A quick word of explanation for everyone asking about Bonkers: I understand where you're coming from, but I would prefer to give him his own episode with the rest of the Raw Toonage characters. The Disney Marsupilami is so different from the original comic that I think he "fits" in with my ruleset. There are also apparently some villains in the Shnookums & Meat Funny Cartoon Show (which I have never actually watched, so I could be entirely wrong). Maybe I'll stick Quack Pack in there, too. I feel like as we get more TV series, we'll have more entries that cover multiple ones at once.
Yeah, that seems like a fair enough approach. Since Raw Toonage has had multiple spin-off shows, I think putting all of those together for a video is a smart decision, especially since individually they would probably be really short anyway.
Sounds like a good plan. The way I see it, shows that have few villains or one villain (Proud Family, Brandy & Mr. Whiskers, etc) can be bundled while those with an overarching plot and many major villains (American Dragon Jake Long, Wonder Over Yonder, etc) can easily be standalone ones. Could make up for the modern era having no villains or few less than stellar ones.
Something I find the most amusing of all in this series is that the creator of the original book seemed to think that the movie was such an improvement that he actually rewrote the entire book to match the film better. THAT is how you know you made a great movie.
Something similar happened with the author of The Brave Little Toaster. When the film based on his book came out, the author loved the movie so much that it inspired him to write the sequel, The Brave Little Toaster Goes to Mars and he wrote the characters to more closely match the personalities of their film counterparts.
@@brandonlyon730 This is because, when he created the original book, he was basing more on the popularity of Newspaper Comics like Peanuts and Garfield. This is why the original book had toons speak with word balloons, which Disney felt is a waste of space to have it happen every time they speak; so, like some of the toons in the original book, all the toons in the movie got rid of the speech balloons completely. Also, there's a literal reason Jessica Rabbit is a sex symbol in the original book: she was a sketch drawn in a Tijuana bible called "Lewd, Crude, and in the Mood". One last thing to note, Judge Doom being a Toon disguised as a human is an actual thing in the book; it's called "Crossing Over".
The idea of Judge Doom being resurrected gave me an idea where Doom comes back in the modern era and finds that his Dip doesn't work on modern cartoon characters because they're computer generated graphics instead of being made from ink and paper. So maybe instead Doom creates a computer virus that causes the cgi characters to glitch until they break down.
I think on more modern characters, their CG layer works as a “shield” so to speak; once the shield is down? You can dip them. Or maybe you dip them but they survive so you have to kill them with normal methods.
"The shoe is childlike." More like a puppy dog! Look at him snuggling against Doom's leg, and running away when he sees he's in trouble. Not to mention his whimpering when being dipped.
@@purplepedantryit's easier to others. Lucky for me the common sense of knowing none of this characters is real nor feel anything may it be pain or any kind of emotion is enough to not feel anything for them. After all they're nothing but drawings, inanimate object just like a table or a chair (the only difference is that at least tables and chairs are real and you can interact with them in the real world)
Glad to see I’m not the only one who recognized June’s voice. She’s voiced so many characters in her long career, but for me there’s no mistaking the pipes of Ma Beagle from Ducktales and Grammi Gummi from Gummi Bears. RIP Mrs. Foray.
I've seen video of that Halloween show. Every single one, the crowd GASPS when they realize what he's pulling out. That's how you know what a mark Doom left on the subconscious.
That scene creeped out many children of the 80s and 90s. (And beyond.) I remember as a kid thinking the red paint from the dissolved toon shoe on his glove was blood. Kudos to bringing back an epic cruel villain.
What really makes that funny is that there's a censored TV edit of the movie that awkwardly replaces the Gorilla Bouncer's retort at Eddie, "Wise Ass" with "Wise Guy." Poorly, at that. Where as the bouncer's voice was a cartoonishly deep, the replacement voice actor was much higher pitched and very nasal.
@@e-mananimates2274 It flows better, but Wisecrack Weasel sounds like the character himself IS a wisecrack somehow. Wisecracker, maybe-- without the "weasel". Or, Wisecrackin' Weasel, but we already have a Pistol Packin' Possum in this universe, so they'd be kinda samey. But hey, enough about Hoskins! 🤣
So glad that you got to mention Judge Doom's appearance at Oogie Boogie Bash last year! I got the chance to attend with his Treat Trail was the first one that I decided to visit when the event started since it was anticipated. His mere presence alone was enough to make ME feel fear as someone who grew up with the movie. Then he pulled the shoe out to "dip" and it solidified why he was a smash hit that year.
@@abrahamaytemo Mainly because Frollo is changed from a priest to a judge, which isn't the first time that has been done but the Disney version harbors a very specific homicidal hatred for an entire race of people that hadn't been shown before in any interpretation of the character, and it strongly resembles Doom's hatred for toons, with even Frollo's speech to Phoebus crushing the ants looking similar to Doom's demonstration of how dip works on the shoe toon. But saying that I'm not claiming that Doom was the only inspiration as I've also heard Dr. Terwilliker from The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T, Amon Goeth from Schindler's List, Judge Turpin from Sweeney Todd, Haman, Tomas de Torquemada, and most obviously Cedric Hardwicke's Frollo in the 1939 Charles Laughton film factored into the character considerably
I always have wondered if Esmeralda's festival dance wasn't in part some kind of homage to Jessica Rabbit's nightclub performance (even her toying with Frollo and flirting with Quasimodo in the crowd seems like a callback Jessica's going into the audience to do the same thing to Marvin Acme and Eddie) EDIT: Marvin Acme not RK Maroon lol
Like I said with The Brave Little Toaster about it having a place in animation history, the same can be said about Who Framed Roger Rabbit but times it to 100. The film was responsible for many things. -It was what gave Richard Williams the chance to finally make what would’ve been his magnum opus, The Thief And The Cobbler to a more mainstream audience (for better and for worse). -It was what made Spielberg more interested in animation, with creating animation studios at first with Amblimation and then alongside Jeffrey Katzenberg,formed Dreamworks Animation. -It was the film that Disney desperately needed back in the late 80s and was ultimately one of the reasons for the Disney Renaissance. And -It also made Warner bros more interested in making their own animated films, with movies such as Space Jam and The Iron Giant. So all in all, it’s safe to say that Who Framed Roger Rabbit left a huge impact for the animation industry, we really need another film like Roger Rabbit in this day and age for the animation industry.
It wasn’t just Warner Bros. It’s also what convinced various networks to start producing their own original cartoon shows - notably Nickelodeon, which gave rise to the competition in Fox and Cartoon Network. In a way, a good chunk of the ‘90s renaissance of western animation owes itself to the success of “Who Framed Roger Rabbit”.
@@eggmannega6895 I think “Rescue Rangers” is probably the closest we’ll get these days to a proper Roger Rabbit followup. No other film released since then has come close to matching it, and times have changed so much that it just can’t be duplicated the same way anymore.
18:29 - 22:03: It's very likely that Judge Doom was "Pistol Packin' Possom", given the evidence within the movie. 1. He hangs around with a bunch of weasels that are gangsters. 2. He's a Toon that likes to commit murder. 3. Eddie said that the murderer had a high-squeaky voice, which is what Doom has upon his reveal as a toon. 4. The Toons listed out numerous things he could've been but isn't; one of the things they didn't rule out is most likely Possum. 5. Doom assassinated R.K. Maroon with a gun that looks exactly like the one on the "Pistol Packin' Possom" poster. 6. Speaking of the poster, Judge Doom's real eyes show he has white eyeballs with red irises, which Eddie mentioned previously. The poster has the Possom having similar eyes.
It's one of the better theories out there, and I'd certainly take it over the comic version! :D However, I would say it might be a bit hard to fully prove it was planned from the start. :(
I just commented with the same theory. I hadn't even considered your third point. I also added in the first scene with Maroon, P.P.P.'s gun follows Maroon around when the door is rotating.
@@maurycyoseka1057 You're right about two of them, however... Greasy = Snake (long hair and second in command) Psycho = Grubber (because of the crazy eyes & lack of speech) Wheezy = Arturo (because Arturo has a raspy voice, sounding like he smokes)
Ever wonder if Judge Doom a.k.a gets Reanimated with his toon form as a cross between Christopher Lloyd's other animated villains such as Rasputin from Don Bluth's Anastasia, The Hacker from PBS Kids' Cyberchase, and Merlock from Ducktales: The Legend of the lost lamp?
Roger should've been in that Once Upon a Studio short. He's an honorary WDAS character since so many Disney animators worked on both WFRR and the Disney Renaissance films
There’s some legal issues surrounding the usage of the character, split between Disney, Amblin, and author Gary K. Wolf. It’s extremely difficult for all three parties to agree on things, which explains why Roger is hardly used that much anymore. Most we’ve gotten as of late was his brief cameo appearance in the 2022 “Rescue Rangers” film, which I imagine was a compromise between all three rights holders.
My sister, her husband (my brother-in-law) and I went to the Disney Halloween event Doom was at dressed up as some of the Toon Patrol weasels (I was dressed as Stupid, my sister was dressed as Smartass, and her husband was Wheezy), and it was really cool to see Judge Doom! He instantly recognized us as his henchmen and to keep an eye out for Roger Rabbit, which we agreed we would! We even laughed about it, and, true to his character, he ordered us to stop, since laughter is fatal to weasels. It was fun! On an unrelated matter, that same night, I ran into Captain Hook, and, assuming the role of a villain's goon, I told the pirate how bad I felt for him that that nincompoop Peter Pan had cut off his hand and threw it to the crocodile, and that I hoped he made mincemeat of him for good.
I had this idea of the Coachman from Pinocchio and Judge Doom being one and the same since the former doesn’t make many cameos outside of his movie. He doesn’t even appear in Once Upon A Studio.
The rumor I've heard is that an early idea in production is that Judge Doom was another classic Disney villain, the hunter from Bambi. Why not? We never see the hunter after all. He could have bulging eyes.
6:35 - Essentially, the Blot from Epic Mickey is best described as a living and breathing Dip with the aura of Chernabog, the glee of Maleficent and the destructive joy of the Firebird. 13:15 - Psycho and alongside Wheezy are the few members of the Toon Patrol that stood out to me, personally. 17:14 - Now this character would be an excellent Blotling type in the Epic Mickey games. 17:33 - I actually used that character and his name to my own character for a certain Japanese animated series in which I am enamoured with.
