"We are feeling creatures first and thinking creatures second, and if you take care of the first bit, the audience will come with you for the second" Fuck that's a good quote
@@hyperkitten1422 i was unsure of you were a bot at first but damn. ive been subbed long before that vid even came out, that's unbelievable and i wish more people knew about it
"When I was ten, I read fairy tales in secret and would have been ashamed if I had been found doing so. Now that I am fifty I read them openly. When I became a man I put away childish things, including the fear of childishness and the desire to be very grown up.” C.S. Lewis
Original fairy tales are pretty hard-core sometimes. But Disney wouldn't make a movie where the Prince, although he meets the sleeping beauty, didn't woke her up by a kiss, but she woke up by herself, when she gave birth to his kids.
@@aleisterlavey9716 yeah, rape isn't that in anymore. Both contractually as non-contractually. But in the same idea, as that winnie the poo horrorstory i'd like to see some un-edidted originals. Original timeframe also, casual murder, rape and gore. Fairytales like story's will snowball
@@aleisterlavey9716 the rape part isn't the original, it was added in much later, and then removed because even at the time, people didn't like that addition
@@aleisterlavey9716hey just curious why you brought up the rape part out of nowhere, it’s completely irrelevant here and in fact talking about the grotesque nature of the 200+ year old versions of these stories is fucking weird when the comment is not about that
@@maddieb.4282To show the Fairy Tales weren’t all so “Childish” also they never said anything about rape, they said Snow White gave birth to the prince’s kids, it implies rape but never outright says it. Just think about that comment for more than a few seconds and you’ll realize what it means and why it was posted
I was lucky enough to meet Terry a number of years ago, shortly before his death. He had just finished Unseen Academicals and signed a copy for me. A sweet man, and a genius author.
There is a german author callled Walter Moers. He wrote a few books about an imaginary continent called Zamonia, witch are strikingly similar to Terry Pratchett with a bit of Lord of the rings in terms of Style. I've read his "Rumo and the wonders in the dark." when I was like 12 or 13. Witch was kind of an mistake because I NEVER could really get back into reading after it. Just nothing compares.
@@mmaswitchstance I was privileged to meet him once at a book store in Glasgow, he had just been banned from another hotel for having a water pistol fight in the halls. I've never been able to finish his last novel, so for me there is always one more story for him to tell.
The panic attack scene is something I've not heard someone mention before and I was surprised by it. Having had panic attacks and fearing ever having them again has made me hesitant to mention it but seeing it represented in a way that feels very similar to what it actually feels like was more than just a little strange.
@@lolzu it's probably a person who copy pasted it everywhere, because the link is true. However, we should treat allegations as such, and not blindly accepting it as facts.
Dude I watched them in the same weekend too! I was surprised by the fact that Everything Everywhere was somehow so terrible yet so great. It didn't take itself seriously at all yet also took itself incredibly seriously. Weirdest movie I've ever watched but also one of the better ones. And Puss in Boots was just perfect That was a great movie week
I'm an adult man who goes to work at 5 in the morning and cried twice during this movie. The themes were... relevant to me and my life and it did build up and get to me. Lets just say I related a lot to the allegory at hand.
Disney has lost that piece these past few years. It hasn't been both. Their current movies only work for a limited age range, for when you look into their stories further they either are just basic or WORSE - damaging to child's perception of the world.
@@peterrealar2.067 And you'd be a bad parent to show movies like "Raya and the Last Dragon" to your kids. It has an atrocious moral that is harmful to kids. That moral is basically even if someone betrays you you should trust them anyway. It's a fucked up moral.
@@peterrealar2.067 that movie i can confirm is terrible. It made me boycott watching Disney for a few years it was that bad. Spider-Verse being that much better the same year didn't help.
@@rommix0 Dude, it's even worse. It was a sequel to a film that DID deserve the Oscar but the idiots that year didn't actually watch the animated films and gave that one to Brave. Wreck-it Ralph deserved Best Animated, damn it.
holy fuck the line "they came looking for humanity and you just dished out a flat speech instead" i have so many feelings towards this, none of which i can word in a meaningful way
@@markblankley Just spitballing a personal interpretation, as I also want to incorporate this into my writing and worry my current WIP book is too grave and preachy, but I assume in application this translates to: "In reality, moments of tragedy are just as prevalent as moments of humor, levity, etc. To touch someone's heart with a real, believable portrayal of the human experience, embrace range of emotion, and have your most profound moments feel raw, rather than scripted." That might be shown in having a character understand their growth over time, rather than a revelation in one moment. Or, the story's themes being implied through subtleties, rather than a neat, closing speech.
dreamworks really kicked up the animation. they've gotten so much more expressive, and have added so much more to their effects library. they went from semi-realistic movies, to beautiful, stylistic, cartoonish movies, and i love that.
Dreamworks always had the chops for art, their very first movie was the animated masterpiece PRINCE OF EGYPT it's just that with Shrek afterwards their cgi style became too obsessed with looking realistic instead of artistic, glad they're moving away from that with Bad Guys and now this.
The one scene that made me close to crying was when the traumatized pup calmed Puss down during his panic attack, and Puss placing his hand on the dog's head, just like a therapy dog and master would interact. It was touching.
it's insane how good the word-of-mouth for this movie is, people who i would never expect to have cared have been talking about this movie, and this video has joined that rapidly growing list of recommendations. i loved it as an animation fan, and it's so exciting for me to see people love it as people. animation as an industry has been in danger, but this movie gives me confidence that it may just find its footing again
Yeah I’ve been worried! My best friend I used to watch every animated movie we could in theaters together has stopped being interested. So I’ve been going alone. And with the pandemic and streaming, I am increasingly seeing them completely alone 😞
It was the same for me with Gravity Falls, ATLA, new doctor who (earlier seasons), wreck it ralph, and Inside Out. Movies/series I would never have watched was it not for word of mouth. But sadly they're few and far in between these days.
@@Sanquinity Word of mouth may not be the most efficient form of advertisement but it's probably the most powerful one if you ask me. I can't count how many great movies or songs/albuns I've found through the years cause someone left a positive comment about them.
"We're getting real bad recently for caricaturing emotions as illogical demons hiding in lines of code of reason inside us, as though we're heroic computers who are occasionally struck down by moments of feeling that we should be ashamed of. This is just such bullshit." Brilliant. Brilliant.
exurb1a's vids used to do the same for me, especially when I was in a dark place a few years back. Now that I'm picking up the pieces, it's mostly just a sense of melancholy. I really do like his content, the way he phrases things, the way I can resonate with them. But I don't really know him as a person, I don't know if he really is someone who abused his girlfriend- which makes me feel less of a righteous indignation and more of a dull realization that I can still derive comfort from the words of someone who could have done some bad things. 'Separating the art from the artist' is especially hard when exurb1a's content is centered around the human state of being, where I want to put integrity in character behind his words. Still, this gave me a little push I needed to pull myself together, not get caught up in my own depressive periods and not despair over the fact that I won't ever _truly_ know someone else's heart, no matter how much I want to like them or care for them. I hope you can reach that point where you can just sit back and enjoy being a little detached while still appreciating content with a lot of heart in it. Welp looks like I rambled on a bit, oops : ) that was a long way of saying 'hope you'll be doing great in the future, fellow internet stranger!'
@@otaku-chan4888 If one looks at most philosophers of history, they weren't great people. A philosopher doesn't have to live true to the words they preach. It's not difficult to see the right and wrong ways to do things, it is however difficult to put those into practice.
@@otaku-chan4888 You do know that abuse allegations stuff is blatant bullshit, right? "Human Experiments" he's a fucking philosophy major. Secondly, if he was truly this way, and this shitty, he would've been convicted. Random RUclipsrs don't get their actions covered up by the UK government unless said actions don't exist.
