Inside Out | Canadian First Time Watching | Movie Reaction | Movie Review | Movie Commentary
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 30 июн 2024
- Simone & George are reacting to Inside Out for the first time! Canadians React!
For unedited full length version go to / cinebinge
Merch Store: www.cinebinge.ca
00:00 - Intro
01:34 - Inside Out
26:55 - Discussion
Subscribe | Like | Share | Comment
Early Access & Full Reaction available on Patreon!
#moviereaction #moviereview #insideout
Instagram: @cinebingechannel
Instagram: @simone.swan
Movie Reactions:
• CineBinge Movies
The Witcher Reactions:
• The Witcher
Squid Games Reaction:
• Squid Game
Band of Brothers:
• Band of Brothers
Blind Playthrough:
• Blind Playthrough - Кино
I work as a therapist. In the last 14 years in this field, this film has been the best reference for children to understand complex emotions and the problem with rejecting genuine emotions. I/we can’t wait for the upcoming sequel.
The CinemaTherapy reaction to this was enthusiastic for similar reasons
Fellow therapist! Same! Also -- passing on a fun intervention -- clients (of any age) who struggle accessing emotions or with social anxiety can sometimes benefit from watching reaction videos! It's a safe way to access and mirror emotions without feeling exposed. I love Simone & George for this especially because they're both so open with their feelings, demonstrative, and accepting of one another when they have silly or embarrassing moments. Great models of spontaneous emoting and safe relationship. Then you throw in the video which might be topically relevant for the client? Presto. Movie becomes a topic they can use as a touchstone for comfort and talk to others about as a safe conversation tool. Plus watching while alone versus comparing to other moments is a nice way of drawing awareness to how much access they have to feeling in differing safety states.
I'm an adult and this movie has been referenced before in my own therapy haha
@@mj_SR22huh… I literally never thought of that activity. I tend to work mainly with teen boys with adhd but with the emotional regulation problems, this could really help. Thanks!
@@CarlosAlexDanger Absolutely. Riley's concerns -- children's concerns -- are human concerns. The whole movie and emotion theory it's built on are beneficial to everybody.
Bing Bong saying "Take Riley to the moon for me" always breaks me😭😭😭
Same here.
Me too, I cry every time 😢
I like to imagine that Riley grows up and joins NASA. And that maybe she'd have a little picture of Bing Bong painted on her helmet as a mascot. 😌
@@HeatRaver I like to think she'd have a patch of him on her space suit, just for good luck. 👍 😁
Saw this in theaters when it first came out. I knew I'd cry, because it's Pixar. But I was NOT prepared for "Take her to the moon". 💔😭
The girl alarm is one of the greatest 10 second jokes in any Pixar movie
There was an old lady probably in her late 80s sitting next to me with her grandchildren when I saw this in theaters. When Bing Bong gets erased she starting doing hard-core heaving sobs as quietly as she could. After the movie ended I heard her telling her grandkids about the imaginary friend she had as a little girl that she had forgotten about.
Damn, just reading her sob got me going a little. This movie to be held up for eternity as a must-see in all the schools and psychology-type classes
The single shot of Riley hugging her parents while sad and then that tiny smile comes through encapsulates the entire point of movie and it's such a beautiful shot.
it's still a good movie no need to be so negative
I get legit good shivers (frission) every time I see that scene.
For me it's when her breathing changes when she hugs her parents
You didn't understand my statement at all and that's okay. What I said was that shot at the end is a visual of the whole point/theme of the movie.@@rawtrout3402
@@rawtrout3402 You didn't understand my comment at all and that's okay.
There's a fan theory about this that I love (although I'm not sure it'll work with the sequel): When a person grows up, their emotions evolve like pokemon. So in the mother, Sadness evolved into Empathy, which is now driving. In the father, Anger evolved into Determination.
The thing I noticed was that with the adults the control panel is bigger and able to accommodate all the emotions working together, whereas as a kid you’re either totally in the grip of a single emotion or torn up as they all fight for control.
I think the director mentioned that Sadness is Empathy and Anger is Fairness.
Pete Doctor felt the need to say something because people were saying the Dad had anger issues and the Mom was depressed.
Which again, Depression is less "sadness" and more "numbness"
Good job George on identifying the point of the movie so early. We need sadness, it is an useful emotion, and happiness at all cost can be toxic. Most reactors get that realization very late in the movie
I was floored at how quickly he caught on, because it's such a nuanced theme. One of the things I love most about this channel is how insightful Simone and George are and how actively they watch and think, without it feeling like they're trying to "outsmart" the movie.