And, of course, the name of one of Mickey's most revered archnemeses, the Phantom Blot. Interesting how this version is essentially a mishmash of villains and hazards.
Just imagine. If Doom and the Toon Patrol did indeed succeed in wiping Toontown forever, they would find out there were other Toons living in other parts of the world, including ones from Japan. They would do it without a heartbeat.
That would be a grave disaster if it's really happening. Especially with both France and Japan (one started the history of animation and other is the popular influential)
I'm pretty firm against Disney remakes/sequels overall, but I would not say no to another film set in a universe like this with this concept, especially as the animation industry has changed since then and international animation is more beloved. Though I guess that new Rescue Rangers movie kind of fits that "toon human hybrid" mold and that didn't look interesting to me.
@austinreed7343 Who needs it? He's already an invincible shape shifter. As long as humans don't figure out how to make Dip themselves, he could wipe them all out himself.
34:32--"He's a back-alley surgeon who has something different in mind for our animated friends. Three words: Cartoon organ harvesting." Why did this make me immediately picture a cartoon version of "Repo! The Genetic Opera"? XD
I thought the chimaera process in Fullmetal Alchemist is disturbing and even unwatchable (in the world of that series, it should be illegal.), but toon organ harvesting? It practically BLEW out of it.
Judge Doom is truly an iconic villian of the old times. Christopher Llyod played him Greatly. So cold and calm and chilling at first then a bit theatrical the next Until His reveal which is truly iconic He was a Toon that came a Looney. The black sheep of the Toons “pacifism”, who took their wackiness to mortal level. He even had. I respect for his fellow toon. He did not crave laughter, only chaos. He was truly, an image of how dangerous a Toon could be
So you're telling me that Judge Freaking Doom - one of the scariest animated villains of all time - was originally going to be played by Tim Curry... and he was passed up for being TOO scary?! What on Earth must that audition have been like?!
I never saw Roger Rabbit as a kid, but after every time the Nostalgia Critic has mention this movie in the past, and reviewed it only recently, I can totally believe Judge Doom was one evil and scary motherfucker. He traumatized children in the 80's, made one hell of a final boss in the NES game, and is still talked about on RUclips.
Ah yes Judge Doom, another of those animated live action villains. I’d say he’s among one of the best, with Narissa from Enchanted being a close second for me.
@@AlejandroigarabideNot much, which makes them a rarity. There’s a good amount of Tron villains like the MCP, Nome King, the Valley Gang from Chip n Dale’s movie, Thanos (who’s ineligible), Davy Jones, Salazar, and a handful of Planet of the Apes baddies (also off limits). Sadly most will likely not be covered, even Colin is unsure if a Pirates video is worth it.
This also raises the question of Enchanted too. There’s just Narissa and her goon. While the mediocre sequel has villains, but were live action actors. Unless we count Giselle having her villain arc in her own slot.
Fun fact: The detective in the "resurrection" comic is actually named Rick Flint. He replaced Eddie Valiant because the writers didn't have the rights to Bob Hoskins' likeness
Fun fact: In an episode of the DuckTales reboot (the Great Dime Chase), in the scene where Gyro sees his lightbulb robot going psychotic, he pulls out a list of all his other inventions that went evil. The list does contain Gyro’s inventions from the original DuckTales show, one of the items listed are the cogs from ToonTown. While not a full on cameo, it’s still great that the game got some acknowledgment from Disney. The game didn’t get referenced in properties like Epic Mickey or Wreck It Ralph.
I really appreciate how you covered the entire franchise of everything that is connected to Roger Rabbit even including the unmade prequel movie and the online games which are all very unique and intriguing. I came for Judge Doom but ended up getting so much more! Excellent job and I’m really looking forward to seeing the Oliver and Company video!
I love Judge Doom as a villain. Brilliantly well done and the perfect nightmare fuel. Your videos with the history of these villains I love and I feel so many could learn about their fav Disney films development time from time BTW, I know you don’t really talk much of your own past readings, but I used to be a co writer for Curse of the Demon Pony and various other stories for JusSonic . I just wanna say..I loved your dramatic reading. Loved it, had me in stitches
I heard Christopher Lloyd say in an interview that Doom's clothes billowing and flapping, even when indoors where there wouldn't be a breeze, was meant to be a subtle hint to his unreal toon nature.
Another great villain profile! As for Judge’s ID, I support the crazy possum suspect. The quick poster we see in the alley, has the possum shown to have the same eyes, and the crazy possum seems to prefer more violent weapons, like the missiles and knives we see in the Doom’s cartoony bits. Plus it was rumored that the possum was going to have a big role or similar but got canceled for being too violent/mean spirited. Thus motive against the head of the studio. Can’t wait to see you cover one of the most realistic villains in all of Disney!!
34:20 It looks like the "Koko" they're referring to is Koko the Clown, a character created by Fleischer Studios who first starred in a series of shorts called "Out of the Inkwell" that combined animation with live-action footage, much like Roger Rabbit. Koko also went on to appear in many Betty Boop cartoons as one of Betty's friends. It would have been so cool to see him in a Roger Rabbit sequel.
He technically appeared in the first film, though they seemed to have disguised him a bit by giving him different shaped hair and a colorful suit. My guess is maybe they thought they had the rights to the character but had to change him in the animation process to avoid copyright infringement. Kinda ironic now, given that the character is now largely in the public domain.
Judge Doom is one of my all-time favorite Disney villains! Christopher Lloyd did a phenomenal job portraying this terrifying villain. I am glad that the Disneyland Resort added him to the Oogie Boogie Bash. I wish he was permanently around at all the parks.
You forgot to mention about Hollywood Studios, the the old backlot attraction used to have many of the props from who framed Roger rabbit and canceled land that was going to be in Hollywood Studios supposedly somewhere near where rock ‘n’ roller coaster sits now
Ah yes, Who Framed Roger Rabbit, classic movie! It's actually been a while since I've seen that movie, maybe I'll watch it with my mom on a weekend we're not busy. I remember watching it a lot as a kid and not fully understanding the plot, mostly because half of the plot is live action and I had a pretty short attention span when it came to anything live action as a kid. In fact, I almost exclusively watched animated stuff as a kid, which I guess explains my passion for animation as an adult. This movie gets a lot of love for the insane amount of crossover between so many different cartoon characters owned by different companies (it STILL feels surreal to see Mickey Mouse and Bugs Bunny on the same screen together, in an official capacity), but it manages to stay focused with a strong story with good characters. Man, though, I LOVE the concept of "toon logic" and "toon physics", and this movie plays with a lot of classic cartoon tropes, particularly where the villains and their not-so-secret weapon is concerned! Judge Doom himself, I remember him being a Toon was a big surprise for me, though I'm suppose any kid would be surprised watching this for the first time. See, to me, a "Toon" is wacky and colorful, while Doom was dark and restrained. Once he gets revealed as a Toon, he gets considerably more wacky, even if we never see what he truly looks like. As an adult, I now appreciate that even in the beginning there was always something "off" about him and his mannerisms. I also find his "boomerang bigotry" against his fellow Toons fascinating. He seems to show disdain for Toon, which makes me wonder if he truly hates them or just enjoys asserting his authority over them. He definitely gets annoyed when the Toon Patrol start laughing, though in that case it's more because he doesn't want them to laugh themselves to death. Oh, and then there's his plan to commit mass genocide against everyone in Toon Town just so he can build a freeway, which seems to be an in-joke based on the time period this movie takes place in, though the way he talks about his vision of a freeway is really... strange. It's like Eddie Valiant said, only a Toon would come up with a scheme this crazy. I also think it's a good move to give as little information about him as possible, up to and including not actually showing us what he really looks like; the mystery of who or what he even is makes him feel even more otherworldly and strange, enhance the creep factor behind him. Even still, I can't help but be a little curious about what kind of evil Toon he really was... I think the Toon Patrol is a nice little homage/throw-back to the weasels that originally appeared in The Adventures of Ichabod & Mr. Toad and subsequently made frequent appearances in Mickey Mouse-related media. The Chekhov's Gun of them laughing themselves to death is well-played, though the fact that Smartass, the most competent and restrained weasel actually dies from the Dip is actually rather disturbing. Heck, the Dip in general is a disturbing concept, it was easily one of the scariest concepts for me a kid, particularly after seeing that cute friendly Toon shoe get Dipped for no reason! Toon Logic dictates that Toons can survive almost anything thrown at them, and even if they do "die" like the weasels did, odds are they'll come back, same way characters killed in various Looney Tunes shorts often died but came back just fine in the next short. The permanence of being dissolved by the Dip is what makes Judge Doom and the Toon Patrol so dangerous and people to be avoided. I have to wonder though, would the Dip be as effective against Toons in the present day? The Dip is said to be a mixture of turpentine, acetone, and benzine, which are all paint thinners which, when combined in real life, can be used to wash ink off an animation cel. It makes that such a combination would be deadly to the Toons of old, but given that cel animation has fallen by the wayside in favor of digital animation, would it still work on Toons animated in that style? And that's to say nothing of 3D CGI Toons. Maybe I'm overthinking this... But hey, that's what we do around here.
Interestingly enough Robert Patrick was given the same direction to not blink in his role as the T1000. I find it interesting that these two villains have a LOT in common. Both of them are inhuman beings posing as humans. Both are shape shifters and BOTH have the ability to warp their arms or hands into weapons. Makes me wonder if the T1000 took some notes from Judge Doom because he scared the hell out of so many people.
I feel that if Doom's identity had to be explored, it should've been done in a way that opened more mysteries. I'd have gone down the route of making Doom some unfinished animated cell. In his truest form, Doom would resemble an inkblot with blazing red eyes. Being an unfinished cell would make Doom malleable and able to morph is body into all sorts of things, which we've seen. Just me spitballing.
Oliver and company! The fact that you're going to be doing sykes and his dobermans next is something i have always wanted to see. I like the fact that sykes ends up so unhinged that he actually tries to kill both a little girl and a street gang of dogs just for pure evil!
Bro. That's not all. Sykes also knows ways to dispose of a body without getting his hands dirty. Surprisingly, throughout the whole film, he never uses his hands to abuse Fagin or Jenny, he only uses the objects around him and his Doberman.
