredible finding his message in the cave; like he knew him well enough to discover it.
0:53 Is that Gamma Jack? Damn, when he was among the "terminated" list, i thought Mr. Incredible was just mourning the death of another fellow super, the fact that he was a close acquaintance must have hurt a lot. Also, i like how Edna has such a humble-looking store, interesting to see the fashion designer/former supersuit maker's beginnings
I would give anything for a prequel involving him. His death obviously caused a huge impact on everyone in would love a prequel of the older heros
They should’ve kept this scene. 😔😔😔😔😔
This is what made the first movie a masterpiece of animation, the tone, yeah, is a colorful superhero movie, but that doesn’t necessary imply that the themes will be happy stuff and funny moments, moments of tragedy like this is what makes the movie feel real and human, you connect so well with the characters, you understand their suffering and you actually suffer with them, the first movie wasn’t afraid of showing this dark aspects and that’s one of the main reasons why is so amazing. The second movie needed this scene, to remind us that the colorful superheroes we see on screen are people like us. I wish Pixar had the guts to add dark tones if necessary, you must go with everything to make a masterpiece.
Without Gazerbeam, Mr. Incredible never would have had the code to log into Syndromes computer. Sad how he went out.
My heart is warmed by the fans, we’re still here loving this movie