I had the same reaction when I saw the movie. My mother wanted to watch Whale starring Brendan Fraiser, but I didn't want to feel the emotions of sadness and such, so I went to Puss and Boots, the Last Wish instead. After finishing the movie, I was filled with a similar urge to share how good the movie was as well, but instead I just pestered my friends on discord to check it out when they get the chance. I'm glad you made this video, because Puss in boots is REALLY good. Another thing you didn't cover that I appreciated was how much a bastard Jack horner was, we dont get that level of pure evil villains it feels, children movie antagonists are usually more nuanced or having reasonable ideals nowadays, but as a comedic choice having the bad guy just be unredeemably bad was so funny!
Fr, i like how we have deep villans with backstories telling us what causes them to become the way they became. But I also miss the good ol days of villans just being evil because of no other reason than to be evil!! Ugh, jack horner is such a piece of shit that cant be redeemed and i love him for that
From what I understand Jack Horner was left out of all promotional material so I guess he could be considered a spoiler? Which might be why the wordsmith Turtle didn’t mention him? But yeah Jack was amazing and probably one of the most entertaining villains I’ve found in western media as of recent.
@@elisanoro He's also realistic. Some people are out there being pieces of shit for no other reason than they enjoy the suffering they inflict unto others.
There are still static evil villains in movies they're just incredibly boring hence why we don't remember them, unlike Jack who is big funni from his backstory to his design and dialogue. It also helps that he's not the main focus of the movie so his schtick doesn't become played out and has a fun dynamic/contrast with the other characters who are more nuanced.
@@babyplum2837 that is ok, but please inform yourself. Also if you have extra insight on it please let me know. The least I want is to dislike exurb1a, but I cant ignore the evidence
I feel like this is a movie that someone like me really needed to have when I was younger. At a very young age I was depressingly aware of my, and others, mortality. I remember lying awake at night and bursting into tears because I would remember that everyone's time is limited and already wondering if I would ever made the most of it. I've worked all those thoughts and feelings now and existential questions like "what is the meaning of life", don't bother me anymore because I was able to come to my own conclusion. And this movie tackles every worry and dread I ever felt towards death and it did so with a talking cat with a sword that's voiced by Antonio Banderas. In other words its the greatest movie every made.
wow that was me too. I would literally sit in my room alone for up to two hours sitting and crying. This movie definitely connected to me on that level
Me too, I would’ve loved to have this movie as a kid and I still love it to death (no pun intended) now as a young adult. I’ve watched it at least 8 times because of how cathartic it is.
It respects children, honestly. And a lot more films and tv shows used to do the same. It used to teach kids lessons that they weren't always ready to hear or understand, so that they would in the future perhaps recall to it either in the back of their minds or at the forefront. So those themes and lessons are more deeply ingrained, like on the opposite scale of internalized trauma. I've experienced similarly calling back to old media, that helps shape my worldview, my values, morals and ethics. As silly as it might sound nowadays given the state of children's media, it wasn't always flashing lights and colors made to make babies force their parents into buying merchandise. It was for serving a greater purpose, and I hope a movie like this can help bring back respectful and meaningful storytelling to children that their parents can enjoy with them.
I'd drawn the similarities between this film and Everything Everywhere All at Once too and I'm so happy you made the connection as well! It's films like these, man. Not afraid to be extremely silly and unashamedly vulnerable at the same time. With outlandish premises like a chinese mother trying to save the multiverse or a spanish cat on his ninth life. They show you all of what humanity still has to offer.
What I've learned from- as weird as it is, webtoons- is that you can have an incredibly comedic and stupid story and STILL turn it into something beautiful and serious when you want to. Comedy can work hand in hand with emotion to create an experience that is both wholesome and heartbreaking at the same time. I see so many webtoons that start off comedies and then either mix in serious moments or become fully serious stories after a while, and it always works so well. Movies that do the same are just as great.
@@catpoke9557 Comedy always needs tragedy... or at least something serious to make the funny actually be funny and not just be funny for the sake of being funny.
@@seisosimp I think comedy alone can be funny, but it's almost never going to be as funny as comedy in a series where it takes a moment to be grounded every now and then. It just makes the comedy hit even harder when it happens. Even Smiling Friends, a very stupid (but good) show, has moments where it's grounded. They usually only last a few seconds, but it's there. And it makes it even funnier.
I've been thinking about EEAAO constantly since I first saw it, watched a handful of times since. Watched it smack dab in the midst of one of the most emotionally traumatic times of my life and I think I'll carry it with me for all time.
@@alexatedw His actions directly blacken his works. His focus is discussion of the human condition. The allegations against him reflect the darkest aspects of humanity. It's intellectually dishonest to try and separate what he's accused of from what he talks about.
For the longest time, I wondered if this whole "Puss in Boots is the greatest movie ever" thing was a meme. You know, like Morbius. Now I know it's real. Now I wanna watch this movie.
Dude, it's legit. I didn't want to believe that a freaking Puss In Boots movie was going to be anything more than a shameless cash grab, but it's actually a fantastic work of art. Instant classic!
this was the most, human? thing i ever heard from the internet, it made me feel like someone also felt, it was, i cant describe it i just sat here for a solid 5 minutes thinking of a word well it made me feel human, like other people are like me? like have... feelings? i dont know.
Here is a list of all the recommendation's in this video, comment if I got something wrong or missed it. The entire Video: Puss in Boots: The Last Wish Books 4:15 Flowers for algernon Daniel Keyes 4:17 One hundred years of solitude Gabriel García Márquez 9:43 Watership Down is an adventure novel by English author Richard Adams Films 5:50 The Fabulous Destiny of Amélie Poulain 8:06 Beyond the Infinite Two Minutes 10:24 Everything Everywhere All at Once Games 5:57 FTL: Faster Than Light
I live for this sort of thing, for media where you can feel the heart of the people who made it, stuff that goes against the norm and manages to pull it off. How can you not get goosebumps when the wolf whistles after such a big first impression? I'm really happy I get to experience labours of love like this, even if it's once every few years.
I’m personally from Campbellsville, Kentucky. Hearing that tiny town be mentioned in this video caught me completely off guard. I had to listen to it again to make sure I heard it right. I know the exact theater where you saw Everything Everywhere All At Once.
This is why a lot of the time when I like a movie its not because of technical mumbo jumbo, its simply because it felt like it gave me a warm hug while telling me things will be ok. You're right, we're emotional creatures first, logical second.
I just got home from the movie theater because of this video, and was not disappointed. What a heartfelt movie! That panic attack scene hit me right in the feels, and the movie theater was dead silent for a moment, even the noisy little kids sitting in the row above us. I was not expecting to get teary-eyed from a movie about a character from Shrek. Glad I watched this video and then saw it for myself.
As a reminder, this is from DreamWorks- the same people that made Shrek, How To Train Your Dragon, Kung-Fu Panda, Prince of Egypt, Megamind and others. Whenever they're not making stuff like Boss Baby or Shark Tale, these guys are absolute masters of the craft, easily as good as the best Pixar and actual 'adult' film companies shove out and sometimes leaps and bounds better. It will likely never come, but I really hope films like this can help bring animation the respect as an art form it so richly deserves, able to bring a level of imagination and storytelling prowess that just isn't able to be reached through other means.
I just love your videos. The ones on the main channel and the ones here. They are always so inspiring and give me that feeling of "yeah somewhere I already knew all that but somehow these words move me in a way that I can't really describe"... Your words give a feeling of wondering, of hope, of love.
