Fun Fact: Demolition Man is the reason why the Taco Bell logo we know today looks the way it does. Taco Bell corporate liked the Taco Bell logo in Demolition Man so much that they redesigned the official logo in a similar style. The more you know!
Demolition Man was blatant with the Taco Bell advertising but they could get away with it because it was completely acceptable as part of their comically dystopian worldbuilding.
I let it slide because it was played for laughs and successfully so. Product placement is not inherently bad, it's only bad if it distracts from the film or feels out of place. The Taco Bell thing was not clumsy, it fit perfectly with the future parody tone of the movie
I am european and in the 90s I knew Pizza Hut existed. I found out taco bell was a thing when I started hearing english podcast like material in like 2008. The general public probably still doesn't know Taco Bell exists.
The joke's on Rich. It did only take 30 years for us to develop into a society without toilet paper, no-contact social interactions, and where Taco Bell rules the world (or at least rules weekends after midnight.)
The decapitation was foreshadowed in the very beginning of the film. Phoenix says, "I'd lose my head if it wasn't attached." and they zoomed in on Stallone's face as he says, "I'll keep that in mind" very dramatically.
In Germany it's Pizza Hut, too. I always assumed that this is because nobody in Germany would have had any idea what Taco Bell is, while Pizza Hut was trying to break into the market around that time.
Not of you are European. Because then you have no idea what Taco Bell even is (unless you spend a lot of time studying American pop culture on the internet).
Sure, but it also meant to be a joke and if you don't know that Taco Bell is some sort of fast food restaurant you don't get why the character acts so confused about the notion to get invited to taco bell. You get the joke if you replace Taco Bell with Pizza Hut, though. Like, the first time I watched Ant-man I was totally confused by the "I take whatever is hot and fresh" joke because I had no idea what Baskin Robins is.
"What seems to be your boogle?" LOL. Love it! I'm the actor in "Demolition Man" that said those lines. One of my most favorite gigs! Love this video. You guys are awesome!
I remember watching a cut of this movie on TV when I was a kid and Sandra Bullock explains the three seashells. The first is for the sides, the second is for the middle, and the last is for scraping up what the first two shells didn't get. The only explanation I can think of this is that I know TV stations make their own edits of films using assembly cuts so they can thematically edit in cuts to commercials.
I'm with Jack. If Stallone was anything but a big dumb action man, this movie would have been far different and far worse. Intentional or otherwise, Stallone was EXACTLY what he needed to be here.
The ironic thing is...Stallone is far from dumb. He's incredibly articulate and intelligent. He plays dumb because thats what the roles require at the time.
Yes, we need a prequel trilogy to explain the intricate details of the political jostling that created this situation. We could lighten the mood with a wacky character for the kids, but really he's the key to all of this.
Calling Simon Phonix as "just one gangster" is a bit of an understatement, the implication is the he *is* the reason why LA was such a criminal hellhole in 1996, if I recall correctly its stated in the intro scene that he united all the gangs into an army and took over part of the city. Him being a ridiculously over-the-top supervillain is what makes the short time span for societal shift to sorta work, as the people would be sick and scared of that much mayhem and accepting of anybody promising to fix society so that it would never happen again.
True, not to mention the fact that while Simon was frozen his brain was fed advanced training in hacking, terrorism and undoubtedly all matters martial, essentially turning him into a specialist in toppling societies and creating mayhem, while Mr. Man was brainwashed into being an avid knitter. Furthermore perhaps the population at large, apart from some individuals who later formed the rebelling faction, also received similar brainwashing to make them more receptive to the society Cocteau built? This movie would definitely have benefited from an extra 10-15 minutes of worldbuilding.
I disagree with the Taco Bell advertising criticism in Demolition Man. I thought it was funny at the time, maybe because it was still a novel concept, but I think it's less annoying when they make it so obvious and integrated into the world. It transcends simple brand recognition and becomes a satirical commentary on the watering down of culture and cuisine in this hypothetical future.
It's also less intrusive because of the food the restaurant serves. Had they been serving actual Taco Bell food, it would have been harder to believe. But instead, because it is some fancy stuff, it just becomes one more silly thing (in a good way) in a fun movie.
Thread Bomb, I have just rewatched Demolition Man and thought the same thing. It also works well with the bit about jingles being popular retro music. In a way, it is a clever way to draw a comparison between our 'brutish' and their 'pure' reality. The status Taco Bell gained is ironic.
Worked in the EU cut as well, it didn't even register as product placement to me as a kid because it was so mocking and irreverent. I also associated the rise of blatant product placement more with Brosnan-era James Bond.
@@frankmerker630 You know seeing this movie makes me wonder, has there ever been a movie to age this well? I mean, we've seen lots of movies nowadays that have aged poorly but this movie works FAR better today than it would have back on release to you point.
Just about every other night I ride home from work and get taco bell because I'm too lazy to cook. Every night I get to my pc to check youtube for new vids to watch while I eat. 80 percent of the time I watch a RLM video, it's while I'm eating taco bell. Thanks, RLM, for putting my pathetic life into perspective. You're truly heroes.
Funny enough, I'm actually in shape and I suppose it's due to the fact that I commute on a bicycle literally everywhere. Probably 10 miles a day average. so tired though... fuck.
well, to add insult to injury, I can't actually eat too much fiber. I have ulcerative colitis, so too much fiber and I'll usually just trigger a flare. For some reason, the taco bell doesn't seem to affect my uc all that much or else I would've stopped it ages ago. That or the meds I'm taking is working well. Either case, I definitely need to stop. Fucking expensive for that cheap processed shit. >_>
Yeah, it used to be Dunkin Donuts, but I'm in a similar position now. Those Taco Bell bastards took them down a few months ago, artillery cannons and drive-thru's are a brutal combo. If you can't beat em...
The low point of Stallone'dom was the late 90's, early 2000's, not the early 90's. He still had Cliffhanger and Copland, but later on, it was Detox, Eye See You, and Get Carter
19:36 I love the backstory behind Stallone doing 'Stop, Or My Mom Will Shoot.' Schwarzenegger was expressing interest in doing the movie, so Stallone jumped on to beat him to the punch. But it turns out, Schwarzenegger knew it was going to be shit and just bluffed to get Stallone to do it.
Same with Bladerunner. I don’t think the Taco Bell was bad product placement. If anything, it made Taco Bell the but of the joke. It was so unlikely for Stallone to go to Taco Bell for a celebration because it has a reputation for crappy did in the 1990s. They are playing off that.
Nah, that was just awkward. Besides... clothed women are hotter than naked ones. It leaves more to the imagination, accentuates the figure in special ways and people look pretty much the same naked anyway. Cool outfits are the way to set themselves apart and to make women look especially hot. ;) Oh, I just realized that I admitted that I find women hot. Please everybody, don't sue me for being sexist and don't call the PC police! Mellow greetings!
Seeing Sandra Bullock in that dope outfit at a very young age made me utterly fascinated by women in uniform. Of course, all the satire at the time went over my head, I just loved the action, one liners, and of course, Sandra ;)
I heard a rumor that Wesley Snipes loves the Joker and always wanted to play him. He realized he would never be the Joker, so he decided to play Simon as if he were playing the Joker.