Exactly. Riley didn't run away because she felt unhappy; she ran away because she felt nothing.
@@Johnny_Socko The difference between sadness and depression 😢
I wonder if his encounter with Ted Lasso helped with the early realization
How tf you comment 13 days ago when this was posted only 5 days ago
My daughter has significant mental health challenges and we have used this movie as a reference since she was very young. She’s 13 now and we still refer to it daily by asking which emotion is driving or which color she’s feeling now or sometimes I’ll just sing “who’s your friend that likes to play?” When she’s having a rough moment and it will kind of help her regulate.
Speaking both as a therapist and a heterosexual boy-now-man, the "GIRL! GIRL!" danger scene is FANTASTIC.
Scarily accurate lol
Me watching this saying “so that’s what was going on up there” thinking about all the interactions I had with girls as a teenager 😂😅
On a side note, as a gay man I want to thank you for referring to yourself as a "heterosexual boy-now-man", and not talking like every boy is girl-crazy growing up. It's just a nice feeling when someone acknowledges that some boys will feel that way about other boys, and not girls. I can tell you're a good therapist. 🙂👍
Oh, and I've seen that same reaction to girls on the faces of straight friends growing up, so I thought that scene was HILARIOUS! (I had the same inner panic, but the other way. 🤣)
SO on the money
My teenage brain was definitely dominated by the fear guy crying and rocking on the floor!
I know Bing Bongs death is the moment everyone talks about, but the moment that completely wrecks me is the sigh of relief Riley gives when her parents comfort her at the end. It's a very simple moment but the way they do it (and the score) is just perfectly done. It's possibly my favorite Pixar moment.
I dont know if either of you have seen it, but I desperately need George in particular to see Wall-E. I think its a perfect movie for him.
Hard agree
Agreed
I would’ve cried during Bing Bong’s sacrifice, but I was already emotionally spent by Joy looking back on Riley’s forgotten memories. 😭
Bing Bong (Inside Out) and Bing Bong (Baldur's Gate 3: Shadows of Athkatla). R.I.P. We will never forgive and we will never forget.
Well, that's where I _start_ crying, but then I just go harder and harder lol
I don’t remember ever seeing George laugh harder than “GIRL! GIRL!” Right there with ya, buddy. Absolutely hilarious.
I completely ruined a date when I saw this in theaters. I absolutely sobbed like a baby.
Probably because when I was 8 years old I had to move from Minnesota to Northern California and eventually broke down to my parents and told them the same line as Riley, “I miss Minnesota.”
So I guess you could say I took this personally.
thats brutal hopefully you went for a walk afterward and explained to her why you were crying lol
@@topofladder I did. We ended for other reasons, but remained friends.
That’s heavy yet understandable.
I watched it (as an adult) at my (adult) cousin's place, and I was a blubbering wreck! 😅
If I was on a date with someone who DIDN'T cry in this movie I would consider it a bad date.
9:10 One of the points they make, in this movie. Riley keeps having problems adjusting as long as Joy keeps taking steps to hem in her _other_ emotions and prevent her from _experiencing_ them.
17:36 But _here's_ where Joy begins to figure it out.
When Sadness asked 'do you remember the funny movie where the dog dies?' I was like... 'Riley has seen John Wick?''
Guessing they're probably talking about Old Yeller
@@BBJ111 or Marley and me
John Wick came out a year before this. So I'm gonna say yes.
I wouldn't exactly call John Wick a "funny" movie
I'd go for Turner & Hooch
"GIRL! GIRL!" is the most relatable thing in this movie.
“Forget it…it’s Cloud Town” is a reference to “Chinatown(1972)” considered to be one of the greatest screenplays and movies of all time.
Chinatown would be a great watch for our Cinebingers!
Also fun fact, after chinatown they made 2 rough scripts for possible sequels, one of which was edited and changed and became who framed rodger rabbit
I think the greatest accomplishment of this movie is that it portrays how Sadness is a valuable emotion *all on its own* - none of that weak-sauce "you need Sadness in order to appreciate Joy!" crap. This movie says "Sadness itself is a crucial outlet during difficult times, and Sadness also is what often triggers empathy in other people, and what allows us to empathize with others in return." Such a valuable and healthy perspective for kids (and adults) to grasp. :)
100% true ❤
Yes, I love that! It's not that sadness makes you appreciate non-sadness more... it's that sadness serves its own purpose and is a valuable thing to experience. When you let sadness out, you can be comforted by the people who care about you. You can't get that if you're clinging to happiness or pushing people away angrily. After a good cry you feel refreshed and clear-headed. Anxiety and judgment can't get you there. This movie really masterfully conveys the way different emotions interact and impact you, and how those things can be personified.