@@hyperkitten1422 just wtf.... :O never would have thought that a guy who makes such videos about life, love and other inspiring and creative content, could do such things... I'm truly shoked, this needs to go more viral
Hey, Exurb. I know you may not see this but I would really love to see you make a video something to the effect of; "to those who are to be imprisoned". Something for the souls about to face prison time, or some other agency enforced punishment. The way your voice conveys meaning and emotion. It is caring, equally uncaring, blunt, noble, and directed. You never cease to amaze me how theatrically composed you are in your videos. I think you could help a lot of people facing the tremendous existential obstacles and real life issues that plague the punished of our society.
I dragged my friend to go see this and while there were only three groups of people in the cinema (the school year just started) the groups were diverse in age and life, my friend and I being in our twenties, two parents in their 40s and their three children, and a couple in their 70s-80s and everyone left the film smiling. (Except for one of the kids cause the wolf scared her) genuinely good films can do that for people and we need more of them
Yes, talking cat film is excellent But on a side note, I am surprised you still doubt yourself after making millions of people smile over the years. Imagine if you had experienced their smiles first hand, would you still doubt yourself? Trust your creativity.
I really, really like this… hope he sees because always had an aura of self-loathing which is frankly lovable but a bit painfully relatable- love to see more content in general especially like this
*Spoiler alert* Honestly what I fucking loved about the movie was that sometimes you look for some grand thing in your life to give it meaning and it seems so far away and you still keep chasing it not understanding that while you're doing that you let the things that already give your life meaning are slipping away and the more you chase that stupid dream the more hopeless you get and anxiety and depression fill you. You just wish in someway magical or by a miracle you just end up having it. And even by the slightest chance that you somehow end up getting what you want you feel like you didnt earn it. So moral of the story is that the world is full of meaning. You can just draw meaning from anywhere even the smallest things in life or as a nice youtuber once said meaning is a jumper you have to knit yourself.
Meaning there is meaning along the way on this blue dot of our existence but in the end, the limitation on our understanding line, in regards to it all, there needs to be no meaning in relation to the cosmos ...save for we all have our time as individuals, families, people, countries, species, land, mountains, seas.
Lol, me and my ex broke up, not ling after it came out. My mum wanted to go see a movie to try and cheer me up. She'd suggested AntMan cause I love the Marvel movies, but recently, they haven't been doing too well in my opinion, so jokingly, I opted to go to this movie. My God, was it the right choice. I thought I was walking into a children's movie that was gonna be fun and have a nice moral at the end. I wasn't expecting to connect so damn hard with this stupid talking cat😅 His need to try and be a "legend" and pushing everyone away in pursuit of filling his ego really made me take a step back and examine thay I'd kinda done the same thing. More worried about what the majority of people thought about me as opposed to what the people closest to me thought about me. His fear of being forgotten by everyone and dying without making a mark is heavily relatable to a 19 year old😂 Walked out of the theatre with a slightly new perspective, actually. My ex said I was a toxic shit and I had never changed over the years. She was right. And I hate to say it took a talking cat in a kids' movie to make me see it, but that's exactly what happened.
Thank GOD you've seen Everything Everywhere all at once, the rocks scene reminds me very much of your videos - it's become one of my favourite films ever
I gotta say, after watching the movie, i found its coverage of death and family/friends to be a lot like some of your videos. Where its not such a bad thing to just live your life, love the people around you, and face death when it comes. But i cannot say i expected a review to come of it. Thanks for the other recommendations, ill have to see if EEAaO is still showing
It’s a silly movie about a lil goober with boots facing off many perils and gripping with his own mortality and inner demons and it’s so good at balancing it’s tone and theme despite being labeled as a “children’s” film. I love this movie so much.
I absolutely love this film,i watched it twice, once at home and once in a cinema and not only is the art incredible and I wanna stare at each frame forever, but both times I teared up. Both times I felt things. I like things that make me feel things,it reminds me that I'm still here,and that everyone else is still here too.
Truly one of the best animated films i have ever seen. I love how real and deep it is to us, but a child could watch it and enjoy it too without ever knowing. Truly a 10/10
DANG. I can absolutely tell you’re a writer just by the way you speak in this video. Extremely well spoken and thought out, and a beautiful analysis about the humanity and feeling we can get from media. ^^
i was thinking about writing a comment recommending Everything Everywhere all at once from the first couple minutes of this video because it is my favourite movie ever, but i thought id watch the video first and not spend brainpower writing and listening at the same time, and when you mentioned it by yourself my jaw dropped properly for the first time in ages and i was genuinely in shock. If you by some miracle read this comment i hope it finds you well. i am a long time subscriber from Norway and your videos have made my day so many times. I recently rewatched som of your videos and you promoted your book at the end. i embarrassingly have never ever finished a book, so i thought i would give yours a try, so i bought the four that was available in paperback. they will arrive soon, and i will read them when i have spare time in the military. Keep making videos and i will keep watching. Sincerely, Daniel from Norway
My absolute favourite book is "The little prince" for almost 20 years now, precisely because I read it almost every year since I was 10 and it was absolutely amazing every time. For me it was a different book every time. I felt endlessly heartbroken and still hopeful every time, even if I know almost every word in that book by now. It is still like reading something new that you know for sure you are gonna like. Also, shout-out to "Fineas and Ferb". I LOVED that cartoon when I was a kid and rewatched it several times in the last few years, and it is still soooo funny and clever. It has a different layer for adults)
*"We're still a child at heart"* I've never heard truer words spoken... They didn't need to go this hard, but they did. Almost everything about this film is perfect
I KNEW you were gonna touch on EEAAO. It struck me in many of the same ways and yes, completely agree. Love your analysis, love your comments. This is the first video of yours I've ever seen and consider me a subscriber, because I was just nodding along the whole time going "YES EXACTLY"
As someone going through dramatic life changes, coming to terms with reality and my place in it as an adult male this movie was astounding. Loved it from start to finish, made me feel so much more than usual. Watched it with my son and then my partner, awesome
You've convinced me, and thanks for the other reccomendations. The kind of film you describe brings me back to when I first watched Princess Monoke as a child.
You keep telling us that you could never write something as good, but then you go on and make me laugh and cry and think and feel not only in the span of this short video, but in every single video you make! Your texts are an absolute banger and I love your narrating voice, it just fits so perfectly. Soothing but not boring or sleep evoking, just the right tone to listen attentively and still feel at ease.
I watched your video yesterday and dragged my friends to the cinemas today! We all loved the movie and I'm very happy and grateful that you made a video about it, because I definitely wouldn't have watched it otherwise. So thanks a lot for recommending!
holy shit man you did it again, you made your feelings into words and those words made me feel things. fuck i gotta rewatch the rememberer tonight (after a cheeky bong hit or two)
“Emotion is not a slave of the intellect, but that the intellect is there to communicate emotions in greater resolution” best quote I’ve ever forever heard ever!