Simon Phoenix is a better version of the Joker than whatever Jared Leto was trying to accomplish. Keeping it white for white sake would make the next Batman worse if the decision was Snipes vs Leto.
and funnily enough, the idea for the new Joker was to make him more gangsta, it seems? at least that's what I can tell from the tattoos and teeth. on another note, it's kind of funny that because now everything on the internet is about "SJW cuckolds" vs "alt-right neo-nazis" the idea of a black person being an option for a clown character has to fall directly into this dumb "war" of "ideas".
Stalone was tricked into "stop or my mom will shoot" Him and Arnie were in a rivalry and Arnie "leaked" he was gonna star in it, so Stallone did the film. And he hated Arnie for it
Interesting. Estelle Getty was also tricked into doing that movie because she was not interested in doing an action film. Or maybe rather a film where she has to shoot a gun. I forget exactly. Something like that.
The thing is... A lot of their issues with the movie can be summed up as "That's the point." Dennis Leary's character having rants that just sound like his standup, that's the point. Stallone being big bad action man in a future where everyone is a pacifist who don't know how to defend themselves, that's the point.
They also predicted that Arnold was governer of Cali LOL, and salt was forbidden, which is funny because in Mexico they did made salt forbidden in restaurants (sort of)
They use them to scrape their butt. If the seashells were buttons then their use would have been too obvious simply from experimentation. Especially to someone living in LA. The fact that he had to ask what the point of the three seashells was meant that he had recognized that they weren't just decorations on the toilet.
The first two are used together to scoop the majority. The last one is used to scrap clean. In the future if your button isn't inflamed, you're doing it wrong.
the thing about Demolition Man is almost all of the things they throw in for craven commercial reasons actually kind of work in the context of the film, even Denis Leary doing his stand up routine. It's kind of brilliant if you view it from the lens of how 90s culture would imagine a relatively recent future.
Hey Rich remember Wesley Snipes character wasn't just some ordinary gangsta. No sir the character Wesley portraid had super gangsta abilities uploaded into him before he was thawed out.
You know, it would have added an extra distopian element to that world had Stallone been awakened *after* his sentence was up. Way after. With the explanation being that they didn't think those "cavemen" in the prisons could be reintegrated into society because they were too violent, so they just kept them all there.
Regarding the Back to the Future / California Raisin thing... I've heard that commentary a few times. Rich doesn't get the story quite right here (I'm not trashing on Rich, just correcting the story). Universal made the deal with the California Raisin Board to feature raisins in the movie, with the promise that them being featured in BTTF would "do for raisins what E.T. did for Reese's Pieces." Both Bob Gale and Robert Zemeckis were frustrated with this. Bob Gale is the one telling the story in the commentary. Part of the problem was that it wasn't for a specific brand of raisins (i.e. Sunmaid Raisins)... it was just raisins (think of it like the old "got milk?" commercials, which was never for a specific brand of milk like Deans or something). So it wasn't like they could show a box of raisins since it wasn't a brand specific deal. At one point it was suggested that they have a bowl of raisins next to the punch bowl at the Enchantment Under the Sea Dance, but in the commentary, Bob Gale explains that on film "a bowl of raisins is going to look like a bowl of dirt." So when all was said and done, having the general "California Raisins" logo on the park bench was the result of the deal. While I'm sure having the bum laying on the bench didn't help, it really wasn't the bum specifically that upset them... it was the fact that simply having the logo on the bench at the end in no way, shape, or form came even remotely close to the promise of BTTF giving raisins the same level of attention and promotion as E.T. did with Reese's Pieces. It was at that point that the California Raisin Board got upset, wanting their money back and was otherwise ready to sue Universal. When Universal brought up the issue to Bob Gale and Robert Zemeckis, their response was basically that if they get involved in the dispute, they are going to testify in favor of the Raisin Board because it was a bad, ridiculous deal to begin with that had to realistic chance of giving them the kind of promotion they were looking for. So, the Board got their money back.
See how it reaches in and grabs a Taco, asserting its dominance. Meanwhile, the other mammals are unnmoved by its assertion of dominance; they stand their ground and continue their movie analysis ritual.
For those of you too young to clearly remember the early 90's, I can tell you that nobody back then thought the hellish city-scape of 1996 as depicted in the film was terribly unrealistic. The Rodney King riots took place in the summer of 1992, probably during the filming of this movie.
Not really, unless in a facetious strawman kind of way. If this review had come out this year, I'm sure that the comments would be filled to the brim with snide remarks and emotive tirades about "wokism". But that's not what's being depicted in Demolition Man. What's being depicted is an authoritarian means of controlling the minds, thoughts and actions of society. It's not any different in its fundamental reasoning than the doublespeak, double think and Newspeak depicted in Nineteen Eighty-Four. And the motivation behind it has absolutely nothing to do with any current concept of political correctness let alone "wokism". In fact it's much closer to where the term political correctness came from, which was describing how authoritarian regimes, such as in the old USSR, Cultural Revolution China and Red Scare period America would police the citizenry for "thought crimes" against the approved political dogma of the government. Political correctness in the context of Demolition Man is just another way to achieve the same end while also convincing the citizenry that they are not oppressed. It is similar to how Fahrenheit 451 describes the gradual slide of its society into authoritarian oppression. The government preyed upon a citizenry that was anxious, angry, afraid and confused about the constant tension of an informational, intersectional, pluralist and multicultural world. In other words, there was a "culture war" and the government capitalised and leveraged those fears and attitudes to exert control over society to its own ends. In the case of Fahrenheit 451, it was through a similar outcome as Demolition Man, but ultimately it was indistinguishable from typical fascism.
Thomas Wheeler haha, I couldn't believe it when I saw it. I've been looking for someone else who comment on it. would love to play some analog games with these dudes.
Alioon6, You are fined one credit for violation of the verbal morality statute. Yes I scrolled all this way to find someone swearing to make that joke, God I'm bored
In the beggining of the video they say few times that it was a 1991 movie and then later they do say 1993 but they never adress their error. I know it is a nitpick, but still it is weird that they would slip like that.
Fun fact. One of the earliest examples of product placement was in the 1961 film One, Two, Three. It was about a coke businessman in Berlin before the wall fell. But a bunch of executives on the film who represented Pepsi were unhappy that Coke basically got an entire movie of advertising. So the director threw in one instance of Pepsi in the movie. At the end, the main character is buying his family cokes from a coke machine. When he buys his own, a pepsi comes out and he grimaces at it. Then the movie ends.
I always thought this movie was about a world run by corporations, highly sanitized to please everybody and super generic, people listen to advertisements as music, Taco Bell, poor people displaced out of the view of the rich. To me that is what was being satirized a safe world brought to you by Corporations.
Even Sandra Bullock's character is a Brave New World reference. Lenina Huxley: : Lenina (love interest-ish in BNW) and Huxley (Aldous Huxley wrote BNW)
The thing is, I don't think it really does "predict the 2020s" in anything but a facetious strawman kind of way. If this review had come out this year, I'm sure that the comments would be filled to the brim with snide remarks and emotive tirades about "wokism". But that's not what's being depicted in Demolition Man. What's being depicted is an authoritarian means of controlling the minds, thoughts and actions of society. It's not any different in its fundamental reasoning than the doublespeak, double think and Newspeak depicted in Nineteen Eighty-Four. And the motivation behind it has absolutely nothing to do with any current concept of political correctness let alone "wokism". In fact it's much closer to where the term political correctness came from, which was describing how authoritarian regimes, such as in the old USSR, Cultural Revolution China and Red Scare period America would police the citizenry for "thought crimes" against the approved political dogma of the government. Political correctness in the context of Demolition Man is just another way to achieve the same end while also convincing the citizenry that they are not oppressed. It is similar to how Fahrenheit 451 describes the gradual slide of its society into authoritarian oppression. The government preyed upon a citizenry that was anxious, angry, afraid and confused about the constant tension of an informational, intersectional, pluralist and multicultural world. In other words, there was a "culture war" and the government capitalised and leveraged those fears and attitudes to exert control over society to its own ends. In the case of Fahrenheit 451, it was through a similar outcome as Demolition Man, but ultimately it was indistinguishable from typical fascism.
funny story, the whole salt thing may not actually be true, there's never been a full study of the effects of too much salt in your diet. We know that you will die if you eat a huge amount in one day but the evidence that too much salt over a continued period is spotty at best. It's one of those weird things where doctors just parrot this as it encourages the eating of fresher meals as salt is often an additive in the less healthy meals.