Judge Doom is one scary dude. Evil to the core, who is more dangerous than all the corrupt corporate executives combined. His red eyes and high squeaky voice makes nails on a chalkboard feel like a girdling scream. Anyway, nicely done on this Disney Villain Retrospective video. And I know we are getting close to the villains of the Disney Renaissance themselves after the next video. I can't wait! 😁
The importance of “nightmare fuel” Judge Doom can not be understated. For Christopher Lloyd or for the larger animated media universe, as a kid in the 90s or as adults looking back on this “film noir with grown-up knowledgeable cartoons” style mystery. Nice to learn those facts about the Wind in the Willows weasels being rebranded as a goon squad for Judge Doom. I knew it was possible to die from laughter, but I didn’t know hyenas sometimes did that in nature before you said it.
3:07 While Jessica was absolutely a sexual awakening for many, I've also seen people express that they find her proportions so ridiculous that it becomes grotesque. Part of the joke with her character is just how exaggerated she is: her hourglass figure is so extreme that, if she were real, she'd fold in half and crumple under the weight of her own big breasts vs. her absolutely tiny waist vs. the wideness of her massive hips vs. the skinniness of her long legs. 5:18 Also, his perfectly-white plasticine teeth and skin are just as obviously fake as his unblinking eyes. Another detail that can be seen in Doom's costuming: his cape is ALWAYS flowing in the wind, even indoors, befitting a cartoon villain in black. Yet ANOTHER detail is just how stiff and awkward his movements are, as if he's stuck inside a human suit and just waiting to burst out. A smaller one is how he acts around dip, putting on an extra glove when dipping a shoe and backing away when dip gets spilled in the bar, but those could be explained away as just not wanting to get dirty/wet or something. 5:43 I love how Doom's evil plan all comes together in the end. He robs the bank so he can use the money to bribe his way into office, purchase the red car, invest in Cloverleaf, pay his weasel goons to do his dirty work, etc. All of it goes back to that fateful robbery, where he killed Eddie's brother during the getaway. 6:06 It should be noted that, both in the original book and this film, Toons are an allegory for African Americans. The Ink & Paint Club is a direct parody of the IRL Cotton Club, where black people could work as entertainers but never be served as guests. Toontown is a ghetto which is segregated from the rest of society. Doom's plan is to bulldoze Toontown to make way for a freeway and gentrify the area (after all, who cares about a buncha "subhuman" Toons anyways?). And part of what makes Jessica so mysterious and suspicious is that she's a humanoid Toon, aka "passing". Is she more on the Toons' side or the humans' side? Roger mentioning how there's "no justice for Toons anymore!" really hammers home the racism allegory. And how Roger refers to laughter as the only weapon Toons have in the face of adversity (while standing on a literal soapbox) further cements the theme of remaining hopeful and kind even when faced with tragedy. Eddie letting himself become so prejudiced and hateful after a Toon killed his brother made his life so utterly miserable (although his soft spot for Betty Boop and his horror at the shoe getting dipped prove he's not beyond redemption). 6:38 Fun fact: that shoe is voiced by Nancy Cartwrite, aka Bart Simpson. 9:23 That flat Doom effect is amazing for 1988! And speaking of eyes popping out, I like the detail of Doom holding a hand over his eye after slipping on marbles. Seems that the fall nearly knocked out one of his fake eyes, a last minute hint at his true nature. 34:42 Isn't that basically the villain from Chip n Dale (2022)?
I actually think that Doom's real identity being Baron von Rotten, and the backstory given in the comics could actually be tragic if given a bit if a rewrite in the Kingdom Hearts series. Like, the bomb going off in Rotten's face could actually be deliberately triggered by Organization XIII to brainwash him into thinking he was a real villain and take advantage of his natural Toon desire to make people laugh by manipulating him into creating his elaborate Dip Toontown scheme, lying to him that the death of every Toon in existence would be hilarious to them, neglecting to mention of course they can't feel anything since they lack true hearts. When he dies after he reveals his true identity, Sora would give him the mother of all Shut Up Hannibal speeches to him, pitying him for his accident, but condemning him for killing those closest to his friends just to please everyone else and for thinking that treating life as expendable as funny, only to realize that Doom was probably jealous of all other toons for being naturally funny compared to him that led to him being manipulated by the Organization in the first place, leading to a similar death scene to Envy's from Fullmetal Alchemist Brotherhood.
Here’s what I predict the next episodes will be: 31. Sykes (BONUS: Mizrabel) 32. Chip & Dale Rescue Rangers 33. Ursula/The Little Mermaid 34. Catch-Up #2 35. Darkwing Duck villains 36. Gaston (BONUS: Bradley Uppercrust III/Goof Troop) 37. Jafar 38. Oogie Boogie (BONUS: Sanderson Sisters) 39. Scar 40. Gargoyles villains 41. Misc. Disney Afternoon villains (Bonkers, Raw Toonage, Quack Pack, etc) 42. Toy Story villains 43. Ratcliffe (BONUS: James & the Giant Peach) 44. Frollo 45. Hades 46. One Saturday Morning This does make me wonder where other video-game-original villains go in the series. Mizrabel could work as a bonus villain for Sykes for example.
Well, that sound accurate, except for few things; Catch-Up videos are unpredictable. Bradley is from the movie made in the 2000s. And before Bradley there was Goof Troop with few villains: a pair of crooks, a bully, ringmaster jerk, Goofy's gangster doubleganger, and most memorable to me, Felton Sludge. Goof Troop villains, especially Bradley would have their own entry, along with Teamo Supremo supervillains. Since only Goof Troop would be too short. Sanderson Sisters are live-action, not animated. Quack Pack rouges gallery would probably appear in the catch-up video and maybe along with Goof Troop. Bonkers and Marsupilami from Raw Toonage probably are going to get a seperate entry. Since a video that is all about Gargoyles villains would be too short just like if Edgar and Amos Slade entries would be, John Ratcliffe would be a bonus in Gargoyles entry. James & the Giant Peach should appear in Oogie Boogie entry, since the undead pirate captain is modeled after Jack, a NBC character. Mizrabel was already mentioned in Maleficent entry. And it is not stacked chronologically.
Alright, what do you think of my predictions? 31. Bill Sykes and a BONUS villain(s) 32. Chip 'n' Dale Rescue Rangers 33. Ursula 34. Gaston 35. Darkwing Duck 36. Jafar 37. Raw Toonage (Bonkers and Marsupilami) 38. Oogie Boogie and BONUS: James and the Giant Peach 39. Scar 40. Gargoyles and BONUS: John Ratcliffe 41. Toy Story 42. Frollo 43. Hades 44. Lord Dragonus and BONUS: Miss Finster 45. Shan Yu and Hopper 46. Clayton 47. Carnotaurus and Krom and BONUS: Teacher's Pet 48. Yzma and Kronk 49. Catch-Up video 2: Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck video game villains, Goof Troop with Bradley, Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland: Through the Looking Glass, Househorn Malice Draconia (Twisted Wonderland) Quack Pack, PK the Duck Avenger, Nightmare Ned, Lloyd in Space and Teamo Supremo. 50. Mr. Waternoose and Randall, Commander Rourke and BONUS: The Proud Family 51. Gantu and Hamstervile 52. Xenoheart 53. Dr. Drakken 54. Silver 55. Alameda Slim and BONUS: Skeleton King 56. Syndrome 57. Foxy Loxy, DOR-15, Dr. Callico and The Agent 58. Cars 59. Herbert P. Bear 60. Catch-Up video 3: Chuckles the Silly Piggy, Gaspar, Huntsman and Dark Dragon, Mr. Bedlum, Yin Yang Yo! and The Replacements 61. Pixar (The Barracuda, Chef Skinner, AUTO, Charles Muntz, Mor'du, Gloom (cancelled), Thunderclap, Ernesto Del La Cruz, Curse Dragon and Ercole) 62. Dr. Doofensmirtz 63. Dr. Facilier and BONUS: G-Force 64. Mother Gothel 65. Turbo and BONUS: Supervisor 66. Bill Cipher and BONUS: Hex 67. Catch-up video 4: Kazar, Queen Narissa, Frankenweenie, Valentino, Abraxas (Tron), Sorcerer and Hannibal McFist and Mizrabel (remake) 68: Cedric the Sorcerer and Elena of Avalor 69; Prince Hans and BONUS: Gadfly Garnett 70: Lord Hater and Lord Dominator 71: Star vs. The Forces of Evil 72: Dawn Bellweather, Moana and BONUS: Mormagnon (Rolling with Ronks) 73: Chip Whistler 74: The Core and Emperor Belos 75: Drunns and The Ghost and Molly McGee 76: Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur and El Ray Magnifico
When you said that statement about the organs, I had to pause the video to say 'WHAT? WHAT? WHAT? And I thought the forcing characters to be bootlegged in Rescue rangers was bad!'
Something i love of judge doom was what he meant on a meta level. Because the big technical achivement of the film was mixing animation with live action and the whole movie we got comfortable with the two interacting with each other. Judge doom on the other hand being both is offputting. It is the uncanny valley where it both looks like it fits but also doesn't. when his eyes are flashing colors or he is flying through the air. It really helps him stand out and being a threat to both sides
This movie is one of a kind. Many have tried but I don't think they got the balance of for kids and adults like Roger Rabbit has. Either they go towards the kiddie route i.e. Space Jam or too adult like Cool World. To be fair, there is merit within those movies but to me they're missed potential. Doom is a fine line between cartoonish and depraved. Any other bad guy dropping a piano on someone's head would be laughed out a room or questioned heavily. If Joker did that it could work I guess but not many would get away with that. Also Doom won in real life. That can't be said for most villains. LA is full of freeways now.
With Collin covering Roger Rabbit and Oliver and Company being next on the list, this retrospective has officially reached my birth year! Not too long until we’re covering the Renaissance era since that happened only a year after I was born!
Other actors considered for Doom include F. Murray Abraham, Peter O'Toole, Sting, and Roddy McDowall. Christopher Lee turned it down. Christopher Lloyd compared it to his role of Commander Kruge in Star Trek III: the Search for Spock, as they were both overly evil and fun to play.
I love Toontown Online. I used to play all the time with my mom and collect the trading cards that would come in the mail. I still play time to time on Rewritten in which I actually got a higher laugh toon than I did as a kid lol.