I think thats what really at the core of what separates a good thing from a masterpiece; accessibility. there is an understated genius to describing human emotion in a way that’s not just to the point but poignant. it’s easy to get snobby about mainstream media but take a second to really consider the concept of mass appeal and what it means for our similarities and shared humanity. there are so many compelling things we overlook due to their accessibility, because explaining why we connect feels like explaining color.
it's beautiful to see you bloom into a feeling human from the intellectual human you were before just watched puss in boots last wish, it made me feel thanks
That part where you said we feel things and want to make others feel things too really hit me. It's like how we share our music taste with others, only for them to go "yeah it's alright" and we know they actually thought it was shit. You showed them the song because you wanted them to feel the same way you do when you listen to it, but sometimes it just doesn't work out that way. And that's OK. My personal favourite film is bad santa. Its got dark, adult and sexual themes to it and is very funny, but there is a deeper meaning to the story that isn't quite obvious at a first glance. Whenever I tell anyone that bad santa is my favourite film they are kinda confused as to why, because they just know it as a dumb adult themed Christmas comedy and nothing more, but there are subtle things that hint at the emotions of the characters. Like when Marcus berates Willie, in the next scene he is always drunk and looks depressed, showing how Marcus is a very toxic part of Willie's life and is the source of a lot of misery for him, both through his direct behaviour and the fact that Marcus is the one who holds up their criminal operation, allowing Willie to spend all his stolen money on alcohol which makes him more depressed. Sorry if this all sounds a mess, I've just never really had a place to talk about these ideas before
Glad you did talk about another movie here, exurb1a also mentioned another one, eh....the eeeaoc. & What in the world was he doing in Tennessee or? Consulting right. Will put bad Santa on my to do watch list
When my worlds collide. How is this possible? Thank you for this. Really. In a world where I just exist while being decent something this lovely comes into my life. Thank you.
I’ve never even heard of this film up until a few days ago. I was invited along with some friends to go watch it on Thursday…. I instantly fell in love with the whole thing, and have been checking out reviews and videos to see if anyone else felt the same (as we tend to do). It really was so heartwarmingly done. Furthermore, it’s the first time I come across this channel, and after hearing the structure and way of thinking, breaking down the film without spoilers, analyzing it and putting it back together. 👌 def subscribing!
Holy shit I put this up as a podcast while doing homework and it was so good! You explain so simple and clear, both in pronounciation and showing your opinion. It's so relaxing and easy to digest while working on something else. Thank you, and yes this movie is the best ever.
Ong the way i can express my love through this film through an art analysis perspective as well as just a blatantly human one. Not only is TLW beautifully animated and composed, paced and framed, scripted and voiced, but it also effectively makes me feel things. As an autistic adult i struggle with empathy, and art is the only thing that made me feel truly understanding of other people. I can sympathize and understand the logic of a person's emotions and validate them, but i rarely feel anything myself. It's only through art that i feel any kind of real connection. To me, art is the universal language for empathy. Not everyone is trained in that language, but when you use your grammar correctly, you can communicate a profound and deep emotion in people. With art, i can connect with people. And that kind of power deserves to be taken seriously whether its made for kids or otherwise
Oh, it's so nice listening to your words - so well put together, and clearly articulated thoughts. It's calming and relatable. I'm having the best time listening to your work!
I’ve just discovered you through this video. I was captivated by your thoughts on feeling before thinking. I feel like you would really appreciate Psychonauts 2. It’s a genuinely beautiful game that that takes a lot of technical and sterilized concepts about mental health and cognizance and turns it into a wacky adventure that puts a lot of feeling and heart into struggles that often get summarized by a medical term. I can’t remember the last time a game made me laugh incessantly at my own chronic internal struggles and then cry so hard at a beautifully hopeful notion that people can heal even in the twilight of their life.
I am so glad someone else saw the comparison between this film and Everything Everywhere All At Once. Both completely made me feel something and were a commentary on the nature of humans and morality as a whole, and both made me feel so much. This is the best commentary I have seen in a long time, and I completely agree that good movies are the ones that make you feel something--I'm so glad you put my thoughts about this perfectly into words
I didn't go into this movie expecting it to be Andrei Tarkovsky's 'Stalker' for children, but I'm perfectly happy that that is what it somehow ended up being
You are unbelievable good. I have been loving your content for a long time and the evolution and diversity of content is absurd in how much I love it. I loved your depressed alcohol fueled speeches and stories and especially your video on absurdism. I can't believe the insights you manage to pack into a TALKING CAT VIDEO. This is ridiculous. You are amazing. Please keep making videos you have no idea how much I enjoy your content
Never thought The depressed turtle would ever talk about The fearless cat, damn, pleasant surprise
He's not the fearless cat any more, he's the brave cat now :)
@do not then be on your way with it
@TheOdd1sOutoffI’d like it if all bots (like this one) linked videos like this.
@Lucifer Morningstar 🅥 I'm just gonna assume you're a bot pretending to make fun of bots.
@@hyperkitten1422 Is this another bot?
"We are feeling creatures first and thinking creatures second, and if you take care of the first bit, the audience will come with you for the second"
Fuck that's a good quote
@theowldidthat what... What does that mean..
@@hyperkitten1422 i was unsure of you were a bot at first but damn. ive been subbed long before that vid even came out, that's unbelievable and i wish more people knew about it
@@hyperkitten1422 who cares? Why are so dead set on ruining somebody’s life…
MTBI personalities begs to differ.
Whats that?
"When I was ten, I read fairy tales in secret and would have been ashamed if I had been found doing so. Now that I am fifty I read them openly. When I became a man I put away childish things, including the fear of childishness and the desire to be very grown up.” C.S. Lewis
Original fairy tales are pretty hard-core sometimes. But Disney wouldn't make a movie where the Prince, although he meets the sleeping beauty, didn't woke her up by a kiss, but she woke up by herself, when she gave birth to his kids.
@@aleisterlavey9716 yeah, rape isn't that in anymore.
Both contractually as non-contractually.
But in the same idea, as that winnie the poo horrorstory i'd like to see some un-edidted originals. Original timeframe also, casual murder, rape and gore. Fairytales like story's will snowball
@@aleisterlavey9716 the rape part isn't the original, it was added in much later, and then removed because even at the time, people didn't like that addition
@@aleisterlavey9716hey just curious why you brought up the rape part out of nowhere, it’s completely irrelevant here and in fact talking about the grotesque nature of the 200+ year old versions of these stories is fucking weird when the comment is not about that
@@maddieb.4282To show the Fairy Tales weren’t all so “Childish” also they never said anything about rape, they said Snow White gave birth to the prince’s kids, it implies rape but never outright says it. Just think about that comment for more than a few seconds and you’ll realize what it means and why it was posted
this whole "telling a story for two audiences" thing is why I love Terry Pratchetts works so much
I was lucky enough to meet Terry a number of years ago, shortly before his death. He had just finished Unseen Academicals and signed a copy for me. A sweet man, and a genius author.
There is a german author callled Walter Moers. He wrote a few books about an imaginary continent called Zamonia, witch are strikingly similar to Terry Pratchett with a bit of Lord of the rings in terms of Style. I've read his "Rumo and the wonders in the dark." when I was like 12 or 13. Witch was kind of an mistake because I NEVER could really get back into reading after it. Just nothing compares.
@@mmaswitchstance I was privileged to meet him once at a book store in Glasgow, he had just been banned from another hotel for having a water pistol fight in the halls.
I've never been able to finish his last novel, so for me there is always one more story for him to tell.
This is what I was about to mention. IMO one of the greatest of both fantasy and existentialism!
Yes, I immediately thought of Pratchett!
This Movie is so surprisingly good like the animation is stunning and the style that drops the frames when ever the action goes hard
Hehehe “Exurb”
Idk why people are surprised, Dreamworks is the best
animating on 2s
@@hyperkitten1422 you name has kitten in it… be quiet
@@fl1490 Boss Baby and Trolls say otherwise
The panic attack scene is something I've not heard someone mention before and I was surprised by it. Having had panic attacks and fearing ever having them again has made me hesitant to mention it but seeing it represented in a way that feels very similar to what it actually feels like was more than just a little strange.
let's hope this films popularity will improve at least in some way the response others have towards those around them having panic attacks
And they did not play it off with a joke! I loved the care this scene (and every anxiety-inducing scene) was given so much
@@hyperkitten1422
...what?
@@erifetim prolly a bot since they're in all replies
@@lolzu it's probably a person who copy pasted it everywhere, because the link is true. However, we should treat allegations as such, and not blindly accepting it as facts.