Actually, Taco Bell tacos have very little sodium compared to almost any other fast food item. Meanwhile, burgers from McD's or BK are practically made of salt with meat flavoring. And because they the tacos are rather low in carbs and actual sugars, they're not so bad for die-a-bee-tees.
Amazing. I just realized that this video was posted the day before my daughter was born, and THAT NIGHT my last meal before becoming a father was Taco Bell. What a special connection to RLM. I love you guys.
Good job guys! I can remember going to see Demoltion man in the theater with my mom, she wanted to see Stallone's ass. Can you believe the movie was rated R? I a couple of swear words in an otherwise almost bloodless action movie (with frozen head of course.) I could have sworn in my pre-teen mind I saw more of Sandra Bullock in the "sex" scene than I have seen in subsequent viewings as an adult. I have to say, the Taco Bell in Demolition man doesn't seem like much of an endorsement. The bemusement of Stallone at the fact that Taco Bell won, the odd haute cuisine? The movie seemed to push ratburgers, best damn burger Stallone had had in years. In addition, the sea shell conceit was the best! I love that they thought up a system for something so basic and made it just flat out as incomprehensible to the audience as it was to the main character. I also liked Stallone's solution!
FUN FACT: In the UK all Taco Bell moments were replaced with Pizza Hut branding. This is because Taco Bell had no presense in England until around 2013. EU hygene and nutrition laws prohibited Taco Bell from operating in Europe until recently.
Don't forget stallones 1991 movie Oscar when discussing his low point and the Pepsi free gag in back to the future in regards to earliest memorable product placements.
I think the product placement works here because it's part of the story. It's when two characters are just randomly both drinking pepsi, with the logos on the cans perfectly positioned for the camera that gets me...
In the PAL release, they DID digitally edit all the Taco Bell signs into Pizza Hut ones. They even got the actors back in to re-record audio to dub over the original video.
When John Spartan and Simon Phoenix first meet in the film's prologue Phoenix says "I swear, I'd lose my head if it wasn't attached" and Spartan responds "I'll keep that in mind" which of course is a stealth set-up to when he kicks his head off at the end.
GREAT movie, and HIGHLY under rated! It was the first movie I saw where Wesley Snipes and I didn't think of him as "Wesley Snipes playing [insert character name]". In every other movie...he's Wesley Snipes playing a role. In this one, he was "Simon Phoenix, played by Wesley Snipes". Probably Wesley's BEST acting roll and performance *ever*.
Yes it's unbelievable Taco Bell became a fancy restaurant same as TGI Fridays, Olive Garden, Old Chicago, Applebees, Pizza Hut, and other restaurants that aren't fast food restaurants. McDonald's and Burger King it would have been believable if either of those 2 powerhouse fast food restaurants won the Franchise wars.
Depending on your region the product placement changed, I think I remember it being Pizza Hut or Dominos down in Australia since we don't have taco bell
The time period thing is something that always bothered me about Fallout 2. You play the Vault Dweller's grandkid but are from a totally tribal society that was founded by people from Vault 13. So in 80 years they went from technologically advanced to believing in spirits and whatnot. Like the Village Elder and Hakunin are only one generation removed from the original founders but are super weird and superstitious.
Demolition Man opened on October 8, 1993, only a few months after the terrific Stallone film, Cliffhanger (that was May 1993). So the movie starts three years after it was released, not five. As for product placement, that was going on way before BTTF. Remember the box of Cheerios in Superman - The Movie? The Bond films also have lots of product placement in them. There was a random AMC car dealership in 1974's The Man With The Golden Gun.
BTTF movies had some pretty egregious product placement: Pepsi, Nike, Mattel, Pizza Hut, Black & Decker, The Weather Channel, Texaco, 7-Eleven, AT&T, etc
WalterLiddy I was responding to Rich's comment that he didn't remember product placement before Back to the Future (1985). I've been pointing out that there was product placement before that movie, and far more prominent.
I was pretty much gonna post the same thing. They seemed to have already gotten rid of things like due process (inherently individualistic concept) even in 1996 to have frozen John Spartan in the first place and I'm guessing it was already going downhill ideologically before the technocracy was installed so it's not such a big leap. I see us moving towards a similar kinda technocracy although at the same time it's getting a lot more chaotic like the movie depicts 1996, isn't it.
@@Wolfshifter Yeah, I'm not gonna lie I'm kinda terrified. The Korean war was in the 1950's and they're in a way more extreme situation than San Angeles. 200 years is overshooting by miles. It can go Brave New World or 1984 and it can happen in increments or violent revolution but it's naïve to think it takes that long or even that it's impossible for us. That naivety is what allows it to happen and it seems to be the standard right now.
@@dreamsof3dspace555 I’ve been in a weird zen state for the last month or so. All these things must come to pass and all that. The rubber band effect is real and the Fourth Turning book correctly correlates the patterns of the timeline for four generations to go through this cycle. I have hope. Like my dad pointed out to me. On 9/11, CNN posted a poll asking how many people would give up some freedoms for security. 10% said NO. A month later, they ran the same poll and 30% said NO. He said “This shows that in a crisis, only 1 in 10 people can keep their wits about them when those orchestrating a crisis seek to take advantage of them. A month later, only 2 join them. 10 years later, 2 more will join. 20 years and hopefully more than half will catch on.” I’ll carry that lesson forever and pass it on.
16:26 The earliest movie that is confirmed to have product placement is Wings (1927). There might be even older movies that have deliberate product placement, but we don't have confirmation for a company paying for product placement earlier than Wings (1927).
The timeline was probably chosen because Bullok's character was at one point meant to be Spartan's daughter... can you imagine the kind of awkward regarding the vr scene? 😂
you guys argue about demolition man being stallones "low point".... i venture to go a bit further back and say "Tango and Cash", and even a bit further back the freefall started with "Cobra"
The reason it's set only 40 years in the future is that there was a subplot about Stallone finding his daughter - which was deleted from the finished film.
I agree with Jack that Demolition Man has kind of a satirical tone to it. By 1993, the big 80's-esque action schlock movie bubble was bursting. In that light, Demolition Man's core premise, a world where violence, danger, profanity, and sex are taboo relics of the past, is pretty self-aware. I think the only thing that saved it from totally bombing was that they didn't go full spoof. Last Action Hero, which came out the same year, tried that angle and bombed spectacularly. Stallone followed up with a near-bomb (Cliffhanger) and a total bomb (Judge Dredd). Schwarzenegger followed up with a near-bomb (True Lies) and a bomb (Eraser). The Matrix came out the year after Eraser, and that was all she wrote.