Now we finally get to Gary K Wolf territory. Plus, I recommend Jaimetud's From Pages to Pictures video of how different the original novel was to final movie. Even Gary liked the final result, despite the massive liberties taken. Plus, here's some tidbits of the weasels, 14:46-14:50 That statement on hyenas and weasels being cousins is partially based on fact. Since hyenas and weasels belong to the order of mammals known as Carnivora. But hyenas are more related to cats and mongooses. 16:50-17:01 Also isn't it ironic how some of those rejected 7 Dwarves names would be used in parodies of those characters. Like Crabby, Hungry for the Simpsons. Some of the rejected names would be used for other cartoon characters after the Snow White film, Gabby from Gulliver's Travels 1939, Snoopy for Peanuts, Scrappy for Scooby Doo, Scruffy for The Railway Series/Thomas and Friends, Wheezy for Toy Story 2, and Dizzy for Tiny Toons and Bob the Builder. Though they couldn't use Daffy since the Looney Tunes/Toons and Merrie Melodies duck beaten them to it. There probably a lot more cartoon characters with that name I'm not aware of though Next time we'll be looking at a reimagined version of a famous Charles Dicken's story, other than A Christmas Carol.
I've grown up with this movie and I am always glad to see it get some love. I think the second Roger Rabbit film screenplay did get used to some extent in the Chip n' Dale Rescue Rangers movie. Roger even made a cameo in the first ten minutes of the movie with his original VA voicing him. I know the Retrospective series is mostly on movies, but I hope you can do one on the villains of Gargoyles one day. That show has a lot of interesting characters such as the tragic Demona and the ever-calculating Xanatos who got his own trope created because of him. (The Xanatos Gambit)
Fun fact: even if Smart Ass Weasel is never named on screen, for some reason the spanish dub decided to add a line where Doom calls him by name, and it's a different name (made up by whoever wrote the dub script): Sargento Cola Loca (Sargeant Crazy Tail).
Who Framed Roger Rabbit is such a underrated movie and is one of my favorite and comfort movies with such a relatable protagonist who has such a great and well written arc and the cartoon references are so nice and funny. The cgi is definitely very good, which is something that is taken for granted nowadays. But yes Judge Doom is a great villain and the twist of being the toon who killed Eddie’s brother is such a great twist, it’s sort of like the twist of King Candy being Turbo in disguise. I wonder if that was it’s inspiration. I’m pretty sure his plan was meant to be a reference to the Interstate Highway System and him melting a reference to the Witch melting from The Wizard Of Oz. He was also my introduce to Christopher Lloyd and he definitely did a good performance as Judge Doom. It’s impressive that Christopher Lloyd is still acting after fifty years, considering his age and really gives out the grandfather vibe in the modern movies. I hope he voices Toadsworth if he appears in the sequel to the Super Mario Movie, if not him than either Billy Crystal or JK Simmons or Kelsey Grammer.
This movie is definitely not funny and this movie is a serious movie and this movie is definitely not funny and this movie is definitely not a comedy film it's a serious film
When you also mentioned the Cogs from Toontown Online, I find it hilariously coincidental since both the time a friend of mine convinced me to play Toontown, and then later when I decided to watch Who Framed Roger Rabbit that developed my obsessive curiosity about what a normal life would be like as a toon? (Heck, even some of the Toontown commercials ask that same question)
Because who framed Roger rabbit is a Richard Williams film, I couldn't help but imagine that judge doom was just raggedy Ann and Andy standing on top of each other in a trench coat. (Then again judge doom could also be tack from the thief and the cobbler, wanting revenge for his film not getting finished).
Given that those films were released some decades after the events of “Who Framed Roger Rabbit”, I can’t see why Tak would be wanting revenge for something that never happened yet.
It's also worth mentioning that Tokyo Disneyland has a Toon Town as well as Car Toon Spin, unedited! Jessica is still in her classic outfit. Additionally, two of the figures that are static in the American version, Roger right as you enter the gag warehouse, and the unnamed weasel, actually have motion in the Tokyo version. It's definitely the better of the two!
Fun fact christopher lyod would later go to feature in a live action animated hybride game called toonstruck as the hero while tim cury the og doom canidate was the villain.
Really, the sequel comic should have had the four weasels who 'died laughing' revive Doom: as you said, toon logic means they should be back and fine in the next cartoon. And of course they will want revenge for the permanent dip-induced death of smart guy/wise guy/smart ass.
Eddie: "Holy smokes! He's a toon!" Doom: "Surprised!?" Eddie: "Not really. That lame-brain freeway idea could only be cooked up by a toon." Doom: "Not just any toon." Smartguy: "Here, boss. Blow yourself up." (Doom inflates himself back to normal and popping out his hat and fake eyes.) Doom: "Remember me, Eddie? When I killed your brother, I talked JUST. LIKE. THAT!!!!!!"
Judge Doom will remain one of the best and most scariest Disney villains of all time. Also, can't believe that next episode will be the end of the Bronze Age. And its with a movie I watched on VHS when I was very young.
The recall the reason why they were so lenient back then was because neither studio were in the best of shape at that time. Disney was still recovering from a near bankruptcy and nearly shut down their animation studio after “The Black Cauldron” flopped. Likewise, Warner Bros. was nearly considering the same thing in regards to the Looney Tunes, who had been struggling for relevancy for the past few decades. Now that they’ve fully recovered and are trying desperately to milk their intellectual properties as much as possible, there’s likely not going to be another collaboration anytime soon.
I'm surprised Judge Doom never said, "There's no kill quite like overkill" when he tries to kill Eddie Valliant in the film's climax. Too obvious? Maybe, but then again that's the point with Judge Doom. Even his very name lacks subtlety, just like a cartoon's calling card. The only things that were subtle about his character was the fact that he never blinked (I honestly missed that every time until you pointed that out, Colin) and that his clothes are constantly moving because of a fan from offscreen, even indoors, which Doug Walker pointed out as the Nostalgia Critic.
A quick word of explanation for everyone asking about Bonkers: I understand where you're coming from, but I would prefer to give him his own episode with the rest of the Raw Toonage characters. The Disney Marsupilami is so different from the original comic that I think he "fits" in with my ruleset. There are also apparently some villains in the Shnookums & Meat Funny Cartoon Show (which I have never actually watched, so I could be entirely wrong). Maybe I'll stick Quack Pack in there, too. I feel like as we get more TV series, we'll have more entries that cover multiple ones at once.
Yeah, that seems like a fair enough approach. Since Raw Toonage has had multiple spin-off shows, I think putting all of those together for a video is a smart decision, especially since individually they would probably be really short anyway.
Putting all the “Misc” Disney Afternoon shows together (maybe even Goof Troop unless it ends up in the Gaston video) is a good idea.
Sounds like a good plan. The way I see it, shows that have few villains or one villain (Proud Family, Brandy & Mr. Whiskers, etc) can be bundled while those with an overarching plot and many major villains (American Dragon Jake Long, Wonder Over Yonder, etc) can easily be standalone ones. Could make up for the modern era having no villains or few less than stellar ones.
You have your work cut out for you, huh?
For your next video will you count a certain poodle to be a villain
Something I find the most amusing of all in this series is that the creator of the original book seemed to think that the movie was such an improvement that he actually rewrote the entire book to match the film better. THAT is how you know you made a great movie.
Something similar happened with the author of The Brave Little Toaster. When the film based on his book came out, the author loved the movie so much that it inspired him to write the sequel, The Brave Little Toaster Goes to Mars and he wrote the characters to more closely match the personalities of their film counterparts.
If I recall Gary Wolf himself retconned his own book with another to say it was all a nightmare of Rogers.
Sometimes Disney manged to adapt something like that, shame it was once every blue moon
@@brandonlyon730 This is because, when he created the original book, he was basing more on the popularity of Newspaper Comics like Peanuts and Garfield. This is why the original book had toons speak with word balloons, which Disney felt is a waste of space to have it happen every time they speak; so, like some of the toons in the original book, all the toons in the movie got rid of the speech balloons completely. Also, there's a literal reason Jessica Rabbit is a sex symbol in the original book: she was a sketch drawn in a Tijuana bible called "Lewd, Crude, and in the Mood". One last thing to note, Judge Doom being a Toon disguised as a human is an actual thing in the book; it's called "Crossing Over".
Reminds me of the Captain Underpants movie and how there’s were things in the movie that Dav Pilkey wished he did in the books
Judge Doom's most widely seen appearance was in the nightmares of millions of children.
So true-
Indeed, he was my childhood fear. Now I have an autograph of Christopher Lloyd upon the head of a Judge Doom Funko lol.
Including mine. He's scared the absolute crap out of me
Yeah, him and the Wicked Witch of the West from Wizard of Oz *shudder*
Between Doom and his role in Dennis the Menace, it took me quite a long time to appreciate Lloyd, he's way too good as a villain 😂
A real cool detail is Doom’s cloak constantly blowing in the wind wherever he goes, even being indoors.
Basically what Darth Vader does with the force, since they're both dramatic as hell XD
clever detail.
The idea of Judge Doom being resurrected gave me an idea where Doom comes back in the modern era and finds that his Dip doesn't work on modern cartoon characters because they're computer generated graphics instead of being made from ink and paper. So maybe instead Doom creates a computer virus that causes the cgi characters to glitch until they break down.
Damn that makes sense
I think on more modern characters, their CG layer works as a “shield” so to speak; once the shield is down? You can dip them. Or maybe you dip them but they survive so you have to kill them with normal methods.
I would like to see one of Eddie's Grandchildren become a detective
That's actually not a bad idea.
That rocky and Bullwinkle movie did something similar, they even reference Roger rabbit
"The shoe is childlike."
More like a puppy dog! Look at him snuggling against Doom's leg, and running away when he sees he's in trouble. Not to mention his whimpering when being dipped.
Kids often do that to. Especially toddlers. But yeah it is doglike In certain aspects
@@chloenieuwsma4846 either way, it's horrific to see such an innocent shoe get executed.
I just said that about a piece of footwear. 😕
@@kylemorello4787
If it's anthropomorphic, it's easier to sympathise.
@@purplepedantry magic of cartoons. Smile, darn ya smile.
Or, in this case, cry, darn ya cry, I guess.
