When I was a kid, I didn’t think the missile was deactivated, nor did it need to be deactivated. The machine was probably made from wonderlux parts, so it was destined to fall apart.
Phew! That was close! Robbie’s parents would’ve been dead by now if Toaster and the supreme commander hadn’t stopped the missile from launching into Earth. Robbie is only a baby and he needs his mom and dad so he can learn and grow.
This is the 2nd time Toaster has sacrificed himself, only this time it’s not in a gruesome manner but again, it’s a sacrifice which he still has the same fate as last time.
3rd and final time actually because this movie was last in production but came out in 1998 to America before "The Brave Little Toaster: TO THE RESCUE, thus creating a continuity problem.
*Meanwhile, back on Earth…* Lauren: (worried) Our friends have been gone too long. I’m really worried about them, Ratso. Ratso: Hey, it’s okay. They’re gonna come back home soon. Just be patient. Lauren: That’s what my mom told me a lot of times. You keep the intercom as quiet as possible. If the owners find out that their baby is missing, we’ll be in big trouble. Ratso: Don’t worry about that. I’ve already taken care of it.
That missile/rocket *just* simply looks *not* big enough to completely and utterly destroy the entire Planet Earth, especially as it was built by household appliances to begin with. If it did successfully launch and landed in an populous place, it looks like it would do enough damage as an WWII doodlebug.
It would have to be loaded with something a lot more explosive than plutonium, like Einsteinium or something. And its hull would melt if it were loaded with something that radioactive. The most they could hope to do is replicate the meteor that destroyed the dinosaurs.
This climax was actually intense, for a DVD sequel.
These sequels are surprisingly good.
When I was a kid, I didn’t think the missile was deactivated, nor did it need to be deactivated. The machine was probably made from wonderlux parts, so it was destined to fall apart.
Thomas M. Disch might have actually been proud of this one.
They made a DVD sequel based on his sequel novel.
Phew! That was close! Robbie’s parents would’ve been dead by now if Toaster and the supreme commander hadn’t stopped the missile from launching into Earth. Robbie is only a baby and he needs his mom and dad so he can learn and grow.
It simply didn't look big enough to be capable of whole Planet Earth oblivion anyway.
Millions of people would have died too.
@@Jothomas214 So would all the animals.
Gee without the ex-supreme commander’s help the earth would’ve been destroyed
This is the 2nd time Toaster has sacrificed himself, only this time it’s not in a gruesome manner but again, it’s a sacrifice which he still has the same fate as last time.
3rd and final time actually because this movie was last in production but came out in 1998 to America before "The Brave Little Toaster: TO THE RESCUE, thus creating a continuity problem.
@@jonathanlafferty2271Yes Yep YEAH
Imagine if Marvin the Martian saw that rocket.
He would be interested in buying it ,but can't because it was deactivated and got destroyed.
We don’t call him the brave little toaster for nothing
1:06 is me when Donald Dump left office! :)
*Meanwhile, back on Earth…*
Lauren: (worried) Our friends have been gone too long. I’m really worried about them, Ratso.
Ratso: Hey, it’s okay. They’re gonna come back home soon. Just be patient.
Lauren: That’s what my mom told me a lot of times. You keep the intercom as quiet as possible. If the owners find out that their baby is missing, we’ll be in big trouble.
Ratso: Don’t worry about that. I’ve already taken care of it.
This is a little bit too extreme for a 1990's movie. Who would put a missile on Mars?!
ALRIGHT ONE WE CAN DO IT =)
That nuke doesn’t look anywhere big enough to destroy the earth.
*Exactly!*
@@SuperTed19021 They probably modified it so it CAN destroy Earth.
The missile defeated 1:03
0:56 Activating abort fire.
That missile/rocket *just* simply looks *not* big enough to completely and utterly destroy the entire Planet Earth, especially as it was built by household appliances to begin with. If it did successfully launch and landed in an populous place, it looks like it would do enough damage as an WWII doodlebug.
It would have to be loaded with something a lot more explosive than plutonium, like Einsteinium or something. And its hull would melt if it were loaded with something that radioactive. The most they could hope to do is replicate the meteor that destroyed the dinosaurs.
Helpful tip don't record off the screen with a camera bad audio bad picture
1:06 will literally be the entire planet when this COVID nonsense finally blows over. :)
I, for one, will throw more than one dance party. :)