This movie was Way ahead of its time. It is a smart action movie from the early 90s with a lot of social commentary and a great combo of sci fi and action. All I can say to the idiotic teenagers and adults that did not go to see this when I was a little kid is "WHAT'S YOUR BOGGLE?" I remember seeing this for the first time in the late 90s on NBC Sunday night when they played a movie. The edited version was still really good and I remember even as like a 10 yr old this movie seemed smarter than the average action movie. The one problem for me is THEY CUT OUT THE PART WITH JESSIE VENTURA GETTING KILLED AND MOST OF HIS SCENES!
Yeah I don't agree that this is a smart movie 😂 The premise and world building is pretty bog standard sci-fi, and the rest of it is just scene after scene of "so bad that it's good".
Fun Fact: Demolition Man is the reason why the Taco Bell logo we know today looks the way it does. Taco Bell corporate liked the Taco Bell logo in Demolition Man so much that they redesigned the official logo in a similar style.
The more you know!
You are correct sir ha ha ha.
Cool!
life imitates art
Demolition Man was blatant with the Taco Bell advertising but they could get away with it because it was completely acceptable as part of their comically dystopian worldbuilding.
A year later, Wayne's World would show them how to do product placement correctly.
I'm not goint to lie, man: the 90's were kind of a blur for me...
I let it slide because it was played for laughs and successfully so. Product placement is not inherently bad, it's only bad if it distracts from the film or feels out of place. The Taco Bell thing was not clumsy, it fit perfectly with the future parody tone of the movie
I am european and in the 90s I knew Pizza Hut existed. I found out taco bell was a thing when I started hearing english podcast like material in like 2008. The general public probably still doesn't know Taco Bell exists.
lagg1e, count yourself lucky. Taco Bell barely qualifies as food, much less as Mexican food.
"it feels like the whole world is LA and everything else is gone"
that's it, that's the LA mindset
thats the mindset
@@-inputoutput you clearly haven't been to LA. I'm here now, and I refuse to believe you exist
New York as well. At least San Francisco and Boston acknowledge the outside because we're busy hating LA and NY, respectively.
Almost like being in the head of Joe Rogans comedian buddies.....
Discuss:
Well if you lived in LA you'd understand. Lol
The joke's on Rich. It did only take 30 years for us to develop into a society without toilet paper, no-contact social interactions, and where Taco Bell rules the world (or at least rules weekends after midnight.)
Goddamn!
Genius comment.
Bravo
New Video title: Fat guy in hat is wrong about everything for 20min.
@@DeandreSteven you are fined one credit for a violation of the Verbal Morality Statute.
The decapitation was foreshadowed in the very beginning of the film. Phoenix says, "I'd lose my head if it wasn't attached." and they zoomed in on Stallone's face as he says, "I'll keep that in mind" very dramatically.
Jay's cameo proves that re:View takes place in the same universe as Half in the bag.
In the overseas version of this re:View they're eating pizza hut
I'm in the UK and I can confirm that they are in fact eating pizza hut.
In Denmark we got the Taco Bell one. We dont have Pizza Hut or Taco Bell, or we didnt.
In Germany it's Pizza Hut, too. I always assumed that this is because nobody in Germany would have had any idea what Taco Bell is, while Pizza Hut was trying to break into the market around that time.
Not of you are European. Because then you have no idea what Taco Bell even is (unless you spend a lot of time studying American pop culture on the internet).
Sure, but it also meant to be a joke and if you don't know that Taco Bell is some sort of fast food restaurant you don't get why the character acts so confused about the notion to get invited to taco bell. You get the joke if you replace Taco Bell with Pizza Hut, though.
Like, the first time I watched Ant-man I was totally confused by the "I take whatever is hot and fresh" joke because I had no idea what Baskin Robins is.
"What seems to be your boogle?" LOL. Love it! I'm the actor in "Demolition Man" that said those lines. One of my most favorite gigs! Love this video. You guys are awesome!
That was a wonderful and memorable scene. Great job!
Dude that shit was great! Thanks
How much do you weigh?
Hank of the Hill: Boggle?
dude thats awesome! I love saying that line to people.
And the brilliance of the three sea shells is that they never ruin it by explaining what they do. ever.
Disney is planning a spinoff detailing the background and origin of the seashells
It's gotta be some water squirt thing
3 shells 3 words scrap cleanse rinse
The director explained it. One is for scooping and the other two are for grabbing.
I remember watching a cut of this movie on TV when I was a kid and Sandra Bullock explains the three seashells. The first is for the sides, the second is for the middle, and the last is for scraping up what the first two shells didn't get. The only explanation I can think of this is that I know TV stations make their own edits of films using assembly cuts so they can thematically edit in cuts to commercials.
I'm with Jack. If Stallone was anything but a big dumb action man, this movie would have been far different and far worse. Intentional or otherwise, Stallone was EXACTLY what he needed to be here.
The ironic thing is...Stallone is far from dumb. He's incredibly articulate and intelligent. He plays dumb because thats what the roles require at the time.
I think Rich's point was that it shouldn't have been Stallone at all. But I could be wrong.
What I'm hearing is we need a Demolition Man prequel all about the Franchise Wars. Perhaps a trilogy.
Taco Bell was supposed to bring balance to the franchises!
deusEXmachinaV42 "YOU WERE THE CHORIZO ONE!"
How would they ever finance that??
Yes, we need a prequel trilogy to explain the intricate details of the political jostling that created this situation. We could lighten the mood with a wacky character for the kids, but really he's the key to all of this.
+MrKalashnik0va Unless the customer asks that it be changed.
Calling Simon Phonix as "just one gangster" is a bit of an understatement, the implication is the he *is* the reason why LA was such a criminal hellhole in 1996, if I recall correctly its stated in the intro scene that he united all the gangs into an army and took over part of the city. Him being a ridiculously over-the-top supervillain is what makes the short time span for societal shift to sorta work, as the people would be sick and scared of that much mayhem and accepting of anybody promising to fix society so that it would never happen again.
That's actually almost plausible. I still think they should have tacked on a couple of more decades of difference at any rate.
True, not to mention the fact that while Simon was frozen his brain was fed advanced training in hacking, terrorism and undoubtedly all matters martial, essentially turning him into a specialist in toppling societies and creating mayhem, while Mr. Man was brainwashed into being an avid knitter.
Furthermore perhaps the population at large, apart from some individuals who later formed the rebelling faction, also received similar brainwashing to make them more receptive to the society Cocteau built? This movie would definitely have benefited from an extra 10-15 minutes of worldbuilding.
1 8 7
M U R D E R D E A T H K I L L
Phoenix*
I call him the Black Joker. He really feels like he's channeling the Joker at some points.
I disagree with the Taco Bell advertising criticism in Demolition Man. I thought it was funny at the time, maybe because it was still a novel concept, but I think it's less annoying when they make it so obvious and integrated into the world. It transcends simple brand recognition and becomes a satirical commentary on the watering down of culture and cuisine in this hypothetical future.
It's also less intrusive because of the food the restaurant serves. Had they been serving actual Taco Bell food, it would have been harder to believe. But instead, because it is some fancy stuff, it just becomes one more silly thing (in a good way) in a fun movie.
And the whole Franchise War concept that explained the set-up is still intriguing. Demolition Man needs a Prequel
Thread Bomb, I have just rewatched Demolition Man and thought the same thing. It also works well with the bit about jingles being popular retro music. In a way, it is a clever way to draw a comparison between our 'brutish' and their 'pure' reality. The status Taco Bell gained is ironic.