I watched this movie and Everything everywhere all at once in the same weekend and it felt like my soul combusted.
we gotta come up with a ''parental advisory'' type o seal for existential content
Everything Everywhere all at once is seriously in my Top 5 movies of all time. It’s just so insanely creative.
Dude I watched them in the same weekend too! I was surprised by the fact that Everything Everywhere was somehow so terrible yet so great. It didn't take itself seriously at all yet also took itself incredibly seriously. Weirdest movie I've ever watched but also one of the better ones. And Puss in Boots was just perfect
That was a great movie week
@@kotzpenner Same here, honestly. Watched it in September of last year, and it came at just the right time.
I regret to inform you that both these movies are objectively mid (in my subjective opinion)
The cheeky “Horner? I barely know her!” Caught me way off guard and had me in stitches
Some very surprisingly funny lines in this film!
I'm an adult man who goes to work at 5 in the morning and cried twice during this movie. The themes were... relevant to me and my life and it did build up and get to me. Lets just say I related a lot to the allegory at hand.
As someone who doesn't cry easily, the panic attack scene was the scene that made me well up a bit. It's so well done.
The panic attack scene and his acceptance in the end brought me to tears
I cried my eyes out during this movie.
In find I cry easier when tired. Getting up at 5 will do that to you
Jesus loves you
Romans 3:23
John 3:16-17
Romans 8:35-39
Luke 23:42-43
"Emotion is not the slave of the intellect, but that the intellect is there to communicate emotions in greater resolution" absolutely brilliant line
This is not a "Kids movie" it's a "Family movie" and that's why it's great.
Disney has lost that piece these past few years. It hasn't been both. Their current movies only work for a limited age range, for when you look into their stories further they either are just basic or WORSE - damaging to child's perception of the world.
@@peterrealar2.067 And you'd be a bad parent to show movies like "Raya and the Last Dragon" to your kids. It has an atrocious moral that is harmful to kids. That moral is basically even if someone betrays you you should trust them anyway. It's a fucked up moral.
@@rommix0 I know! I don't intend to show my daughter that one. Ralph Breaks the Internet has a horrible moral as well.
@@peterrealar2.067 that movie i can confirm is terrible. It made me boycott watching Disney for a few years it was that bad. Spider-Verse being that much better the same year didn't help.
@@rommix0 Dude, it's even worse. It was a sequel to a film that DID deserve the Oscar but the idiots that year didn't actually watch the animated films and gave that one to Brave. Wreck-it Ralph deserved Best Animated, damn it.
holy fuck the line "they came looking for humanity and you just dished out a flat speech instead" i have so many feelings towards this, none of which i can word in a meaningful way
I am still trying to figure out what this means. Like how do I incorporate this into my writing?
In other words, the "do better" speech from Falcon and the Winter Soldier, which was flatter than a pancake in pathos.
@@markblankley Just spitballing a personal interpretation, as I also want to incorporate this into my writing and worry my current WIP book is too grave and preachy, but I assume in application this translates to:
"In reality, moments of tragedy are just as prevalent as moments of humor, levity, etc. To touch someone's heart with a real, believable portrayal of the human experience, embrace range of emotion, and have your most profound moments feel raw, rather than scripted."
That might be shown in having a character understand their growth over time, rather than a revelation in one moment. Or, the story's themes being implied through subtleties, rather than a neat, closing speech.
@@hyperkitten1422 dude, stop spamming fake shit on this site. Go get a life
How very perfect of you to say. I feel the same.
dreamworks really kicked up the animation. they've gotten so much more expressive, and have added so much more to their effects library. they went from semi-realistic movies, to beautiful, stylistic, cartoonish movies, and i love that.
Dreamworks always had the chops for art, their very first movie was the animated masterpiece PRINCE OF EGYPT it's just that with Shrek afterwards their cgi style became too obsessed with looking realistic instead of artistic, glad they're moving away from that with Bad Guys and now this.
The one scene that made me close to crying was when the traumatized pup calmed Puss down during his panic attack, and Puss placing his hand on the dog's head, just like a therapy dog and master would interact. It was touching.
Yeah I cried tears of absolute relief. That moment was so powerful ^_^
the mention of that scene makes me want to cry 😰
Oh I absolutely started sobbing there yes that shit hit like a truck TwT
There were no words exchanged too. Thats the moment I loved Perrito
it's insane how good the word-of-mouth for this movie is, people who i would never expect to have cared have been talking about this movie, and this video has joined that rapidly growing list of recommendations. i loved it as an animation fan, and it's so exciting for me to see people love it as people. animation as an industry has been in danger, but this movie gives me confidence that it may just find its footing again
Yeah I’ve been worried! My best friend I used to watch every animated movie we could in theaters together has stopped being interested. So I’ve been going alone. And with the pandemic and streaming, I am increasingly seeing them completely alone 😞
It was the same for me with Gravity Falls, ATLA, new doctor who (earlier seasons), wreck it ralph, and Inside Out. Movies/series I would never have watched was it not for word of mouth. But sadly they're few and far in between these days.
@@Sanquinity Word of mouth may not be the most efficient form of advertisement but it's probably the most powerful one if you ask me. I can't count how many great movies or songs/albuns I've found through the years cause someone left a positive comment about them.
"We're getting real bad recently for caricaturing emotions as illogical demons hiding in lines of code of reason inside us, as though we're heroic computers who are occasionally struck down by moments of feeling that we should be ashamed of. This is just such bullshit."
Brilliant. Brilliant.
There's the moment of peace I was looking for.
This man's videos consistently make me cry and I'm not even sure why.
exurb1a's vids used to do the same for me, especially when I was in a dark place a few years back. Now that I'm picking up the pieces, it's mostly just a sense of melancholy. I really do like his content, the way he phrases things, the way I can resonate with them. But I don't really know him as a person, I don't know if he really is someone who abused his girlfriend- which makes me feel less of a righteous indignation and more of a dull realization that I can still derive comfort from the words of someone who could have done some bad things.
'Separating the art from the artist' is especially hard when exurb1a's content is centered around the human state of being, where I want to put integrity in character behind his words. Still, this gave me a little push I needed to pull myself together, not get caught up in my own depressive periods and not despair over the fact that I won't ever _truly_ know someone else's heart, no matter how much I want to like them or care for them. I hope you can reach that point where you can just sit back and enjoy being a little detached while still appreciating content with a lot of heart in it.
Welp looks like I rambled on a bit, oops : ) that was a long way of saying 'hope you'll be doing great in the future, fellow internet stranger!'
@@otaku-chan4888 If one looks at most philosophers of history, they weren't great people. A philosopher doesn't have to live true to the words they preach. It's not difficult to see the right and wrong ways to do things, it is however difficult to put those into practice.
@@hyperkitten1422 Allegations are allegations not convictions and we shouldn't treat them as truth.
@@otaku-chan4888 You do know that abuse allegations stuff is blatant bullshit, right? "Human Experiments" he's a fucking philosophy major. Secondly, if he was truly this way, and this shitty, he would've been convicted. Random RUclipsrs don't get their actions covered up by the UK government unless said actions don't exist.
@@hyperkitten1422 Obvious bullshit is obvious.
I had the same reaction when I saw the movie. My mother wanted to watch Whale starring Brendan Fraiser, but I didn't want to feel the emotions of sadness and such, so I went to Puss and Boots, the Last Wish instead. After finishing the movie, I was filled with a similar urge to share how good the movie was as well, but instead I just pestered my friends on discord to check it out when they get the chance. I'm glad you made this video, because Puss in boots is REALLY good. Another thing you didn't cover that I appreciated was how much a bastard Jack horner was, we dont get that level of pure evil villains it feels, children movie antagonists are usually more nuanced or having reasonable ideals nowadays, but as a comedic choice having the bad guy just be unredeemably bad was so funny!