@@purplepedantryit's easier to others. Lucky for me the common sense of knowing none of this characters is real nor feel anything may it be pain or any kind of emotion is enough to not feel anything for them. After all they're nothing but drawings, inanimate object just like a table or a chair (the only difference is that at least tables and chairs are real and you can interact with them in the real world)
Roger Rabbit is one of those rare times where the film adaptation improved the story so much that even the author admitted they told it better
June Foray's line and delivery in the Queue for Car-toon spin is so darn good.
"Benny knows the streets of toontown like the back of his treads."
Glad to see I’m not the only one who recognized June’s voice. She’s voiced so many characters in her long career, but for me there’s no mistaking the pipes of Ma Beagle from Ducktales and Grammi Gummi from Gummi Bears. RIP Mrs. Foray.
I've seen video of that Halloween show. Every single one, the crowd GASPS when they realize what he's pulling out. That's how you know what a mark Doom left on the subconscious.
That scene creeped out many children of the 80s and 90s. (And beyond.) I remember as a kid thinking the red paint from the dissolved toon shoe on his glove was blood.
Kudos to bringing back an epic cruel villain.
I think I saw a video of that, and someone in the crowd cried “Not the shoe!”
The movie was so good the creator of the book made a sequel retconing the first book as a bad dream Jessica had.
That's hilarious.
I LOVE the original names, but "Wise Guy Weasel" is still a great name for a toon, hadn't ever heard it before.
What really makes that funny is that there's a censored TV edit of the movie that awkwardly replaces the Gorilla Bouncer's retort at Eddie, "Wise Ass" with "Wise Guy." Poorly, at that. Where as the bouncer's voice was a cartoonishly deep, the replacement voice actor was much higher pitched and very nasal.
If I was going to give him my own replacement name, what comes in mind for me is "Wisecrack".
@@e-mananimates2274 It flows better, but Wisecrack Weasel sounds like the character himself IS a wisecrack somehow. Wisecracker, maybe-- without the "weasel". Or, Wisecrackin' Weasel, but we already have a Pistol Packin' Possum in this universe, so they'd be kinda samey. But hey, enough about Hoskins! 🤣
I kinda like the idea of Judge Doom being a former toon of a thousand faces, sorta makes him a shapeshifter and also allows him to keep his ambiguity.
I like that idea, what I didn't like was that they showed him essentially "out of makeup" where he really does just look like Christopher Lloyd.
@@ColinLooksBackBold of you to assume he wasn't wearing another disguise
So glad that you got to mention Judge Doom's appearance at Oogie Boogie Bash last year! I got the chance to attend with his Treat Trail was the first one that I decided to visit when the event started since it was anticipated. His mere presence alone was enough to make ME feel fear as someone who grew up with the movie. Then he pulled the shoe out to "dip" and it solidified why he was a smash hit that year.
I definitely think elements of Judge Doom made their way into Disney's later interpretation of the Frollo character
How so
@@abrahamaytemo Mainly because Frollo is changed from a priest to a judge, which isn't the first time that has been done but the Disney version harbors a very specific homicidal hatred for an entire race of people that hadn't been shown before in any interpretation of the character, and it strongly resembles Doom's hatred for toons, with even Frollo's speech to Phoebus crushing the ants looking similar to Doom's demonstration of how dip works on the shoe toon. But saying that I'm not claiming that Doom was the only inspiration as I've also heard Dr. Terwilliker from The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T, Amon Goeth from Schindler's List, Judge Turpin from Sweeney Todd, Haman, Tomas de Torquemada, and most obviously Cedric Hardwicke's Frollo in the 1939 Charles Laughton film factored into the character considerably
I also see the possibility the Eight Gentle Judges (Megaman Zero 3) were inspired by him.
I always have wondered if Esmeralda's festival dance wasn't in part some kind of homage to Jessica Rabbit's nightclub performance (even her toying with Frollo and flirting with Quasimodo in the crowd seems like a callback Jessica's going into the audience to do the same thing to Marvin Acme and Eddie)
EDIT: Marvin Acme not RK Maroon lol
I don’t think so because the novel and the portrayal of Jehan Frollo in the 1939 film such a good movie were his inspirations.
Like I said with The Brave Little Toaster about it having a place in animation history, the same can be said about Who Framed Roger Rabbit but times it to 100. The film was responsible for many things.
-It was what gave Richard Williams the chance to finally make what would’ve been his magnum opus, The Thief And The Cobbler to a more mainstream audience (for better and for worse).
-It was what made Spielberg more interested in animation, with creating animation studios at first with Amblimation and then alongside Jeffrey Katzenberg,formed Dreamworks Animation.
-It was the film that Disney desperately needed back in the late 80s and was ultimately one of the reasons for the Disney Renaissance. And
-It also made Warner bros more interested in making their own animated films, with movies such as Space Jam and The Iron Giant.
So all in all, it’s safe to say that Who Framed Roger Rabbit left a huge impact for the animation industry, we really need another film like Roger Rabbit in this day and age for the animation industry.
It wasn’t just Warner Bros. It’s also what convinced various networks to start producing their own original cartoon shows - notably Nickelodeon, which gave rise to the competition in Fox and Cartoon Network.
In a way, a good chunk of the ‘90s renaissance of western animation owes itself to the success of “Who Framed Roger Rabbit”.
Something much better than that Roger Rabbit wannabe Chip n Dale Rescue Rangers.
@@eggmannega6895 I think “Rescue Rangers” is probably the closest we’ll get these days to a proper Roger Rabbit followup. No other film released since then has come close to matching it, and times have changed so much that it just can’t be duplicated the same way anymore.
18:29 - 22:03: It's very likely that Judge Doom was "Pistol Packin' Possom", given the evidence within the movie.
1. He hangs around with a bunch of weasels that are gangsters.
2. He's a Toon that likes to commit murder.
3. Eddie said that the murderer had a high-squeaky voice, which is what Doom has upon his reveal as a toon.
4. The Toons listed out numerous things he could've been but isn't; one of the things they didn't rule out is most likely Possum.
5. Doom assassinated R.K. Maroon with a gun that looks exactly like the one on the "Pistol Packin' Possom" poster.
6. Speaking of the poster, Judge Doom's real eyes show he has white eyeballs with red irises, which Eddie mentioned previously. The poster has the Possom having similar eyes.
It's one of the better theories out there, and I'd certainly take it over the comic version! :D
However, I would say it might be a bit hard to fully prove it was planned from the start. :(
I just commented with the same theory. I hadn't even considered your third point. I also added in the first scene with Maroon, P.P.P.'s gun follows Maroon around when the door is rotating.
In Prop Culture, Christopher Lloyd says that he had to take multiple retakes to get the glint on his glasses right.
Fun fact: The Toon Patrol weasels are some of the inspirations for the Gangreen Gang from "The Powerpuff Girls" (personality & dynamics wise).
Smartguy = Ace
Greasy = Snake
Psycho = Grubber
Wheezy - Arturo
Stupid - Big Billy
@@maurycyoseka1057 You're right about two of them, however...
Greasy = Snake (long hair and second in command)
Psycho = Grubber (because of the crazy eyes & lack of speech)
Wheezy = Arturo (because Arturo has a raspy voice, sounding like he smokes)
@@keshiaanders6452 But Arturo has a barber instrument just like Psycho, a pocket cone named "Maria".
Ever wonder if Judge Doom a.k.a gets Reanimated with his toon form as a cross between Christopher Lloyd's other animated villains such as Rasputin from Don Bluth's Anastasia, The Hacker from PBS Kids' Cyberchase, and Merlock from Ducktales: The Legend of the lost lamp?
Roger should've been in that Once Upon a Studio short. He's an honorary WDAS character since so many Disney animators worked on both WFRR and the Disney Renaissance films
Him and Merida were both technically eligible and would have fit pretty damn well.
There’s some legal issues surrounding the usage of the character, split between Disney, Amblin, and author Gary K. Wolf. It’s extremely difficult for all three parties to agree on things, which explains why Roger is hardly used that much anymore.
Most we’ve gotten as of late was his brief cameo appearance in the 2022 “Rescue Rangers” film, which I imagine was a compromise between all three rights holders.
My sister, her husband (my brother-in-law) and I went to the Disney Halloween event Doom was at dressed up as some of the Toon Patrol weasels (I was dressed as Stupid, my sister was dressed as Smartass, and her husband was Wheezy), and it was really cool to see Judge Doom! He instantly recognized us as his henchmen and to keep an eye out for Roger Rabbit, which we agreed we would! We even laughed about it, and, true to his character, he ordered us to stop, since laughter is fatal to weasels. It was fun!
On an unrelated matter, that same night, I ran into Captain Hook, and, assuming the role of a villain's goon, I told the pirate how bad I felt for him that that nincompoop Peter Pan had cut off his hand and threw it to the crocodile, and that I hoped he made mincemeat of him for good.
Aww cute
I had this idea of the Coachman from Pinocchio and Judge Doom being one and the same since the former doesn’t make many cameos outside of his movie. He doesn’t even appear in Once Upon A Studio.
The rumor I've heard is that an early idea in production is that Judge Doom was another classic Disney villain, the hunter from Bambi. Why not? We never see the hunter after all. He could have bulging eyes.
Neither did Fagin and Sykes, and I'm still complaining
I actually headcanon the Coachman was executed by Judge Doom halfway through filming Pinocchio.
6:35 - Essentially, the Blot from Epic Mickey is best described as a living and breathing Dip with the aura of Chernabog, the glee of Maleficent and the destructive joy of the Firebird.
13:15 - Psycho and alongside Wheezy are the few members of the Toon Patrol that stood out to me, personally.
17:14 - Now this character would be an excellent Blotling type in the Epic Mickey games.
17:33 - I actually used that character and his name to my own character for a certain Japanese animated series in which I am enamoured with.
And, of course, the name of one of Mickey's most revered archnemeses, the Phantom Blot. Interesting how this version is essentially a mishmash of villains and hazards.
😲 34:42
Sounds like a gruesome version of Sweet Pete's plot in
"The Chip n Dale: Rescue Rangers" movie.
Just imagine. If Doom and the Toon Patrol did indeed succeed in wiping Toontown forever, they would find out there were other Toons living in other parts of the world, including ones from Japan. They would do it without a heartbeat.