What's even better is that the execs at Taco Bell loved this movie and thought it was hilarious.
Worked in the EU cut as well, it didn't even register as product placement to me as a kid because it was so mocking and irreverent. I also associated the rise of blatant product placement more with Brosnan-era James Bond.
Most of the movie roasts Taco Bell. In a world where flavor is banned, Taco Bell still exists. Think about it.
And you need to clean up taco bell shits with only 3 sea shells
I hope you’re right.
This movie is actually pretty brilliant...it's a great social satire wrapped in a typical early-'90s action/sci-fi wrapper.
Only in retrospect. Contemporarily it was pretty silly at the time to the point of not to be taken seriously at all
have you seen Sargon's review? It's a great analysis, like his Starship Troopers one before it.
@@frankmerker630 You know seeing this movie makes me wonder, has there ever been a movie to age this well? I mean, we've seen lots of movies nowadays that have aged poorly but this movie works FAR better today than it would have back on release to you point.
It would be tolerable if Sandra Bullock wasn't in it.
@@frankmerker630 Nah it's because americans never get satire and need years to process it. Just look at their initial reaction to Starship Troopers
Wesley Snipes was amazing in this. A very underrated performance.
@JaX Madison honestly crazier things have happened I totally think he can make a comeback
Wesley Snipes screwed up his career with his tax evasion. He spent almost a decade in jail which I find ridiculous. But sadly it made him irrelevant .
@@numerical25 I'd love to see him try to make a comeback at any rate.
@@0neDoomedSpaceMarine "Any rate" what's the rate for tax? I couldn't help, I saw your pun and I started cough-laughing.
Just about every other night I ride home from work and get taco bell because I'm too lazy to cook. Every night I get to my pc to check youtube for new vids to watch while I eat. 80 percent of the time I watch a RLM video, it's while I'm eating taco bell. Thanks, RLM, for putting my pathetic life into perspective. You're truly heroes.
Every other night, fam i'm not a healthy man but you need to lay off the fast food before your heart explodes
Funny enough, I'm actually in shape and I suppose it's due to the fact that I commute on a bicycle literally everywhere. Probably 10 miles a day average. so tired though... fuck.
well, to add insult to injury, I can't actually eat too much fiber. I have ulcerative colitis, so too much fiber and I'll usually just trigger a flare. For some reason, the taco bell doesn't seem to affect my uc all that much or else I would've stopped it ages ago. That or the meds I'm taking is working well. Either case, I definitely need to stop. Fucking expensive for that cheap processed shit. >_>
Yeah, it used to be Dunkin Donuts, but I'm in a similar position now. Those Taco Bell bastards took them down a few months ago, artillery cannons and drive-thru's are a brutal combo. If you can't beat em...
The low point of Stallone'dom was the late 90's, early 2000's, not the early 90's. He still had Cliffhanger and Copland, but later on, it was Detox, Eye See You, and Get Carter
19:36 I love the backstory behind Stallone doing 'Stop, Or My Mom Will Shoot.' Schwarzenegger was expressing interest in doing the movie, so Stallone jumped on to beat him to the punch. But it turns out, Schwarzenegger knew it was going to be shit and just bluffed to get Stallone to do it.
Yes,it shows that Schwarzenegger can be a very smart man.
2001 : Space Odyssey has egregious product placement. Pan-Am, IBM, Bell Phone, American Express, Hilton, General Motors & RCA, just to name a few.
@@CountArtha Nah, it's product placement alright
@@GelatinousSSnake you really think Kubrick would do that? He would not.
@@CsykKrit he took the money, and famously regretted it, lol.
@@GelatinousSSnake Product placement yes but not bad. It made the world more believable and immersive.
Same with Bladerunner. I don’t think the Taco Bell was bad product placement. If anything, it made Taco Bell the but of the joke. It was so unlikely for Stallone to go to Taco Bell for a celebration because it has a reputation for crappy did in the 1990s. They are playing off that.
Sandra Bullock was never hotter than in her uniform in this movie. But the movie is legendary awesome too!
Nah, that was just awkward. Besides... clothed women are hotter than naked ones. It leaves more to the imagination, accentuates the figure in special ways and people look pretty much the same naked anyway. Cool outfits are the way to set themselves apart and to make women look especially hot. ;)
Oh, I just realized that I admitted that I find women hot. Please everybody, don't sue me for being sexist and don't call the PC police! Mellow greetings!
check your privilege you sexist misogynist...what's your boggle?
Seeing Sandra Bullock in that dope outfit at a very young age made me utterly fascinated by women in uniform. Of course, all the satire at the time went over my head, I just loved the action, one liners, and of course, Sandra ;)
you are in violation of the verbal morality statutes
Haha, looked for it, it was the first comment. Bravo sir
I heard a rumor that Wesley Snipes loves the Joker and always wanted to play him. He realized he would never be the Joker, so he decided to play Simon as if he were playing the Joker.
Simon Phoenix is a better version of the Joker than whatever Jared Leto was trying to accomplish. Keeping it white for white sake would make the next Batman worse if the decision was Snipes vs Leto.
The Joker should only be played by someone who was born an actual clown.
and funnily enough, the idea for the new Joker was to make him more gangsta, it seems? at least that's what I can tell from the tattoos and teeth. on another note, it's kind of funny that because now everything on the internet is about "SJW cuckolds" vs "alt-right neo-nazis" the idea of a black person being an option for a clown character has to fall directly into this dumb "war" of "ideas".
That makes a lot of sense.
Wow we really missed out on a tremendous Joker!
13:46
I RECOGNIZED JAY. I CLAPPED WHEN I SAW HIM!
He is something I KNOW
IT BROKE NEW GROUUUND!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
VERY Cool!
I GOT THIS REFERENCE! THIS COMMENT WAS NOT A REFERENCE!
I know for me, for me personally, personally for me, very very cool. very cool.
lol he doesn't know how to use the 3 seashells
Stalone was tricked into "stop or my mom will shoot" Him and Arnie were in a rivalry and Arnie "leaked" he was gonna star in it, so Stallone did the film. And he hated Arnie for it
Interesting. Estelle Getty was also tricked into doing that movie because she was not interested in doing an action film. Or maybe rather a film where she has to shoot a gun. I forget exactly. Something like that.
Stallone later said that “It is the worst movie in the Solar System including alien movies we haven’t seen yet”
The thing is... A lot of their issues with the movie can be summed up as "That's the point."
Dennis Leary's character having rants that just sound like his standup, that's the point.
Stallone being big bad action man in a future where everyone is a pacifist who don't know how to defend themselves, that's the point.
“His stand up” ya mean Bill Hicks?
I was thinking the same thing! They completely missed the point!
So...what's your point?
That may be the point, but did those variables contribute to the best possible movie......nah.
@@at0micl0bster
Bill Hicks wishes he had his energy! 🍻
They also predicted that Arnold was governer of Cali LOL, and salt was forbidden, which is funny because in Mexico they did made salt forbidden in restaurants (sort of)
I still want to know how those damn sea shells work.
three sea shells its a toilet paper brand.
Scoop & scrape
They use them to scrape their butt.
If the seashells were buttons then their use would have been too obvious simply from experimentation. Especially to someone living in LA. The fact that he had to ask what the point of the three seashells was meant that he had recognized that they weren't just decorations on the toilet.