Fr, i like how we have deep villans with backstories telling us what causes them to become the way they became. But I also miss the good ol days of villans just being evil because of no other reason than to be evil!! Ugh, jack horner is such a piece of shit that cant be redeemed and i love him for that
From what I understand Jack Horner was left out of all promotional material so I guess he could be considered a spoiler? Which might be why the wordsmith Turtle didn’t mention him?
But yeah Jack was amazing and probably one of the most entertaining villains I’ve found in western media as of recent.
@@hyperkitten1422 don't care+didn't ask+no bitches+canadian healthcare yourself
@@elisanoro He's also realistic. Some people are out there being pieces of shit for no other reason than they enjoy the suffering they inflict unto others.
There are still static evil villains in movies they're just incredibly boring hence why we don't remember them, unlike Jack who is big funni from his backstory to his design and dialogue. It also helps that he's not the main focus of the movie so his schtick doesn't become played out and has a fun dynamic/contrast with the other characters who are more nuanced.
Taste is off the charts. Both this film and Everything Everywhere All At Once are amazing.
@@hyperkitten1422 You are spamming and I am reporting you for it
IKR, and "Hundred Years of Solitude" and "Amelie".
@@babyplum2837 that is ok, but please inform yourself. Also if you have extra insight on it please let me know. The least I want is to dislike exurb1a, but I cant ignore the evidence
Also FTL: Faster Than Light. amazing game, he mentions it at 7:54
I feel like this is a movie that someone like me really needed to have when I was younger. At a very young age I was depressingly aware of my, and others, mortality. I remember lying awake at night and bursting into tears because I would remember that everyone's time is limited and already wondering if I would ever made the most of it. I've worked all those thoughts and feelings now and existential questions like "what is the meaning of life", don't bother me anymore because I was able to come to my own conclusion. And this movie tackles every worry and dread I ever felt towards death and it did so with a talking cat with a sword that's voiced by Antonio Banderas. In other words its the greatest movie every made.
wow that was me too. I would literally sit in my room alone for up to two hours sitting and crying. This movie definitely connected to me on that level
Me too, I would’ve loved to have this movie as a kid and I still love it to death (no pun intended) now as a young adult. I’ve watched it at least 8 times because of how cathartic it is.
"Greatest movie ever made" Oh come on now....
Don't undersell it
It respects children, honestly. And a lot more films and tv shows used to do the same. It used to teach kids lessons that they weren't always ready to hear or understand, so that they would in the future perhaps recall to it either in the back of their minds or at the forefront. So those themes and lessons are more deeply ingrained, like on the opposite scale of internalized trauma.
I've experienced similarly calling back to old media, that helps shape my worldview, my values, morals and ethics. As silly as it might sound nowadays given the state of children's media, it wasn't always flashing lights and colors made to make babies force their parents into buying merchandise. It was for serving a greater purpose, and I hope a movie like this can help bring back respectful and meaningful storytelling to children that their parents can enjoy with them.
I'd drawn the similarities between this film and Everything Everywhere All at Once too and I'm so happy you made the connection as well! It's films like these, man. Not afraid to be extremely silly and unashamedly vulnerable at the same time. With outlandish premises like a chinese mother trying to save the multiverse or a spanish cat on his ninth life. They show you all of what humanity still has to offer.
What I've learned from- as weird as it is, webtoons- is that you can have an incredibly comedic and stupid story and STILL turn it into something beautiful and serious when you want to. Comedy can work hand in hand with emotion to create an experience that is both wholesome and heartbreaking at the same time. I see so many webtoons that start off comedies and then either mix in serious moments or become fully serious stories after a while, and it always works so well. Movies that do the same are just as great.
@@catpoke9557 Comedy always needs tragedy... or at least something serious to make the funny actually be funny and not just be funny for the sake of being funny.
@@seisosimp I think comedy alone can be funny, but it's almost never going to be as funny as comedy in a series where it takes a moment to be grounded every now and then. It just makes the comedy hit even harder when it happens. Even Smiling Friends, a very stupid (but good) show, has moments where it's grounded. They usually only last a few seconds, but it's there. And it makes it even funnier.
Saw about 13 seconds of this video, realized my evening was free, and went and watched it. I loved it-thank you.
I've been thinking about EEAAO constantly since I first saw it, watched a handful of times since. Watched it smack dab in the midst of one of the most emotionally traumatic times of my life and I think I'll carry it with me for all time.
when I get a notification stating that you've posted anything I just know my day is about to be a good one. thanks for existing mate
same
Fr
@@hyperkitten1422 ehh. I’m about the body of work. Less the deeds of the artist
@@alexatedw His actions directly blacken his works. His focus is discussion of the human condition. The allegations against him reflect the darkest aspects of humanity. It's intellectually dishonest to try and separate what he's accused of from what he talks about.
@@baum6721 no it does lol. That’s not how art works
For the longest time, I wondered if this whole "Puss in Boots is the greatest movie ever" thing was a meme. You know, like Morbius.
Now I know it's real.
Now I wanna watch this movie.
Dude, it's legit. I didn't want to believe that a freaking Puss In Boots movie was going to be anything more than a shameless cash grab, but it's actually a fantastic work of art. Instant classic!
Best part is when he said "It's time to Puss some boots!"
No, I kid, it's genuinely, unironically my favorite film now.
Treat yourself to a watch.
It will shock you with how good it is.
A crossover of the Existential Turtle and the Cat would be a fun watch.
this was the most, human? thing i ever heard from the internet, it made me feel like someone also felt, it was, i cant describe it i just sat here for a solid 5 minutes thinking of a word well it made me feel human, like other people are like me? like have... feelings? i dont know.
You probably watched all his vids rn
“A children's story that can only be enjoyed by children is not a good children's story in the slightest.”
-C.S. Lewis
Here is a list of all the recommendation's in this video, comment if I got something wrong or missed it.
The entire Video: Puss in Boots: The Last Wish
Books
4:15 Flowers for algernon Daniel Keyes
4:17 One hundred years of solitude Gabriel García Márquez
9:43 Watership Down is an adventure novel by English author Richard Adams
Films
5:50 The Fabulous Destiny of Amélie Poulain
8:06 Beyond the Infinite Two Minutes
10:24 Everything Everywhere All at Once
Games
5:57 FTL: Faster Than Light
yo thanks, i didnt get all the references and was hoping someone did this
thank you so much for posting this, I was about to rewatch the whole video to check for all of exurb1as references 🙏
I live for this sort of thing, for media where you can feel the heart of the people who made it, stuff that goes against the norm and manages to pull it off. How can you not get goosebumps when the wolf whistles after such a big first impression? I'm really happy I get to experience labours of love like this, even if it's once every few years.
I’m personally from Campbellsville, Kentucky. Hearing that tiny town be mentioned in this video caught me completely off guard. I had to listen to it again to make sure I heard it right. I know the exact theater where you saw Everything Everywhere All At Once.
Seen it 3 times and loved it every time, the eeaao of animated movies in terms of hitting your feelings hard
The intellect is there to communicate emotions in greater resolution. - I really love that line
This is why a lot of the time when I like a movie its not because of technical mumbo jumbo, its simply because it felt like it gave me a warm hug while telling me things will be ok. You're right, we're emotional creatures first, logical second.
I just got home from the movie theater because of this video, and was not disappointed. What a heartfelt movie! That panic attack scene hit me right in the feels, and the movie theater was dead silent for a moment, even the noisy little kids sitting in the row above us. I was not expecting to get teary-eyed from a movie about a character from Shrek. Glad I watched this video and then saw it for myself.