That would be a grave disaster if it's really happening. Especially with both France and Japan (one started the history of animation and other is the popular influential)
And what if Judge Doom doesn’t stop at toons? Maybe he gets fed up with most of humanity, and creates a human-equivalent to Dip?
I'm pretty firm against Disney remakes/sequels overall, but I would not say no to another film set in a universe like this with this concept, especially as the animation industry has changed since then and international animation is more beloved.
Though I guess that new Rescue Rangers movie kind of fits that "toon human hybrid" mold and that didn't look interesting to me.
@@austinreed7343 isn't the human equivalent of Dip normal Sulphuric Acid?
@austinreed7343 Who needs it? He's already an invincible shape shifter. As long as humans don't figure out how to make Dip themselves, he could wipe them all out himself.
34:32--"He's a back-alley surgeon who has something different in mind for our animated friends. Three words: Cartoon organ harvesting."
Why did this make me immediately picture a cartoon version of "Repo! The Genetic Opera"? XD
This is a beautiful yet cursed mental image
@@princeapoopoo5787 Right?! I can't unsee it!
I thought the chimaera process in Fullmetal Alchemist is disturbing and even unwatchable (in the world of that series, it should be illegal.), but toon organ harvesting? It practically BLEW out of it.
@@danielsvetlichny5721 I've only seen that one scene from "Fullmetal Alchemist"--"That person Edward,"--and I was like, "Nope!"
Judge Doom is truly an iconic villian of the old times. Christopher Llyod played him
Greatly. So cold and calm and chilling at first then a bit theatrical the next
Until
His reveal which is truly iconic
He was a Toon that came a Looney. The black sheep of the Toons “pacifism”, who took their wackiness to mortal level. He even had. I respect for his fellow toon. He did not crave laughter, only chaos. He was truly, an image of how dangerous a Toon could be
So you're telling me that Judge Freaking Doom - one of the scariest animated villains of all time - was originally going to be played by Tim Curry... and he was passed up for being TOO scary?! What on Earth must that audition have been like?!
Same thing with the Joker in Batman the animated series
i can only imagine how bonkers the "remember me eddie ?" line would've been with tim playing doom
Judge Doom is honestly one of the creepiest villians I've ever seen
I never saw Roger Rabbit as a kid, but after every time the Nostalgia Critic has mention this movie in the past, and reviewed it only recently, I can totally believe Judge Doom was one evil and scary motherfucker. He traumatized children in the 80's, made one hell of a final boss in the NES game, and is still talked about on RUclips.
Ah yes Judge Doom, another of those animated live action villains. I’d say he’s among one of the best, with Narissa from Enchanted being a close second for me.
Are there that many to begin with?
@@AlejandroigarabideNot much, which makes them a rarity. There’s a good amount of Tron villains like the MCP, Nome King, the Valley Gang from Chip n Dale’s movie, Thanos (who’s ineligible), Davy Jones, Salazar, and a handful of Planet of the Apes baddies (also off limits).
Sadly most will likely not be covered, even Colin is unsure if a Pirates video is worth it.
@@KaizokuGaeru
Many of them are presented as “real” in universe which makes it even more ambiguous.
This also raises the question of Enchanted too. There’s just Narissa and her goon. While the mediocre sequel has villains, but were live action actors. Unless we count Giselle having her villain arc in her own slot.
I feel the same way.
Fun fact: The detective in the "resurrection" comic is actually named Rick Flint. He replaced Eddie Valiant because the writers didn't have the rights to Bob Hoskins' likeness
Fun fact: In an episode of the DuckTales reboot (the Great Dime Chase), in the scene where Gyro sees his lightbulb robot going psychotic, he pulls out a list of all his other inventions that went evil. The list does contain Gyro’s inventions from the original DuckTales show, one of the items listed are the cogs from ToonTown. While not a full on cameo, it’s still great that the game got some acknowledgment from Disney. The game didn’t get referenced in properties like Epic Mickey or Wreck It Ralph.
I really appreciate how you covered the entire franchise of everything that is connected to Roger Rabbit even including the unmade prequel movie and the online games which are all very unique and intriguing. I came for Judge Doom but ended up getting so much more! Excellent job and I’m really looking forward to seeing the Oliver and Company video!
I love Judge Doom as a villain. Brilliantly well done and the perfect nightmare fuel. Your videos with the history of these villains I love and I feel so many could learn about their fav Disney films development time from time
BTW, I know you don’t really talk much of your own past readings, but I used to be a co writer for Curse of the Demon Pony and various other stories for JusSonic . I just wanna say..I loved your dramatic reading. Loved it, had me in stitches
I heard Christopher Lloyd say in an interview that Doom's clothes billowing and flapping, even when indoors where there wouldn't be a breeze, was meant to be a subtle hint to his unreal toon nature.
38:27
Psycho: Bye Bye! Hehehehe!
Judge doom is one of my favourite villains in the world of cartoons.
Another great villain profile! As for Judge’s ID, I support the crazy possum suspect. The quick poster we see in the alley, has the possum shown to have the same eyes, and the crazy possum seems to prefer more violent weapons, like the missiles and knives we see in the Doom’s cartoony bits. Plus it was rumored that the possum was going to have a big role or similar but got canceled for being too violent/mean spirited. Thus motive against the head of the studio.
Can’t wait to see you cover one of the most realistic villains in all of Disney!!
5:00 Judge Doom
11:18 The Toon Patrol
16:48 Deleted Villains
32:13 Unproduced Prequel
35:54 Cogs
I'm so happy we've made it this far. Keep going!
About the cogs they are actually mentioned in DuckTales, 2017 episode the great dime chase Gyro shows his inventions that turned evil
Ok, the multiplane camera/model sheet resurrection is literally the cutest thing I've ever seen
34:20 It looks like the "Koko" they're referring to is Koko the Clown, a character created by Fleischer Studios who first starred in a series of shorts called "Out of the Inkwell" that combined animation with live-action footage, much like Roger Rabbit. Koko also went on to appear in many Betty Boop cartoons as one of Betty's friends. It would have been so cool to see him in a Roger Rabbit sequel.
He technically appeared in the first film, though they seemed to have disguised him a bit by giving him different shaped hair and a colorful suit.
My guess is maybe they thought they had the rights to the character but had to change him in the animation process to avoid copyright infringement. Kinda ironic now, given that the character is now largely in the public domain.
Thank you. I really enjoyed your video 💙
Another hint that Doom is a toon is when Eddie spills the dip canister in the bar and Doom backs away almost like he's afraid
Judge Doom is one of my all-time favorite Disney villains! Christopher Lloyd did a phenomenal job portraying this terrifying villain. I am glad that the Disneyland Resort added him to the Oogie Boogie Bash. I wish he was permanently around at all the parks.
Glad to hear you’re going back to Sykes next
Yeah and I hope that he bring up Marlon Brando being the first choice
You forgot to mention about Hollywood Studios, the the old backlot attraction used to have many of the props from who framed Roger rabbit and canceled land that was going to be in Hollywood Studios supposedly somewhere near where rock ‘n’ roller coaster sits now
13:40 he gives me brer bear vibes
21:58 Or maybe... Buddy? I mean, remember the time he tries to Kill his former "Co-Stars" with a bomb once?
Are you referencing Animaniacs?
Ah yes, Who Framed Roger Rabbit, classic movie! It's actually been a while since I've seen that movie, maybe I'll watch it with my mom on a weekend we're not busy. I remember watching it a lot as a kid and not fully understanding the plot, mostly because half of the plot is live action and I had a pretty short attention span when it came to anything live action as a kid. In fact, I almost exclusively watched animated stuff as a kid, which I guess explains my passion for animation as an adult. This movie gets a lot of love for the insane amount of crossover between so many different cartoon characters owned by different companies (it STILL feels surreal to see Mickey Mouse and Bugs Bunny on the same screen together, in an official capacity), but it manages to stay focused with a strong story with good characters. Man, though, I LOVE the concept of "toon logic" and "toon physics", and this movie plays with a lot of classic cartoon tropes, particularly where the villains and their not-so-secret weapon is concerned!
Judge Doom himself, I remember him being a Toon was a big surprise for me, though I'm suppose any kid would be surprised watching this for the first time. See, to me, a "Toon" is wacky and colorful, while Doom was dark and restrained. Once he gets revealed as a Toon, he gets considerably more wacky, even if we never see what he truly looks like. As an adult, I now appreciate that even in the beginning there was always something "off" about him and his mannerisms. I also find his "boomerang bigotry" against his fellow Toons fascinating. He seems to show disdain for Toon, which makes me wonder if he truly hates them or just enjoys asserting his authority over them. He definitely gets annoyed when the Toon Patrol start laughing, though in that case it's more because he doesn't want them to laugh themselves to death. Oh, and then there's his plan to commit mass genocide against everyone in Toon Town just so he can build a freeway, which seems to be an in-joke based on the time period this movie takes place in, though the way he talks about his vision of a freeway is really... strange. It's like Eddie Valiant said, only a Toon would come up with a scheme this crazy. I also think it's a good move to give as little information about him as possible, up to and including not actually showing us what he really looks like; the mystery of who or what he even is makes him feel even more otherworldly and strange, enhance the creep factor behind him. Even still, I can't help but be a little curious about what kind of evil Toon he really was...
I think the Toon Patrol is a nice little homage/throw-back to the weasels that originally appeared in The Adventures of Ichabod & Mr. Toad and subsequently made frequent appearances in Mickey Mouse-related media. The Chekhov's Gun of them laughing themselves to death is well-played, though the fact that Smartass, the most competent and restrained weasel actually dies from the Dip is actually rather disturbing. Heck, the Dip in general is a disturbing concept, it was easily one of the scariest concepts for me a kid, particularly after seeing that cute friendly Toon shoe get Dipped for no reason! Toon Logic dictates that Toons can survive almost anything thrown at them, and even if they do "die" like the weasels did, odds are they'll come back, same way characters killed in various Looney Tunes shorts often died but came back just fine in the next short. The permanence of being dissolved by the Dip is what makes Judge Doom and the Toon Patrol so dangerous and people to be avoided. I have to wonder though, would the Dip be as effective against Toons in the present day? The Dip is said to be a mixture of turpentine, acetone, and benzine, which are all paint thinners which, when combined in real life, can be used to wash ink off an animation cel. It makes that such a combination would be deadly to the Toons of old, but given that cel animation has fallen by the wayside in favor of digital animation, would it still work on Toons animated in that style? And that's to say nothing of 3D CGI Toons. Maybe I'm overthinking this... But hey, that's what we do around here.