The first two are used together to scoop the majority. The last one is used to scrap clean. In the future if your button isn't inflamed, you're doing it wrong.
First blatant product placement I know of is Reeses Pieces in ET.
Josh Foreman I distinctly remember a giant Marlboro truck in a Superman movie.
James Bond movies
Domino's & Pizza Hut in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 1 & 2
For me, it was the first Superman movie, where Clark's mom puts a box of Cheerios right in the middle of the screen.
Coca Cola in Ghostbusters
the thing about Demolition Man is almost all of the things they throw in for craven commercial reasons actually kind of work in the context of the film, even Denis Leary doing his stand up routine. It's kind of brilliant if you view it from the lens of how 90s culture would imagine a relatively recent future.
Hey Rich remember Wesley Snipes character wasn't just some ordinary gangsta. No sir the character Wesley portraid had super gangsta abilities uploaded into him before he was thawed out.
You know, it would have added an extra distopian element to that world had Stallone been awakened *after* his sentence was up. Way after. With the explanation being that they didn't think those "cavemen" in the prisons could be reintegrated into society because they were too violent, so they just kept them all there.
That wouldn't be an extra element; that's a completely different movie.
Regarding the Back to the Future / California Raisin thing...
I've heard that commentary a few times. Rich doesn't get the story quite right here (I'm not trashing on Rich, just correcting the story).
Universal made the deal with the California Raisin Board to feature raisins in the movie, with the promise that them being featured in BTTF would "do for raisins what E.T. did for Reese's Pieces."
Both Bob Gale and Robert Zemeckis were frustrated with this. Bob Gale is the one telling the story in the commentary. Part of the problem was that it wasn't for a specific brand of raisins (i.e. Sunmaid Raisins)... it was just raisins (think of it like the old "got milk?" commercials, which was never for a specific brand of milk like Deans or something). So it wasn't like they could show a box of raisins since it wasn't a brand specific deal.
At one point it was suggested that they have a bowl of raisins next to the punch bowl at the Enchantment Under the Sea Dance, but in the commentary, Bob Gale explains that on film "a bowl of raisins is going to look like a bowl of dirt."
So when all was said and done, having the general "California Raisins" logo on the park bench was the result of the deal. While I'm sure having the bum laying on the bench didn't help, it really wasn't the bum specifically that upset them... it was the fact that simply having the logo on the bench at the end in no way, shape, or form came even remotely close to the promise of BTTF giving raisins the same level of attention and promotion as E.T. did with Reese's Pieces. It was at that point that the California Raisin Board got upset, wanting their money back and was otherwise ready to sue Universal. When Universal brought up the issue to Bob Gale and Robert Zemeckis, their response was basically that if they get involved in the dispute, they are going to testify in favor of the Raisin Board because it was a bad, ridiculous deal to begin with that had to realistic chance of giving them the kind of promotion they were looking for. So, the Board got their money back.
You see, it's stories like this that make the magic of film and filmmaking all the more exciting.
My favorite scene is when they are fighting in the museum, and Spartan swings a T.V. at Phoenix yelling, "You're on TV!!!" :v
I love that Rich doesn't even flinch at Jay taking one of his tacos. Rich is an angel 😇
I don't think anybody was bothered by the Taco Bell stuff in Demolition Man.
Nobody is. It’s Perfect. Just Right in its Product Placement.
Are the 3 seashells replacing Re:View?
TheUnremarkableMe Go watch his channel. He's already dead.
Damn it TBR, keep the formulaic meme comments on your own channel! Can't you see this video is spicy enough as it is?
Harold Penisman confirmed for lead role in Horse Ninja remake.
Streisand effect!
Just Brad. That brilliant hero of mankind deserves his own RLM cameo appearance.
Would love to see a re: Review of "The Last Action Hero"
Love that film.
I promise you they were. It was noted and criticized.
I was there. I was 3000 years ago...
@@anubusx Hated it.
Love how Jay just walks in, "I want this" as if they're not rolling...
The cops listening to old commercial jingles was a Brave New World reference.
No, it was films like Cliffhanger and Demolition Man that brought Stallone out of his low point.
It's a fair point. I was still regularly doing blackface as late as 2008.
13:45 a wild jay appears
You're mistaken, that's a Lesser Spotted Susan
We can only hope to capture some footage of its mating rituals
See how it reaches in and grabs a Taco, asserting its dominance. Meanwhile, the other mammals are unnmoved by its assertion of dominance; they stand their ground and continue their movie analysis ritual.
I was hearing this while drawing XD
thanks for showing me that moment
I kinda wish he would have just stood there, ate a taco, waved to the camera, smiled and walked off. Without a word.
If Sylvester Stallone can squeeze out one more Demolition Man, I can die moderately satisfied.
For those of you too young to clearly remember the early 90's, I can tell you that nobody back then thought the hellish city-scape of 1996 as depicted in the film was terribly unrealistic. The Rodney King riots took place in the summer of 1992, probably during the filming of this movie.
24 years later and not much has changed LOL
you say that like southern california has improved since then.
The most accurate science fiction film of the 20th century
Not really, unless in a facetious strawman kind of way. If this review had come out this year, I'm sure that the comments would be filled to the brim with snide remarks and emotive tirades about "wokism". But that's not what's being depicted in Demolition Man. What's being depicted is an authoritarian means of controlling the minds, thoughts and actions of society. It's not any different in its fundamental reasoning than the doublespeak, double think and Newspeak depicted in Nineteen Eighty-Four. And the motivation behind it has absolutely nothing to do with any current concept of political correctness let alone "wokism".
In fact it's much closer to where the term political correctness came from, which was describing how authoritarian regimes, such as in the old USSR, Cultural Revolution China and Red Scare period America would police the citizenry for "thought crimes" against the approved political dogma of the government.
Political correctness in the context of Demolition Man is just another way to achieve the same end while also convincing the citizenry that they are not oppressed. It is similar to how Fahrenheit 451 describes the gradual slide of its society into authoritarian oppression. The government preyed upon a citizenry that was anxious, angry, afraid and confused about the constant tension of an informational, intersectional, pluralist and multicultural world.
In other words, there was a "culture war" and the government capitalised and leveraged those fears and attitudes to exert control over society to its own ends. In the case of Fahrenheit 451, it was through a similar outcome as Demolition Man, but ultimately it was indistinguishable from typical fascism.
This is probably my favorite action-comedy. The cast is a perfect mix, the plot is engaging, and the setting is well executed. Love it.
Big thumbs up for Jack's Shut Up & Sit Down t-shirt!
Thomas Wheeler haha, I couldn't believe it when I saw it. I've been looking for someone else who comment on it. would love to play some analog games with these dudes.
I was looking for this comment!
Searched and found.
Wait a second, Demolition Man was released in 1993. What the fuck guys?
Alioon6, You are fined one credit for violation of the verbal morality statute.
Yes I scrolled all this way to find someone swearing to make that joke, God I'm bored
OH NO!
+irvingcsaltzburg
GET YOUR FACTS STRAIGHT
In the beggining of the video they say few times that it was a 1991 movie and then later they do say 1993 but they never adress their error. I know it is a nitpick, but still it is weird that they would slip like that.
Yeah, it's over 20 years old! Too outdated for *this* modern channel.
One of my favorite Stallone flicks of all time.