“A rainbow?” 😂 Bravo Simone!
Cool fact: I saw and interview with the director of this project. He had all the ideas except how the heck he would end it. He realized that becoming an adult is positive and negative emotions being blended after watching his child grow. So this project that was in the works for a very long time finally had an ending.
What a great way to illustrate that depression is more than just sadness.
I would highly recommend seeing the short, "Riley's First Date?", which features that boy from the hockey game, coming over to their house, and focuses on the emotions of the parents, as they deal with the situation. There is a mid-credits scene to the short as well. I would love to see you guys react to it!
Frankly, this film should have won "BEST PICTURE" at the Oscars. I don't even know what it might have been up against... but it's pretty much a PERFECT film.
I was curious, so I did a quick Google search: Whiplash, The Grand Budapest Hotel, The Theory of Everything, American Sniper, The Imitation Game, Boyhood, Birdman (winner), and Selma.
It did win the Best Animated Film Oscar that year. Just not Best Picture
I really like how this movie focuses on emotions. Like Pixar has been messing with your emotions for years, and now they’re just cutting the middle man and making a movie about your emotions.
I love how they portray the Weight that sadness can have on you by having joy have to drag her around the memories and how you can try and be happy and think of old memories and they just turn into sad ones like the line of memories she left behind her.
I worked in a bookstore years ago, at the kids' section. The movie had been recently out, and one day there was this little girl acting out / trying to throw a tantrum (I can't remember exactly what, but it was something along these lines). I was around organizing the books and I heard the dad just casually ask her "is it the red little guy in your head? Is he driving now?". I really like this movie and I think it's so well done, but like other people are commenting, I LOVE how it helped both kids in dealing with their emotions and parents, as a tool to help their kids regulate. So cool!
The broccoli pizza scene is based on a real San Francisco pizzeria that Pete Docter and the other Pixar guys ate at. It only served one flavor of pizza per day, and broccoli was one of their flavors.
That seems like a ridiculous theme for a pizza parlor. 10 bucks says they aren't in business anymore. lol
I,for one,love broccoli on pizza.
My mom works in San Francisco, and apparently there's this one pizza place her job likes to buy from that serves potato pizza. They've been bringing it in for years (along with other flavors thankfully), and it angers her every time 😂 SF just loves their random vegetable pizza flavors ig
@@DonMachado You'd be surprised what businesses stay afloat in hipster communities.
@@raynacarraway440 To be fair potato pizza could be really good if done right
The BingBong scene was drastically edited from its original version. Even the voice actor playing BingBong agreed that it was the right decision because the scene was just too intense. It was so intense that the movie couldn't really progress because you would be hung up on BingBong being forgotten for the next couple of minutes. The actor said it was worse than Bambi's mother dying.
What on earth was the original version then???
Wasn’t there an interview where Bing Bong’s VA said they showed the uncut version of that scene to his family at a test screening, and his oldest daughter was sobbing uncontrollably by the end of it?
George inadvertently coming up with the plot to Inside Out 3. Riley as an adult dealing with her elderly parents. Dad or Mom dealing with dementia and their labyrinth of memories has been whittled down to just a hallway of random memories and nobody is manning the controls in headquarters...
Sorry for the fucking bummer everyone.
Holy hell.
Are you okay, man? It's a compelling movie idea by itself, but if you're going through/have gone through some stuff, you can talk about it.
@@RobinHood3000I had my Mom go through stage 4 brain cancer about 6 years ago. Just to see her mentally (figuratively and literally) checked out was a rough go.
I'm good man. But I do appreciate the spot check 😊
Pixar already made that, its called Coco.
@@4747474747bigalby already made, you mean had one character that showed vague symptoms but nobody really talked about her condition; just wrote off the fact she was really old. Then yeah, Pixar made that already.
Funny you mentioned Monsters Inc. since young Riley's voice was reused audio from the little actress who played Boo.
Every dude I know, no matter how tough they think they are, is absolutely wrecked when Bing Bong sacrifices himself.
I actually held it together during that scene, but the scene where she cries with her family broke me.
I saw this in theaters and sat next to this big hulking guy and his daughter. During the Bing Bong scene he was an absolute wreck and his daughter kept trying to comfort him. Such a sweet moment and I always think of it whenever I watch this movie.