Interestingly enough Robert Patrick was given the same direction to not blink in his role as the T1000. I find it interesting that these two villains have a LOT in common. Both of them are inhuman beings posing as humans. Both are shape shifters and BOTH have the ability to warp their arms or hands into weapons. Makes me wonder if the T1000 took some notes from Judge Doom because he scared the hell out of so many people.
I feel that if Doom's identity had to be explored, it should've been done in a way that opened more mysteries. I'd have gone down the route of making Doom some unfinished animated cell. In his truest form, Doom would resemble an inkblot with blazing red eyes. Being an unfinished cell would make Doom malleable and able to morph is body into all sorts of things, which we've seen. Just me spitballing.
I find your idea to be ..... Logical !
Kinda like various versions of the Phantom Blot? (Especially the version from Epic Mickey.)
“Bye bye… Heheheh!”
*Pulls the lever.*
Oliver and company! The fact that you're going to be doing sykes and his dobermans next is something i have always wanted to see. I like the fact that sykes ends up so unhinged that he actually tries to kill both a little girl and a street gang of dogs just for pure evil!
Bro. That's not all.
Sykes also knows ways to dispose of a body without getting his hands dirty. Surprisingly, throughout the whole film, he never uses his hands to abuse Fagin or Jenny, he only uses the objects around him and his Doberman.
Pal Reubens AKA Pee Wee Herman (RIP) voiced Roger Rabbit in early animation tests
Judge Doom is one scary dude. Evil to the core, who is more dangerous than all the corrupt corporate executives combined. His red eyes and high squeaky voice makes nails on a chalkboard feel like a girdling scream. Anyway, nicely done on this Disney Villain Retrospective video. And I know we are getting close to the villains of the Disney Renaissance themselves after the next video. I can't wait! 😁
The importance of “nightmare fuel” Judge Doom can not be understated. For Christopher Lloyd or for the larger animated media universe, as a kid in the 90s or as adults looking back on this “film noir with grown-up knowledgeable cartoons” style mystery. Nice to learn those facts about the Wind in the Willows weasels being rebranded as a goon squad for Judge Doom. I knew it was possible to die from laughter, but I didn’t know hyenas sometimes did that in nature before you said it.
3:07 While Jessica was absolutely a sexual awakening for many, I've also seen people express that they find her proportions so ridiculous that it becomes grotesque. Part of the joke with her character is just how exaggerated she is: her hourglass figure is so extreme that, if she were real, she'd fold in half and crumple under the weight of her own big breasts vs. her absolutely tiny waist vs. the wideness of her massive hips vs. the skinniness of her long legs.
5:18 Also, his perfectly-white plasticine teeth and skin are just as obviously fake as his unblinking eyes. Another detail that can be seen in Doom's costuming: his cape is ALWAYS flowing in the wind, even indoors, befitting a cartoon villain in black. Yet ANOTHER detail is just how stiff and awkward his movements are, as if he's stuck inside a human suit and just waiting to burst out. A smaller one is how he acts around dip, putting on an extra glove when dipping a shoe and backing away when dip gets spilled in the bar, but those could be explained away as just not wanting to get dirty/wet or something.
5:43 I love how Doom's evil plan all comes together in the end. He robs the bank so he can use the money to bribe his way into office, purchase the red car, invest in Cloverleaf, pay his weasel goons to do his dirty work, etc. All of it goes back to that fateful robbery, where he killed Eddie's brother during the getaway.
6:06 It should be noted that, both in the original book and this film, Toons are an allegory for African Americans. The Ink & Paint Club is a direct parody of the IRL Cotton Club, where black people could work as entertainers but never be served as guests. Toontown is a ghetto which is segregated from the rest of society. Doom's plan is to bulldoze Toontown to make way for a freeway and gentrify the area (after all, who cares about a buncha "subhuman" Toons anyways?). And part of what makes Jessica so mysterious and suspicious is that she's a humanoid Toon, aka "passing". Is she more on the Toons' side or the humans' side?
Roger mentioning how there's "no justice for Toons anymore!" really hammers home the racism allegory. And how Roger refers to laughter as the only weapon Toons have in the face of adversity (while standing on a literal soapbox) further cements the theme of remaining hopeful and kind even when faced with tragedy. Eddie letting himself become so prejudiced and hateful after a Toon killed his brother made his life so utterly miserable (although his soft spot for Betty Boop and his horror at the shoe getting dipped prove he's not beyond redemption).
6:38 Fun fact: that shoe is voiced by Nancy Cartwrite, aka Bart Simpson.
9:23 That flat Doom effect is amazing for 1988! And speaking of eyes popping out, I like the detail of Doom holding a hand over his eye after slipping on marbles. Seems that the fall nearly knocked out one of his fake eyes, a last minute hint at his true nature.
34:42 Isn't that basically the villain from Chip n Dale (2022)?
I actually think that Doom's real identity being Baron von Rotten, and the backstory given in the comics could actually be tragic if given a bit if a rewrite in the Kingdom Hearts series.
Like, the bomb going off in Rotten's face could actually be deliberately triggered by Organization XIII to brainwash him into thinking he was a real villain and take advantage of his natural Toon desire to make people laugh by manipulating him into creating his elaborate Dip Toontown scheme, lying to him that the death of every Toon in existence would be hilarious to them, neglecting to mention of course they can't feel anything since they lack true hearts. When he dies after he reveals his true identity, Sora would give him the mother of all Shut Up Hannibal speeches to him, pitying him for his accident, but condemning him for killing those closest to his friends just to please everyone else and for thinking that treating life as expendable as funny, only to realize that Doom was probably jealous of all other toons for being naturally funny compared to him that led to him being manipulated by the Organization in the first place, leading to a similar death scene to Envy's from Fullmetal Alchemist Brotherhood.
Villain themes:
Judge Doom/Baron Rotten - 10:29 - 10:40, 10:59 - 11:06
Toon Patrol - 16:28 - 16:42
Here’s what I predict the next episodes will be:
31. Sykes (BONUS: Mizrabel)
32. Chip & Dale Rescue Rangers
33. Ursula/The Little Mermaid
34. Catch-Up #2
35. Darkwing Duck villains
36. Gaston (BONUS: Bradley Uppercrust III/Goof Troop)
37. Jafar
38. Oogie Boogie (BONUS: Sanderson Sisters)
39. Scar
40. Gargoyles villains
41. Misc. Disney Afternoon villains (Bonkers, Raw Toonage, Quack Pack, etc)
42. Toy Story villains
43. Ratcliffe (BONUS: James & the Giant Peach)
44. Frollo
45. Hades
46. One Saturday Morning
This does make me wonder where other video-game-original villains go in the series. Mizrabel could work as a bonus villain for Sykes for example.
Well, that sound accurate, except for few things;
Catch-Up videos are unpredictable.
Bradley is from the movie made in the 2000s. And before Bradley there was Goof Troop with few villains: a pair of crooks, a bully, ringmaster jerk, Goofy's gangster doubleganger, and most memorable to me, Felton Sludge.
Goof Troop villains, especially Bradley would have their own entry, along with Teamo Supremo supervillains. Since only Goof Troop would be too short.
Sanderson Sisters are live-action, not animated.
Quack Pack rouges gallery would probably appear in the catch-up video and maybe along with Goof Troop.
Bonkers and Marsupilami from Raw Toonage probably are going to get a seperate entry.
Since a video that is all about Gargoyles villains would be too short just like if Edgar and Amos Slade entries would be, John Ratcliffe would be a bonus in Gargoyles entry.
James & the Giant Peach should appear in Oogie Boogie entry, since the undead pirate captain is modeled after Jack, a NBC character.
Mizrabel was already mentioned in Maleficent entry.
And it is not stacked chronologically.
Alright, what do you think of my predictions?
31. Bill Sykes and a BONUS villain(s)
32. Chip 'n' Dale Rescue Rangers
33. Ursula
34. Gaston
35. Darkwing Duck
36. Jafar
37. Raw Toonage (Bonkers and Marsupilami)
38. Oogie Boogie and BONUS: James and the Giant Peach
39. Scar
40. Gargoyles and BONUS: John Ratcliffe
41. Toy Story
42. Frollo
43. Hades
44. Lord Dragonus and BONUS: Miss Finster
45. Shan Yu and Hopper
46. Clayton
47. Carnotaurus and Krom and BONUS: Teacher's Pet
48. Yzma and Kronk
49. Catch-Up video 2: Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck video game villains, Goof Troop with Bradley, Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland: Through the Looking Glass, Househorn Malice Draconia (Twisted Wonderland) Quack Pack, PK the Duck Avenger, Nightmare Ned, Lloyd in Space and Teamo Supremo.
50. Mr. Waternoose and Randall, Commander Rourke and BONUS: The Proud Family
51. Gantu and Hamstervile
52. Xenoheart
53. Dr. Drakken
54. Silver
55. Alameda Slim and BONUS: Skeleton King
56. Syndrome
57. Foxy Loxy, DOR-15, Dr. Callico and The Agent
58. Cars
59. Herbert P. Bear
60. Catch-Up video 3: Chuckles the Silly Piggy, Gaspar, Huntsman and Dark Dragon, Mr. Bedlum, Yin Yang Yo! and The Replacements
61. Pixar (The Barracuda, Chef Skinner, AUTO, Charles Muntz, Mor'du, Gloom (cancelled), Thunderclap, Ernesto Del La Cruz, Curse Dragon and Ercole)
62. Dr. Doofensmirtz
63. Dr. Facilier and BONUS: G-Force
64. Mother Gothel
65. Turbo and BONUS: Supervisor
66. Bill Cipher and BONUS: Hex
67. Catch-up video 4: Kazar, Queen Narissa, Frankenweenie, Valentino, Abraxas (Tron), Sorcerer and Hannibal McFist and Mizrabel (remake)
68: Cedric the Sorcerer and Elena of Avalor
69; Prince Hans and BONUS: Gadfly Garnett
70: Lord Hater and Lord Dominator
71: Star vs. The Forces of Evil
72: Dawn Bellweather, Moana and BONUS: Mormagnon (Rolling with Ronks)
73: Chip Whistler
74: The Core and Emperor Belos
75: Drunns and The Ghost and Molly McGee
76: Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur and El Ray Magnifico
@@maurycyoseka1057
To be fair, the Sanderson Sisters have appeared in crossovers with animated villains.