I love how Jay just walks in and takes a taco halfway through lol
Fun fact. One of the earliest examples of product placement was in the 1961 film One, Two, Three. It was about a coke businessman in Berlin before the wall fell. But a bunch of executives on the film who represented Pepsi were unhappy that Coke basically got an entire movie of advertising. So the director threw in one instance of Pepsi in the movie. At the end, the main character is buying his family cokes from a coke machine. When he buys his own, a pepsi comes out and he grimaces at it. Then the movie ends.
I always thought this movie was about a world run by corporations, highly sanitized to please everybody and super generic, people listen to advertisements as music, Taco Bell, poor people displaced out of the view of the rich. To me that is what was being satirized a safe world brought to you by Corporations.
the amount of sexual tension in this re:view is extraordinary
Kurtis Wilson Explains why they never mentioned how hot Sandra Bullock was in this movie...
Are they going to hunka chunka?
Anyone else get the feeling those are the only tacos these two have ever eaten? And by tacos, I mean p*ssy. EH-YOOOOO!
Dexter White beep you are being cited for a verbal offense in the amount of 125.00 dollars :P
I will never be able to watch Rich and Jack innocently swap joysticks again
Jay coming in quietly and taking the Taco Bell 🌮 is simply hilarious 😂
It's a retelling of Brave New World. Love it!
Even Sandra Bullock's character is a Brave New World reference. Lenina Huxley: : Lenina (love interest-ish in BNW) and Huxley (Aldous Huxley wrote BNW)
I went looking through the comments hoping someone else got the Brave New World reference.
I want a Franchise Wars movie
There's a movie called "Foodfight" for that kind of thing, but it's a really awful movie.
Me to.
@@zaphael0 fuck that noise
@@anubusx apparently we are getting Demolition Man 2 so maybe the Franchise Wars lore will be explored further.
Is it just me, or does Demolition Man kinda feel like a Paul Verhoeven movie? At least in its sarcastic tone.
Adam Baldwin I definitely see the similarities
Very similar to Judge Dredd.
Only missing is a commercial of taco bell
i think that's what they were trying to go for.
This movie is more relevant now than anyone could've ever guessed
Who would have thought that demolition man would be the sci fi movie that most accurately predicted the 2020's
The thing is, I don't think it really does "predict the 2020s" in anything but a facetious strawman kind of way. If this review had come out this year, I'm sure that the comments would be filled to the brim with snide remarks and emotive tirades about "wokism". But that's not what's being depicted in Demolition Man. What's being depicted is an authoritarian means of controlling the minds, thoughts and actions of society. It's not any different in its fundamental reasoning than the doublespeak, double think and Newspeak depicted in Nineteen Eighty-Four. And the motivation behind it has absolutely nothing to do with any current concept of political correctness let alone "wokism".
In fact it's much closer to where the term political correctness came from, which was describing how authoritarian regimes, such as in the old USSR, Cultural Revolution China and Red Scare period America would police the citizenry for "thought crimes" against the approved political dogma of the government.
Political correctness in the context of Demolition Man is just another way to achieve the same end while also convincing the citizenry that they are not oppressed. It is similar to how Fahrenheit 451 describes the gradual slide of its society into authoritarian oppression. The government preyed upon a citizenry that was anxious, angry, afraid and confused about the constant tension of an informational, intersectional, pluralist and multicultural world.
In other words, there was a "culture war" and the government capitalised and leveraged those fears and attitudes to exert control over society to its own ends. In the case of Fahrenheit 451, it was through a similar outcome as Demolition Man, but ultimately it was indistinguishable from typical fascism.
Very unfortunate
The World Economic Forum did lmao
Demolition Man was a prophetic movie.
@Jack Butler It's already begun
I don’t know which is better.
Jay just walking in and grabbing a taco...
Or the fact that it goes completely unacknowledged.
Definitely the fact that he went unacknowledged.
Rich, you better watch out! That taco could make your severe diabetes flare up!
Tomasz Urbaniak I personally LOVED my trip to the ER because of my low blood sugar!
Diabetus*
I was under the impression that it was his severe depression
funny story, the whole salt thing may not actually be true, there's never been a full study of the effects of too much salt in your diet. We know that you will die if you eat a huge amount in one day but the evidence that too much salt over a continued period is spotty at best.
It's one of those weird things where doctors just parrot this as it encourages the eating of fresher meals as salt is often an additive in the less healthy meals.
Actually, Taco Bell tacos have very little sodium compared to almost any other fast food item. Meanwhile, burgers from McD's or BK are practically made of salt with meat flavoring. And because they the tacos are rather low in carbs and actual sugars, they're not so bad for die-a-bee-tees.
I take issue with calling Simon Phoenix a regular gangster. He is a SUPER GANGSTER!
Last Action Hero was also released in that year and hits the same action/parody stuff that Demolition Man did. I think it was better myself.
Last action was another awesome movie that seemed under appreciated but was brilliant
LAH Sucked ass.
This is hilarious in hindsight because Wendy's and Arby's has embraced the way of the waifu and the memes. Memes, Jack.
The DNA of the soul
KFC too now
Amazing. I just realized that this video was posted the day before my daughter was born, and THAT NIGHT my last meal before becoming a father was Taco Bell. What a special connection to RLM. I love you guys.
13:44 cameo by Jay!
I KNOW WHAT THAT IS!
I wish he ate that taco bell in front of the camera. That would release all that built-up sexual tension in the episode.
chipchipersonmdphd shouldn't read comments before you watch a vid, son. That's RUclips 101!
I didn't even notice him
Good job guys! I can remember going to see Demoltion man in the theater with my mom, she wanted to see Stallone's ass. Can you believe the movie was rated R? I a couple of swear words in an otherwise almost bloodless action movie (with frozen head of course.) I could have sworn in my pre-teen mind I saw more of Sandra Bullock in the "sex" scene than I have seen in subsequent viewings as an adult.
I have to say, the Taco Bell in Demolition man doesn't seem like much of an endorsement. The bemusement of Stallone at the fact that Taco Bell won, the odd haute cuisine? The movie seemed to push ratburgers, best damn burger Stallone had had in years.
In addition, the sea shell conceit was the best! I love that they thought up a system for something so basic and made it just flat out as incomprehensible to the audience as it was to the main character. I also liked Stallone's solution!
FUN FACT: In the UK all Taco Bell moments were replaced with Pizza Hut branding. This is because Taco Bell had no presense in England until around 2013. EU hygene and nutrition laws prohibited Taco Bell from operating in Europe until recently.
And now Rich just mentioned that, what timing.
I'm glad you watched the video before commenting
You got me. But I did add aditional info.
It was Taco Bell on UK VHS.
Is commenting replacing watching the fucking video?
I saw the tacos and instantly caught the refference. New subscriber who has this in the news feed. Love your takes on these movies.
seeing this movie as much as i have i have NEVER realized it was only 30 years i thought it was longer
Don't forget stallones 1991 movie Oscar when discussing his low point and the Pepsi free gag in back to the future in regards to earliest memorable product placements.
I think the product placement works here because it's part of the story. It's when two characters are just randomly both drinking pepsi, with the logos on the cans perfectly positioned for the camera that gets me...
"I am very disappointed this dog is not a cat" - Rich reviewing Demolition Man
100%
In the PAL release, they DID digitally edit all the Taco Bell signs into Pizza Hut ones. They even got the actors back in to re-record audio to dub over the original video.