As a reminder, this is from DreamWorks- the same people that made Shrek, How To Train Your Dragon, Kung-Fu Panda, Prince of Egypt, Megamind and others. Whenever they're not making stuff like Boss Baby or Shark Tale, these guys are absolute masters of the craft, easily as good as the best Pixar and actual 'adult' film companies shove out and sometimes leaps and bounds better.
It will likely never come, but I really hope films like this can help bring animation the respect as an art form it so richly deserves, able to bring a level of imagination and storytelling prowess that just isn't able to be reached through other means.
“Small talking cat film part 2” with his intonation was so hilarious to me for some reason
I just love your videos. The ones on the main channel and the ones here. They are always so inspiring and give me that feeling of "yeah somewhere I already knew all that but somehow these words move me in a way that I can't really describe"... Your words give a feeling of wondering, of hope, of love.
@@hyperkitten1422 just wtf.... :O never would have thought that a guy who makes such videos about life, love and other inspiring and creative content, could do such things... I'm truly shoked, this needs to go more viral
@@STR4nG3boy I know, this most be heard. I love his videos too but I cant let this allegations slide
Hey, Exurb. I know you may not see this but I would really love to see you make a video something to the effect of; "to those who are to be imprisoned". Something for the souls about to face prison time, or some other agency enforced punishment. The way your voice conveys meaning and emotion. It is caring, equally uncaring, blunt, noble, and directed. You never cease to amaze me how theatrically composed you are in your videos. I think you could help a lot of people facing the tremendous existential obstacles and real life issues that plague the punished of our society.
Only a good whiskey will he mutter "yes"
I dragged my friend to go see this and while there were only three groups of people in the cinema (the school year just started) the groups were diverse in age and life, my friend and I being in our twenties, two parents in their 40s and their three children, and a couple in their 70s-80s and everyone left the film smiling. (Except for one of the kids cause the wolf scared her) genuinely good films can do that for people and we need more of them
Yes, talking cat film is excellent
But on a side note, I am surprised you still doubt yourself after making millions of people smile over the years. Imagine if you had experienced their smiles first hand, would you still doubt yourself?
Trust your creativity.
I really, really like this… hope he sees because always had an aura of self-loathing which is frankly lovable but a bit painfully relatable- love to see more content in general especially like this
All the fairly well supported sexual assault allegations against him probably help with that self-loathing thing he has going on
came looking for this exact comment!
*Spoiler alert*
Honestly what I fucking loved about the movie was that sometimes you look for some grand thing in your life to give it meaning and it seems so far away and you still keep chasing it not understanding that while you're doing that you let the things that already give your life meaning are slipping away and the more you chase that stupid dream the more hopeless you get and anxiety and depression fill you. You just wish in someway magical or by a miracle you just end up having it. And even by the slightest chance that you somehow end up getting what you want you feel like you didnt earn it. So moral of the story is that the world is full of meaning. You can just draw meaning from anywhere even the smallest things in life or as a nice youtuber once said meaning is a jumper you have to knit yourself.
Meaning there is meaning along the way on this blue dot of our existence but in the end, the limitation on our understanding line, in regards to it all, there needs to be no meaning in relation to the cosmos ...save for we all have our time as individuals, families, people, countries, species, land, mountains, seas.
Oh man... what a great comment. You just gave me a looooot to think about. :) I hope you have a good day.
Everything everywhere started close to my mind for months after and I still want to laugh and cry thinking about it
“This is also the hallmark of a good friend of course”
That line hit me a bit
Lol, me and my ex broke up, not ling after it came out. My mum wanted to go see a movie to try and cheer me up.
She'd suggested AntMan cause I love the Marvel movies, but recently, they haven't been doing too well in my opinion, so jokingly, I opted to go to this movie.
My God, was it the right choice. I thought I was walking into a children's movie that was gonna be fun and have a nice moral at the end.
I wasn't expecting to connect so damn hard with this stupid talking cat😅
His need to try and be a "legend" and pushing everyone away in pursuit of filling his ego really made me take a step back and examine thay I'd kinda done the same thing.
More worried about what the majority of people thought about me as opposed to what the people closest to me thought about me.
His fear of being forgotten by everyone and dying without making a mark is heavily relatable to a 19 year old😂
Walked out of the theatre with a slightly new perspective, actually.
My ex said I was a toxic shit and I had never changed over the years.
She was right. And I hate to say it took a talking cat in a kids' movie to make me see it, but that's exactly what happened.
Thank GOD you've seen Everything Everywhere all at once, the rocks scene reminds me very much of your videos - it's become one of my favourite films ever
I gotta say, after watching the movie, i found its coverage of death and family/friends to be a lot like some of your videos. Where its not such a bad thing to just live your life, love the people around you, and face death when it comes. But i cannot say i expected a review to come of it.
Thanks for the other recommendations, ill have to see if EEAaO is still showing
It’s a silly movie about a lil goober with boots facing off many perils and gripping with his own mortality and inner demons and it’s so good at balancing it’s tone and theme despite being labeled as a “children’s” film. I love this movie so much.
Has this man played the Outer Wilds yet? It seems right up his alley
I absolutely love this film,i watched it twice, once at home and once in a cinema and not only is the art incredible and I wanna stare at each frame forever, but both times I teared up. Both times I felt things. I like things that make me feel things,it reminds me that I'm still here,and that everyone else is still here too.
"You were good, son, real good. Maybe even the best."
Rick May as The Soldier from Team Fortress 2.
Truly one of the best animated films i have ever seen. I love how real and deep it is to us, but a child could watch it and enjoy it too without ever knowing. Truly a 10/10
Format reminds me of Schaffrillas, very well done
DANG. I can absolutely tell you’re a writer just by the way you speak in this video. Extremely well spoken and thought out, and a beautiful analysis about the humanity and feeling we can get from media. ^^
I've run out of antidepressants and this made me have the only good cry I've had this week thanks
i was thinking about writing a comment recommending Everything Everywhere all at once from the first couple minutes of this video because it is my favourite movie ever, but i thought id watch the video first and not spend brainpower writing and listening at the same time, and when you mentioned it by yourself my jaw dropped properly for the first time in ages and i was genuinely in shock.
If you by some miracle read this comment i hope it finds you well. i am a long time subscriber from Norway and your videos have made my day so many times.
I recently rewatched som of your videos and you promoted your book at the end. i embarrassingly have never ever finished a book, so i thought i would give yours a try, so i bought the four that was available in paperback. they will arrive soon, and i will read them when i have spare time in the military.
Keep making videos and i will keep watching.
Sincerely, Daniel from Norway
"The intellect is there to communicate emotion in greater resolution." Beautifully said.
My absolute favourite book is "The little prince" for almost 20 years now, precisely because I read it almost every year since I was 10 and it was absolutely amazing every time. For me it was a different book every time. I felt endlessly heartbroken and still hopeful every time, even if I know almost every word in that book by now. It is still like reading something new that you know for sure you are gonna like.
Also, shout-out to "Fineas and Ferb". I LOVED that cartoon when I was a kid and rewatched it several times in the last few years, and it is still soooo funny and clever. It has a different layer for adults)
Yet another video of yours going on my favorites Playlist, I definitely will be trying to watch this asap
I've never been so moved by an almost still image of two rocks.
Omg can't believe you play FTL one of my favorite indie games, also their new release is amazing as well
*"We're still a child at heart"* I've never heard truer words spoken...
They didn't need to go this hard, but they did. Almost everything about this film is perfect
I KNEW you were gonna touch on EEAAO. It struck me in many of the same ways and yes, completely agree. Love your analysis, love your comments. This is the first video of yours I've ever seen and consider me a subscriber, because I was just nodding along the whole time going "YES EXACTLY"
I've never felt more connected with a content creator then i do right now. This was perfectly said.