They actually did so well with this on so many levels. If I remember correctly, the five basic emotions portrayed (joy, sadness, anger, fear, disgust) are the only emotions they've found consistently across cultures. So for example, something like shame presents differently and for different reasons in different cultures, may be expressed differently, etc. But something like fear is so hardwired that no matter where someone comes from, you can identify the same signs of fear anyone else in the world would show (e.g. heightened heart rate, shaking, dilated pupils etc.) Everything else is to some degree cultural or personal.
There’s also supposed to be a sixth emotion “Surprise”, but they’re not in the movie bc conceptually they were too similar to Fear
There are two moments that make me cry. The BingBong part makes me cry because I feel for my childhood and the child like wonder that we inevitably forget or leave behind.
I also cry when Riley finally admits whats she's feeling to her parents. People always get angry with Sadness in the beginning but every emotion has their chance at the control panel, every emotion had it's place, so does sadness. I think this movie builds up really well how Sadness is framed, of course people wouldn't like Sadness - who wants to be sad? - but by the end of the movie people undertand why feeling sad is also important.
Thirty years ago, there was a TV show following very much this same concept called Herman's Head, I miss it.
Yeah! Featuring the voice actress for Lisa Simpson
Mom's headquarters are dominated by Sadness, because (as the movie aptly demonstrates) one of the aspect of sadness is compassion.
Dad's headquarters are dominated by Anger, because one of the aspects of anger is determination. He is probably very dedicated at work.
As a father with younger kids this movie wrecks me every single time I watch it. Not because I'm relating to it for my childhood...but because I see my boys growing up and the happy memories I had with them have now turned to sadness because I miss them. Not saying things are bad now. Just...not the same.
Guys, before the sequel comes out you should watch the short called "Riley's First Date"!
5:38 - 5:42 the few seconds of changing expressions as Simone catches on to what George said... priceless!
@27:36 for a more adult version: Herman's Head was a sitcom in 1991 that is *exactly* this concept. Only his internal "emotions" are: Intellect, Sensitivity, Anxiety, and Lust.
22:31 This is the scene being referred to in 'She Hulk' when Bruce is trying to figure out her threshold for stress, Jen mentions Bing Bong... "Oh put on a Pixar movie"... "When Bing Bong jumps out of the wagon in Inside Out..." 😢
Who's your friend who likes to play?
Bing Bong, Bing Bong
His rocket makes you yell "Hooray!"
Bing Bong, Bing Bong
Who's the best in every way, and wants to sing this song to say
Bing Bong, Bing Bong!
Take her to the moon for me..
-Bing Bong
"GIRL! GIRL! GIRL! GIRL!"
That is just amazing, and so accurate. xD
Something I like about the film is that the external storyline is so mundane. It would be easy to have a film where the external event was so dramatic (like the parents divorcing etc), but the way that Riley is affected by the move just adds so much power to it.
I wonder how long it was since Simone last watched it, and if it was a long time, if she noticed any particular things this time around that she missed before. Did the pair of them watch the short film? I think it was something to do with Riley's first date? That was quite funny if I recall
I faced a cancer treatment during pandemic.
.
Dark days for me AND my mom, who stood by my side, but couldn't stand me crying of sadness. I had professional psychological support, so I was "fine".
.
My mom used to tell me not to get depressed, and I showed her this movie so she could understand the difference between sadness and depression. It was REALLY helpful.
The purring at 0:33 🥹
I'm sorry, but I saw the thumbnail and just the thought of George being Disgust has me cackling uncontrollably 😂
I had an imaginary friend who coincidentally was named George. I have no memory of him but my aunt told me about him when I was 11-12 or so and I had no memory of him then. I can only hope that he went out in a blaze of glory like Bing Bong.
Whoever wrote that script and led this movie the way it is, is a genius.
It hits all the right emotions and takes you to your own memory country.
Great reaction
I always love how the situation of what's happening with Riley is written on Anger's newspaper 😂
As someone who has experienced it, this is the realest expression of depression I've ever seen. That numbness and lack of feeling anything is real, and damn if this cartoon movie didn't just paint a corner of my life! I cry every time I watch this movie, because it hits me so hard with how accurate it is! That cry when Sadness finally gets back and breaks through to her is a salvation experience - the ability to be sad is as important as the ability to be happy! Probably my favorite Pixar movie for that reason!
Great movie and great reaction, however at @22:33 you can see the hope in George that they might make it and Simone just putting a brave face on because she knows... she knows how this ends...