When John Spartan and Simon Phoenix first meet in the film's prologue Phoenix says "I swear, I'd lose my head if it wasn't attached" and Spartan responds "I'll keep that in mind" which of course is a stealth set-up to when he kicks his head off at the end.
I'm a simple man. I see a new RedLetterMedia video, I press like.
More Jack and RIch please! Thanks!
GREAT movie, and HIGHLY under rated! It was the first movie I saw where Wesley Snipes and I didn't think of him as "Wesley Snipes playing [insert character name]". In every other movie...he's Wesley Snipes playing a role. In this one, he was "Simon Phoenix, played by Wesley Snipes". Probably Wesley's BEST acting roll and performance *ever*.
Yes it's unbelievable Taco Bell became a fancy restaurant same as TGI Fridays, Olive Garden, Old Chicago, Applebees, Pizza Hut, and other restaurants that aren't fast food restaurants.
McDonald's and Burger King it would have been believable if either of those 2 powerhouse fast food restaurants won the Franchise wars.
Depending on your region the product placement changed, I think I remember it being Pizza Hut or Dominos down in Australia since we don't have taco bell
The time period thing is something that always bothered me about Fallout 2. You play the Vault Dweller's grandkid but are from a totally tribal society that was founded by people from Vault 13. So in 80 years they went from technologically advanced to believing in spirits and whatnot. Like the Village Elder and Hakunin are only one generation removed from the original founders but are super weird and superstitious.
Demolition Man opened on October 8, 1993, only a few months after the terrific Stallone film, Cliffhanger (that was May 1993). So the movie starts three years after it was released, not five.
As for product placement, that was going on way before BTTF. Remember the box of Cheerios in Superman - The Movie? The Bond films also have lots of product placement in them. There was a random AMC car dealership in 1974's The Man With The Golden Gun.
Cliffhanger ...terrific...that might be the first time that has been said...
BTTF movies had some pretty egregious product placement: Pepsi, Nike, Mattel, Pizza Hut, Black & Decker, The Weather Channel, Texaco, 7-Eleven, AT&T, etc
And Superman II had someone get thrown into a giant Coca-Cola sign.
WalterLiddy I was responding to Rich's comment that he didn't remember product placement before Back to the Future (1985). I've been pointing out that there was product placement before that movie, and far more prominent.
First that came to my mind was Reece's pieces in E.T.
I want more Jack and Rich eating tacos videos.
Artacus Rex I was hoping for 21 minutes of taco eating without a single word about any movie.
They post those over on Pornhub
Considering what has happened in only the last 5 years, I no longer agree with the sentiment that "such a change would need 200 years minimum."
I was pretty much gonna post the same thing. They seemed to have already gotten rid of things like due process (inherently individualistic concept) even in 1996 to have frozen John Spartan in the first place and I'm guessing it was already going downhill ideologically before the technocracy was installed so it's not such a big leap. I see us moving towards a similar kinda technocracy although at the same time it's getting a lot more chaotic like the movie depicts 1996, isn't it.
@@dreamsof3dspace555 Glad to see others on the same wavelength and disheartened that it's so few. It is kind of right in our faces, isn't it?
@@Wolfshifter Yeah, I'm not gonna lie I'm kinda terrified. The Korean war was in the 1950's and they're in a way more extreme situation than San Angeles. 200 years is overshooting by miles. It can go Brave New World or 1984 and it can happen in increments or violent revolution but it's naïve to think it takes that long or even that it's impossible for us. That naivety is what allows it to happen and it seems to be the standard right now.
@@dreamsof3dspace555 I’ve been in a weird zen state for the last month or so. All these things must come to pass and all that. The rubber band effect is real and the Fourth Turning book correctly correlates the patterns of the timeline for four generations to go through this cycle. I have hope. Like my dad pointed out to me. On 9/11, CNN posted a poll asking how many people would give up some freedoms for security. 10% said NO. A month later, they ran the same poll and 30% said NO. He said “This shows that in a crisis, only 1 in 10 people can keep their wits about them when those orchestrating a crisis seek to take advantage of them. A month later, only 2 join them. 10 years later, 2 more will join. 20 years and hopefully more than half will catch on.” I’ll carry that lesson forever and pass it on.
16:26 The earliest movie that is confirmed to have product placement is Wings (1927). There might be even older movies that have deliberate product placement, but we don't have confirmation for a company paying for product placement earlier than Wings (1927).
The timeline was probably chosen because Bullok's character was at one point meant to be Spartan's daughter... can you imagine the kind of awkward regarding the vr scene? 😂
you guys argue about demolition man being stallones "low point".... i venture to go a bit further back and say "Tango and Cash", and even a bit further back the freefall started with "Cobra"
They say it's a plot hole that it only took 30 years for society to shift. Yet look at what is "unacceptable" now to People that was ok in like 2005.
I get what you mean but it's still way too short a time. Just not something that was deeply considered by the writers I expect, it happens.
@Craig X That is definitely what I do.
I like the Re:Views where you get the pairings that aren't seen very often. Jack and Rich, Josh and Jay, etc
The reason it's set only 40 years in the future is that there was a subplot about Stallone finding his daughter - which was deleted from the finished film.
Rich Evans has such a personalized way of thinking... it's as-if he's the only person on the planet to have an opinion or to ever be correct.
Fuck now I need Taco Bell. . .
I agree with Jack that Demolition Man has kind of a satirical tone to it. By 1993, the big 80's-esque action schlock movie bubble was bursting. In that light, Demolition Man's core premise, a world where violence, danger, profanity, and sex are taboo relics of the past, is pretty self-aware. I think the only thing that saved it from totally bombing was that they didn't go full spoof. Last Action Hero, which came out the same year, tried that angle and bombed spectacularly. Stallone followed up with a near-bomb (Cliffhanger) and a total bomb (Judge Dredd). Schwarzenegger followed up with a near-bomb (True Lies) and a bomb (Eraser). The Matrix came out the year after Eraser, and that was all she wrote.
Um, 'near-bombs' True Lies($380m) and Cliffhanger($255m), both were very successful financially, and were very popular too.
Eraser wasn’t a bomb either.
True Lies was the pinnacle of 90's action movies
one thing that is under appreciated is wesley's wardrobe, denim overalls and orange shirt, absolute perfection
Demolition Man is actually a Police song by Sting, Andy Summers, and Stewart Copeland recorded in 1981.
This movie was Way ahead of its time. It is a smart action movie from the early 90s with a lot of social commentary and a great combo of sci fi and action.
All I can say to the idiotic teenagers and adults that did not go to see this when I was a little kid is "WHAT'S YOUR BOGGLE?"
I remember seeing this for the first time in the late 90s on NBC Sunday night when they played a movie. The edited version was still really good and I remember even as like a 10 yr old this movie seemed smarter than the average action movie. The one problem for me is THEY CUT OUT THE PART WITH JESSIE VENTURA GETTING KILLED AND MOST OF HIS SCENES!
Yeah I don't agree that this is a smart movie 😂 The premise and world building is pretty bog standard sci-fi, and the rest of it is just scene after scene of "so bad that it's good".
God, I keep hearing them miss-enunciate Denis Leary's name when talking about him just doing his act, phonetically its pronounced Bill Hicks.
Stallone was exactly what he needed to be in this movie, it is almost the perfect movie.
The 1979 Moonraker James Bond movie had incredible amounts of blatant product placement.
Now it's 2 AM, were in the middle of a fucking quarantine, and all I want is Taco Bell. Damn you Rich Evans