@@austinreed7343 Okay. But that still doesn't count.
Oh boy, isn't Sykes such a great villain? :D
1.only 2 parts away to renaissance villains
2. fun fact chip and dale rescue rangers aired day after Oliver and company freaky is it
It doesn’t seem that freaky.
@@geoffreyrichards6079 maybe freaky wasn’t the right to use but it was first word to pop into my head
When you said that statement about the organs, I had to pause the video to say 'WHAT? WHAT? WHAT? And I thought the forcing characters to be bootlegged in Rescue rangers was bad!'
Something i love of judge doom was what he meant on a meta level. Because the big technical achivement of the film was mixing animation with live action and the whole movie we got comfortable with the two interacting with each other. Judge doom on the other hand being both is offputting. It is the uncanny valley where it both looks like it fits but also doesn't. when his eyes are flashing colors or he is flying through the air. It really helps him stand out and being a threat to both sides
This movie is one of a kind. Many have tried but I don't think they got the balance of for kids and adults like Roger Rabbit has. Either they go towards the kiddie route i.e. Space Jam or too adult like Cool World. To be fair, there is merit within those movies but to me they're missed potential. Doom is a fine line between cartoonish and depraved. Any other bad guy dropping a piano on someone's head would be laughed out a room or questioned heavily. If Joker did that it could work I guess but not many would get away with that.
Also Doom won in real life. That can't be said for most villains. LA is full of freeways now.
With Collin covering Roger Rabbit and Oliver and Company being next on the list, this retrospective has officially reached my birth year! Not too long until we’re covering the Renaissance era since that happened only a year after I was born!
I love using cartoon as an expression, so puppetry and some character writing kind a makes it animated in a way.
Other actors considered for Doom include F. Murray Abraham, Peter O'Toole, Sting, and Roddy McDowall. Christopher Lee turned it down. Christopher Lloyd compared it to his role of Commander Kruge in Star Trek III: the Search for Spock, as they were both overly evil and fun to play.
the scene where Judge Doom puts the poor helpless toon shoe into the Dip traumatized me!
Thank you for acknowledging the Pistol Packing Possum. That's my favorite Judge Doom theory.
Never kill a poor, innocent shoe. Lesson learned! Well, sort of.
Excellent episode, definitely enjoyed seeing Judge Doom’s development. Thank you for this series
I love Toontown Online. I used to play all the time with my mom and collect the trading cards that would come in the mail. I still play time to time on Rewritten in which I actually got a higher laugh toon than I did as a kid lol.
Now we finally get to Gary K Wolf territory. Plus, I recommend Jaimetud's From Pages to Pictures video of how different the original novel was to final movie. Even Gary liked the final result, despite the massive liberties taken. Plus, here's some tidbits of the weasels, 14:46-14:50 That statement on hyenas and weasels being cousins is partially based on fact. Since hyenas and weasels belong to the order of mammals known as Carnivora. But hyenas are more related to cats and mongooses.
16:50-17:01 Also isn't it ironic how some of those rejected 7 Dwarves names would be used in parodies of those characters. Like Crabby, Hungry for the Simpsons. Some of the rejected names would be used for other cartoon characters after the Snow White film, Gabby from Gulliver's Travels 1939, Snoopy for Peanuts, Scrappy for Scooby Doo, Scruffy for The Railway Series/Thomas and Friends, Wheezy for Toy Story 2, and Dizzy for Tiny Toons and Bob the Builder. Though they couldn't use Daffy since the Looney Tunes/Toons and Merrie Melodies duck beaten them to it. There probably a lot more cartoon characters with that name I'm not aware of though
Next time we'll be looking at a reimagined version of a famous Charles Dicken's story, other than A Christmas Carol.
Omg I was just re-watching some of ur older villain retrospectives (just finished the Captain Hook one) and seeing a new episode just now is a treat!
I've grown up with this movie and I am always glad to see it get some love.
I think the second Roger Rabbit film screenplay did get used to some extent in the Chip n' Dale Rescue Rangers movie. Roger even made a cameo in the first ten minutes of the movie with his original VA voicing him.
I know the Retrospective series is mostly on movies, but I hope you can do one on the villains of Gargoyles one day. That show has a lot of interesting characters such as the tragic Demona and the ever-calculating Xanatos who got his own trope created because of him. (The Xanatos Gambit)
Fun fact: even if Smart Ass Weasel is never named on screen, for some reason the spanish dub decided to add a line where Doom calls him by name, and it's a different name (made up by whoever wrote the dub script): Sargento Cola Loca (Sargeant Crazy Tail).
Who Framed Roger Rabbit is such a underrated movie and is one of my favorite and comfort movies with such a relatable protagonist who has such a great and well written arc and the cartoon references are so nice and funny. The cgi is definitely very good, which is something that is taken for granted nowadays. But yes Judge Doom is a great villain and the twist of being the toon who killed Eddie’s brother is such a great twist, it’s sort of like the twist of King Candy being Turbo in disguise. I wonder if that was it’s inspiration. I’m pretty sure his plan was meant to be a reference to the Interstate Highway System and him melting a reference to the Witch melting from The Wizard Of Oz. He was also my introduce to Christopher Lloyd and he definitely did a good performance as Judge Doom. It’s impressive that Christopher Lloyd is still acting after fifty years, considering his age and really gives out the grandfather vibe in the modern movies. I hope he voices Toadsworth if he appears in the sequel to the Super Mario Movie, if not him than either Billy Crystal or JK Simmons or Kelsey Grammer.
This movie is definitely not funny and this movie is a serious movie and this movie is definitely not funny and this movie is definitely not a comedy film it's a serious film
@@ShawnBettasso-rn9kk Okay.
Great video Collin. But didn’t the original book have a genie as the villain who murdered roger. I was surprised you didn’t discuss him
I can't like this video enough times. I learned so many things about my favorite movie! Thank you so much
When you also mentioned the Cogs from Toontown Online, I find it hilariously coincidental since both the time a friend of mine convinced me to play Toontown, and then later when I decided to watch Who Framed Roger Rabbit that developed my obsessive curiosity about what a normal life would be like as a toon? (Heck, even some of the Toontown commercials ask that same question)
Was the vulture inspired by Zigzag's vulture phido ? Richard williams worked on both
One detail you missed about the Doom Patrol, that through out the movie they are using real-life guns instead of cartoon guns.
Because who framed Roger rabbit is a Richard Williams film, I couldn't help but imagine that judge doom was just raggedy Ann and Andy standing on top of each other in a trench coat.
(Then again judge doom could also be tack from the thief and the cobbler, wanting revenge for his film not getting finished).
Given that those films were released some decades after the events of “Who Framed Roger Rabbit”, I can’t see why Tak would be wanting revenge for something that never happened yet.
Roger Rabbit might be my favorite Disney Movie of all time, so this is a REAL a treat! Getting closure and closure to Urusla!
It's also worth mentioning that Tokyo Disneyland has a Toon Town as well as Car Toon Spin, unedited! Jessica is still in her classic outfit. Additionally, two of the figures that are static in the American version, Roger right as you enter the gag warehouse, and the unnamed weasel, actually have motion in the Tokyo version. It's definitely the better of the two!
Fun fact christopher lyod would later go to feature in a live action animated hybride game called toonstruck as the hero while tim cury the og doom canidate was the villain.
28:48 Benny: HOLY SMOKES, ROGER! WE’VE BEEN DIPPED!!!!!
Who Framed Roger Rabbit is my most favorite Disney movie of all time!! I think the Toon Patrol weasels are not only evil, but also very funny!
Really, the sequel comic should have had the four weasels who 'died laughing' revive Doom: as you said, toon logic means they should be back and fine in the next cartoon. And of course they will want revenge for the permanent dip-induced death of smart guy/wise guy/smart ass.
YESSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS FINALLY A ROGER RABBIT EPISODE
Eddie: "Holy smokes! He's a toon!"
Doom: "Surprised!?"
Eddie: "Not really. That lame-brain freeway idea could only be cooked up by a toon."
Doom: "Not just any toon."
Smartguy: "Here, boss. Blow yourself up."
(Doom inflates himself back to normal and popping out his hat and fake eyes.)
Doom: "Remember me, Eddie? When I killed your brother, I talked JUST. LIKE. THAT!!!!!!"
Judge Doom will remain one of the best and most scariest Disney villains of all time.
Also, can't believe that next episode will be the end of the Bronze Age. And its with a movie I watched on VHS when I was very young.
Sure, Judge Doom is the scariest, but no one is as dark and realistic as Bill Sykes.
I wonder if the idea of a pet Vulture is the idea that inspirated the villain Taurus Bulba to have the same type of pet in Dark Wing Duck.
I wish Disney and Warner Brothers would still be willing to work together like they did in this film😞
The recall the reason why they were so lenient back then was because neither studio were in the best of shape at that time. Disney was still recovering from a near bankruptcy and nearly shut down their animation studio after “The Black Cauldron” flopped. Likewise, Warner Bros. was nearly considering the same thing in regards to the Looney Tunes, who had been struggling for relevancy for the past few decades.
Now that they’ve fully recovered and are trying desperately to milk their intellectual properties as much as possible, there’s likely not going to be another collaboration anytime soon.
Ah, Judge Doom. Arguably the MVP in the department of "They showed us this AS KIDS?!" stuff 😂
Christopher Lee AKA Hammers Dracula was considered for Judge Doom too.
I'm surprised Judge Doom never said, "There's no kill quite like overkill" when he tries to kill Eddie Valliant in the film's climax. Too obvious? Maybe, but then again that's the point with Judge Doom. Even his very name lacks subtlety, just like a cartoon's calling card. The only things that were subtle about his character was the fact that he never blinked (I honestly missed that every time until you pointed that out, Colin) and that his clothes are constantly moving because of a fan from offscreen, even indoors, which Doug Walker pointed out as the Nostalgia Critic.