George's joke about mom putting the hair up was my favourite :D
One of the films that can be accurately described as a modern classic, primarily for its thematic exploration of emotions.
OK, comment before watching the reaction: George in the thumbnail is perfect!
25:16 This close-up is simply brilliant. Too bad you didn't keep it all in.
Riley's sadness transitioning to joy, through that shaking breath. It's an absolutely amazing scene.
Aw man, I would have loved to see George’s face as anger or sadness, Simone as disgust! 🤣
Never watched this channel before, skipped the intro and instantly got called out XD
(Also, you guy's laughs brightened my day, it's contagious!)
My little sister was afraid of the vacuum. This was in the 90s and we had the vacuums with the canisters. They’re mostly stand up vacuums now. So naturally, the sibling thing to do was to wait till she was sitting on it and turn it on.😅
I'm so happy Simone said 'Rainbow.' That's exactly what I was thinking >_< Nice to see George actually be impressed. His ND can be a little patronizing, and I admire the balance/patience you guys have together
Bing Bong's death still makes my heart shatter to pieces 🥺😢😭 but at least his sacrifice wasn't in vain, he died trying to help Joy get out of the cavern.
Trying and succeeded 🥺😌
Some Trvia: The bubbly texture of the emotions was originally supposed to be just on Joy. Still, due to the difficulty of animating this unique design, after eight months, the animators decided to scrap it altogether because it became unaffordable. However, when Pixar Chief Creative Officer John Lasseter saw it, he said, "That's great. Put it on all the characters." Commenting on this incident, production designer Ralph Eggleston said, "You could hear the core technical staff just hitting the ground, the budget falling through the roof. But it was all good. They found a way to make it work."
Everyone always says that Bing Bong is the saddest, but the part that always breaks me is when she comes back home and breaks down to her parents. Not that Bing Bong isn't sad, but I always cry at the end.
The subconcious guards are voiced by Frank Oz and Dave Goelz of The Muppets, though their character names are swapped Oz voices Dave and Goelz voices Frank.
Frank Oz have been voiced Fungus in Monsters, Inc (another Pete Docter movie), he puppeteered Fozzie Bear, Miss Piggy, Animal, Bert, Grover and Yoda in Star Wars (and voiced him whenever he was CG), while Dave Goelz did (and still does) Gonzo, Zoot, Beaugard, Dr. Bunsen Honeydew and Waldorf (taking over from Jim Henson after his death in 1990) and he is the current voice of Figment in Journey Into Imagination with Figment at Epcot.
5:35 - 5:45
"she put her hair up, we're in for it."
"Dad thought the same thing" I needed a good laugh thank you George! 🤣😂🤣
Fear going "called it" when watching the dream is one of my favorite moments
So much deja vu is happening, you're telling me they HAVEN'T already reacted to this??? (Maybe I watch too many reaction channels) 😂😂😂
Her literally just being Leslie nope is hilarious one of my favourite shows
There will never be a time when hearing Bing Bong say “Take her to the moon for me” won’t reduce me to a puddle of tears 😭
The two incompetent security guards in the dream sequence were voiced by Al Franken and Tom Davis, who were writing partners on SNL way back in the day, and were in Trading Places as the baggage handlers on the train.
"it's cloud town" is a reference to Chinatown I believe.
the first time I watch this I was annoyed of sadness, but as I rewatch it again and again, I realize that Joy was the toxic one..
I know what you mean. She tries to force the positivity, and oppress Sadness. VERY unhealthy.
Even though I haven't seen this movie in probably 7 or 8 years just hearing the music again gets me emotional and even just an edited react video had me bawling my eyes out.
Watching this in the theater was a magical and emotional experience and it has been my favorite film ever since. Glad you both liked it!
I haven't seen the sequel (I am planning on it) but I had this head canon of Riley as an adult, sitting and strapped in the cockpit of rocket on a mission to the Moon.
And before launch, she starts humming and mumbling to herself "Who's your friend who likes to play? Bing bong, Bing Bong"
As a parent this movie hits hard. Knowing all those early memories that will be forever yours, won't be forever theirs. 😭
10:18 George on the first day in school in Canada: "No habla inglez"
I'm kinda sad that we'll never get to see Simone's first reaction to Bing Bong
I imagine just a ton more crying
The commitment......."Legend" 1985 and “The Fountain” 2006….would love your take on The Fountain especially. Thank You Cinebinge!!!