Same. It hitted home so hard that these 12 minutes went by so easily, I just realized time passed in the last 2 seconds
I watched this the other week and my grandma (60), sister (2) and I were glued. This film was a masterpiece
As someone going through dramatic life changes, coming to terms with reality and my place in it as an adult male this movie was astounding. Loved it from start to finish, made me feel so much more than usual. Watched it with my son and then my partner, awesome
You've convinced me, and thanks for the other reccomendations. The kind of film you describe brings me back to when I first watched Princess Monoke as a child.
I was wondering when the depressed turtle would post again. Good to hear from him again. Well played, and much love! I've got a film to watch now.
You keep telling us that you could never write something as good, but then you go on and make me laugh and cry and think and feel not only in the span of this short video, but in every single video you make! Your texts are an absolute banger and I love your narrating voice, it just fits so perfectly. Soothing but not boring or sleep evoking, just the right tone to listen attentively and still feel at ease.
I usually don't leave comments before finishing videos but GOD IT HIT ME SO HARD TO HEAR SOMEONE ELSE BRING UP FLOWERS FOR ALGERNON
Read the book in 6th grade and it just hit different I've never read science fiction and was the thing that got me into star trek and stuff.
Your videos always provoke the emotion I need right at the perfect moment
Bro I think you achieved the humanity
I laugh and cry at your main channel videos all the time They’re very well put together
I watched your video yesterday and dragged my friends to the cinemas today! We all loved the movie and I'm very happy and grateful that you made a video about it, because I definitely wouldn't have watched it otherwise. So thanks a lot for recommending!
holy shit man you did it again, you made your feelings into words and those words made me feel things. fuck i gotta rewatch the rememberer tonight (after a cheeky bong hit or two)
“Emotion is not a slave of the intellect, but that the intellect is there to communicate emotions in greater resolution” best quote I’ve ever forever heard ever!
I think thats what really at the core of what separates a good thing from a masterpiece; accessibility. there is an understated genius to describing human emotion in a way that’s not just to the point but poignant. it’s easy to get snobby about mainstream media but take a second to really consider the concept of mass appeal and what it means for our similarities and shared humanity. there are so many compelling things we overlook due to their accessibility, because explaining why we connect feels like explaining color.
it's beautiful to see you bloom into a feeling human from the intellectual human you were before
just watched puss in boots last wish, it made me feel
thanks
That part where you said we feel things and want to make others feel things too really hit me. It's like how we share our music taste with others, only for them to go "yeah it's alright" and we know they actually thought it was shit. You showed them the song because you wanted them to feel the same way you do when you listen to it, but sometimes it just doesn't work out that way. And that's OK. My personal favourite film is bad santa. Its got dark, adult and sexual themes to it and is very funny, but there is a deeper meaning to the story that isn't quite obvious at a first glance. Whenever I tell anyone that bad santa is my favourite film they are kinda confused as to why, because they just know it as a dumb adult themed Christmas comedy and nothing more, but there are subtle things that hint at the emotions of the characters. Like when Marcus berates Willie, in the next scene he is always drunk and looks depressed, showing how Marcus is a very toxic part of Willie's life and is the source of a lot of misery for him, both through his direct behaviour and the fact that Marcus is the one who holds up their criminal operation, allowing Willie to spend all his stolen money on alcohol which makes him more depressed. Sorry if this all sounds a mess, I've just never really had a place to talk about these ideas before
Glad you did talk about another movie here, exurb1a also mentioned another one, eh....the eeeaoc. & What in the world was he doing in Tennessee or? Consulting right. Will put bad Santa on my to do watch list
I'm so happy to hear you liked it 💜 such great themes, I love the strengths of art that can make us feel
When my worlds collide. How is this possible? Thank you for this. Really. In a world where I just exist while being decent something this lovely comes into my life. Thank you.
I’ve never even heard of this film up until a few days ago. I was invited along with some friends to go watch it on Thursday….
I instantly fell in love with the whole thing, and have been checking out reviews and videos to see if anyone else felt the same (as we tend to do). It really was so heartwarmingly done. Furthermore, it’s the first time I come across this channel, and after hearing the structure and way of thinking, breaking down the film without spoilers, analyzing it and putting it back together. 👌 def subscribing!
watership down mention is huge
Yup, Descartes was I little off; it's *I feel, therefore I am*
I, too live for those moments. Haven't had many since 2000. Maybe I'll watch the movie.
watched this movie twice in theaters and genuinely cried twice while watching it. i say this as a grown man. this movie was beautiful.
Holy shit I put this up as a podcast while doing homework and it was so good! You explain so simple and clear, both in pronounciation and showing your opinion. It's so relaxing and easy to digest while working on something else. Thank you, and yes this movie is the best ever.
4 minutes in and you've convinced me, brb!
edit: I'm back and by the kitties' beard, that was one of the best I've watched! Thank you!
Good to see my sibling grow as an actor
Ong the way i can express my love through this film through an art analysis perspective as well as just a blatantly human one. Not only is TLW beautifully animated and composed, paced and framed, scripted and voiced, but it also effectively makes me feel things. As an autistic adult i struggle with empathy, and art is the only thing that made me feel truly understanding of other people. I can sympathize and understand the logic of a person's emotions and validate them, but i rarely feel anything myself. It's only through art that i feel any kind of real connection. To me, art is the universal language for empathy. Not everyone is trained in that language, but when you use your grammar correctly, you can communicate a profound and deep emotion in people. With art, i can connect with people. And that kind of power deserves to be taken seriously whether its made for kids or otherwise
Oh, it's so nice listening to your words - so well put together, and clearly articulated thoughts. It's calming and relatable. I'm having the best time listening to your work!
Wow, this was pleasantly unexpected. I love your books so far by the way, takes my imagination cool places
Keep the great vids, love your work 🫶
I’ve just discovered you through this video. I was captivated by your thoughts on feeling before thinking. I feel like you would really appreciate Psychonauts 2. It’s a genuinely beautiful game that that takes a lot of technical and sterilized concepts about mental health and cognizance and turns it into a wacky adventure that puts a lot of feeling and heart into struggles that often get summarized by a medical term. I can’t remember the last time a game made me laugh incessantly at my own chronic internal struggles and then cry so hard at a beautifully hopeful notion that people can heal even in the twilight of their life.
Thanks Dude, you've given me a couple things to watch and a game to check out.
Never thought I'd hear Amelie come out in a shrek spinoff video. I fucking love that movie, it's one that holds a special place in my heart.
me too! amélie is like is someone captured the way i see the world at it’s best on film, it’s amazing
I just finished it. I loved it. My dear kitten died yesterday, the movie and your words made me feel better
In the end, you don't have to fear Death, but to respect it. Also, perrito is the goodest boy.
I am so glad someone else saw the comparison between this film and Everything Everywhere All At Once. Both completely made me feel something and were a commentary on the nature of humans and morality as a whole, and both made me feel so much. This is the best commentary I have seen in a long time, and I completely agree that good movies are the ones that make you feel something--I'm so glad you put my thoughts about this perfectly into words
I didn't go into this movie expecting it to be Andrei Tarkovsky's 'Stalker' for children, but I'm perfectly happy that that is what it somehow ended up being
You are unbelievable good. I have been loving your content for a long time and the evolution and diversity of content is absurd in how much I love it. I loved your depressed alcohol fueled speeches and stories and especially your video on absurdism. I can't believe the insights you manage to pack into a TALKING CAT VIDEO. This is ridiculous. You are amazing. Please keep making videos you have no idea how much I enjoy your content