For the new emotions coming in "Inside Out 2"
Orange = Anxiety voiced by Maya Hawke
Turquoise = Envy voiced by Ayo Edebiri
Indigo = Ennui voiced by Adèle Exarchopoulos
Pink = Embarrassment voiced by Paul Walter Hauser
Also Disgust (Green) and Fear (Purple) have been recast with Liza Lapira and Tony Hale respectively.
Great vid! Wish this was filmed when the trailer came out to add
They actually did a lot of research for this movie and it's true that most emotions apparently boil down to these 5 basic ones. We obviously have more complex ones but this is kind of like the building blocks of all the others. They use this movie to help teach kids to understand their emotions and not to repress them, I remember listening to an interview on all this and it made me love this movie even more
I’ve seen this lovie multiple times and it’s my fav animated movie. At saturday movie night with my kids we watched it and my 5yrs old son never talked as much as when watching this movie. It was like he understood himself a little bit better. For me it was more fun to watch him than the movie.
I've seen this movie 5 or 6 times and the moment when Riley hugs her parents has made me bawl my eyes out every time. It's Pixar's best film for me - it's really a grown-up movie
This movie represents the biggest mistake my wife has made in parenting with me (I have made many, to varying degrees.) When this came out my now eldest daughter was just 4, I had read reviews that said there was a lot of emotional heavy lifting in this which seems obvious given its about emotions. My wife said and I quote "It's a Pixar movie. Of course it's great for kids!" Against my reservations we brought my daughter. She was in whatever the exact opposite of the sweet spot is for watching this movie. She was intelligent enough and emotionally aware enough for it to have multiple devastating moments, But young enough not to truly be able to process them all that well. It led to her being very reluctant to go to any movie with us for many years.
I think this movie is a perfect example of how Movies can be inappropriate or appropriate for ages having nothing to do with negative content. I think had my daughter been younger some of the heavier stuff would have flown over her and if she had been older she might have been able to process it a bit better. I also think this is an example of Pixar movies that actually tip further for adult than for kid in the same vein as some of the later Toy Story movies and Soul. That is not at all a bad thing and I think it's actually a good thing to show audiences Animated movies can be greatly impactful for older people without having to Is necessarily the violent or sexual etc.
In the theater watching this Bing Bong destroyed us all.
Having watched Inside Out 2, it was absolutely worth the watch in cinemas! I really look forward to your reaction to it!
We're going to watch the part 2 tomorrow, that's why i'm rewatching this with you guys, and still cried 😢😅
OMG the thumbnail is great!!!! George looks amazing with that hair hahaha
I'd love it if, in the next movie, they gave Bing Bongs final wish to riley. Give us a little hint that Riley still might make it to the moon. Just a model rocket on her desk or a picture of Sally Ride or maybe a poster of the moon. Bing Bong is forgotten but maybe his wish hasn't faded away.
Every single time, when Bing Bong sacrifices himself, I start bawling and yell "F*** you, Pixar!"
Cool reaction as always Simone & George, you both take care and have a great weekend
“Dragonballs?” 😂 I’m knew this would be a great reaction!
the losing the memories bit reminds me of eternal sunshine of the spotless mind
People point out that Sadness is also probably Empathy. Just like Anger can also be Authority, it seems like in inside out 2, they are going to explore how complex emotions can be and interact with each other as people evolve.
Y'all handled the BingBong scene a lot better than I did. 😂
Animated movies for kids will often throw in a little innuendo that goes right over the kids heads and gives the parents something to enjoy. This movie's the opposite. This movie is made for adults but it's animated and colorful enough that kids can watch and enjoy it, too.
Love this movie, and your reactions make it 100 times better. My favorite is when the end where the one boys emotions freak out because “Girl!”
as 44 yr old male this movie broke me, I dont think ive ever cried so hard, it wasn't so much Bing Bong but in the movie there this short scene were you see all the island that represents you breaking away and falling apart. that part as a fatherless/motherless alone all his life hit me WAY to hard. this movie in absolute legendary when comes to pulling your strings as an adult.
I love how much George loved it. lol
Bing Bong and when Riley finally comes home, makes me cry every time!
For the adult emotions, they are more mature and conduct themselves in a more organized way. But definitely there would be more.
My therapist also suggested this movie to me as an adult i love this movie to bits the flower petal on Bing Bong Jacket have a gray petal witch represents depression. I sufffer from depression and anxiety and i watch this movie every time i feel sad or down and always feel better after a good cry.
When I was little kid and was sad I was mostly ignored until I stop annoying everyone with my sadness. On the other hand I was almost never denied new toys/clothes/video games when I asked. That's how kids are raised where I'm from :)