Here's the truth of Mansley's situation: - Lied to a superior officer/General - Put American citizens in danger - Insubordination - Treason by ordering the launch of an Atomic weapon without authorization - Attempted desertion Mansley was more than likely Executed
While treason can result in the death penalty, it's almost a myth that it happens. Very few people are every charged, almost no one has been convicted, and I don't think anyone has been executed via the federal government just states. And we're talking less people than you have fingers. Mansley is going away to a prison no one has ever heard of so they can test new torture techniques though.
The guy is a true artist. I get the feeling, that's why he often includes them in his movies. Edna Mode in The Incredibles, Dean McCoppin in The Iron Giant, Gusteu in Ratatouille.
Rest in peace Sylvia Plath 1932-1963 Bernard Herrmann 1911-1975 Burne Hogarth 1911-1996 Ted Hughes 1930-1998 Mel Torme 1925-1999 Jimmie Logsdon 1922-2001 Michael Kamen 1948-2003 Frank Thomas 1912-2004 Ollie Johnston 1912-2008 James Gammon 1940-2010 Eddie Platt 1921-2010 Roger Ebert 1942-2013 Jimmie Haskell 1926-2016 Lawrence Van Gelder 1933-2016 John Mahoney 1940-2018 Edd Byrnes 1932-2020 Jimmie Rodgers 1933-2021 Cloris Leachman 1926-2021
@@BlueMooMoo96 the voice actors, actress, producers and singers who songs were in this movie, Ted Hughes wrote a called the Iron Man, for his children after their mom, Sylvia Plath who took her own life in 1963
8:44 Yes, it's the 1950s. it's theorized the reason we never see the father is because he fought in WW2. he got his wife pregnant, went off to fight, and never came back. we even see a photo of him sitting in a plane, showing that he was Air Force. Hogarth wants to take after him, which is why he's always dressing as a soldier. It's also why everyone is so afraid of the Giant. they think he's a new weapon the other countries made to get revenge. the war is still very fresh in their minds as if it happened yesterday.
There was a deleted scene, cut out and replaced by the chloroform scene, where it’s revealed during dinner that Hogarth’s dad died in the Korean War. Hogarth gets into an argument with Mansley before going to bed instead of being drugged.
"You... stay. I... go. No following." "Superman." It is impossible to not cry at those scenes. Such an underrated classic. It's a shame it flopped when it originally came out.
The Iron Giant is one of my favorite childhood movies of all time. Since one of you asked when this movie was released, it was the year I was born, 1999.
You made me laugh. I have this joke. Pixar. Toy Story: What if toys had emotions. Finding Nemo: What if fish had emotions. Cars: What if cars had emotions. Inside Out: What if emotions had emotions. You comment made me think. Brad Bird’s interview at Pixar. “Mr. Bird, what makes you think you’ve got what it takes to work at Pixar.” “Well, I wrote and directed a major motion picture that explored what if guns had emotions.” “Hired!!”
@@DavidRomigJr well I'm happy you found joy from it. I identified a lot with the iron giant when I was younger. I'm descended from 3 warrior cultures and come from a military family. I wanted to be a soldier since I was 10 and I enlisted at 19. I quit half way through training cause I didn't believe in what we were doing over there anymore but I was totally lost. All I knew was combat. Even though I hadn't seen it, it's all I taught myself from a young age. I believed it to be my destiny to fight but I have a strong heart that feels and breaks for everyone around me. So the question became; what if I don't have to be a fighter? Is it ok for me to only love? What if a gun had a soul and it didn't want to be a gun? "I am not a gun" was so heartbreaking of a line to me personally. I'm still trying to this day a decade later to prioritize what is important. I still have this warrior inside filled with pain and remorse and anger but I try so hard to find another way to live. Due to my mental disabilities, normal working life is difficult for me. Fighting was always simple and easy but a normal working environment is stressful and it cause emotional breakdowns if I stay at the same job too long. Makes me wonder if I can be anything but a fighter? Maybe a gun is all ill ever be good for and I missed my true calling all those years ago..
@@DavidRomigJr - Dude. Brad Bird’s sister died because her husband shot her. “What if a gun had a soul?” was a considerably more important question to him than “what if X had emotions.”
"The Iron Giant" is an absolute classic! To this day people just can't get enough of the story Brad Bird did an amazing job bringing this movie to life!!!!
This movie is a classic but I feel bad for Brad Bird because you can tell he put heart and soul into the movie, just to it to bomb hard at the box office. Glad he succeeded with directing The incredibles, 5 years later of the release of this film.
“It’s bad to kill, but it’s not bad to die” is such an amazing message. So many movies and shows depict death as the ultimate sadness, but this is the first animation I’ve seen that says it’s okay; that it’s just an inevitable part of life.
Okay… But all those other movies you saw were right to depict death as the ultimate sadness. The only time death isn't bad is if you choose it, and even then it's still _sad._ Dying when you _didn't_ want to is definitely bad, and teaching people that it isn't bad is a poor message. Something being "a part of life" doesn't make it not bad; smallpox was "a part of life" before we got rid of it.
What like most about the missile scene in this movie is that it really shows how much the Giant learned from his experiences on Earth. Because it was thanks to Hogarth that the Giant learned that he may have been created to be a living weapon, But he could be way more than that and he chose to be a force for good. And since the Giant knew that the whole thing with the missile was because of him, Giant didn't want to see another planet get destroyed because of him. So he realized that the best way save the Earth was to save it from himself and so the Giant sacrificed himself by letting himself get blown up by the missile. He may have turned out to be alive in the end, But the point is The Iron Giant's sacrifice managed to show people that he was a hero.
This was one of my favorite childhood movies. I found a new appreciation for it rewatching it again as an adult. I still tear up when the Giant sacrifices himself and repeats the same line Hogarth told him in different context. You don't need a giant budget or tons of celebrities to make a great movie. All it takes is something as simple as this movie. I wish there were more movies like this, focus on a great engaging story, characters and world rather than the things going on in movies today.
You misinterpreted the gun scene. The giant didn't start hating guns suddenly. The image and concept of a gun triggered dormant memories of his true purpose.
As an adult, I discovered that the two men that talked to Kent at the train wreck scene were characters based the late animators, Frank Thomas and Ollie Johnston.
39:52 YOU REALIZED HOW MUCH HARDWARE I BROUGHT OUT HERE😤?! YOU JUST BLEW MILLIONS OF UNCLE SAM’S DOLLARS OUT OF YOUR BUTT😤!! Cracks me up as a kid, and still as an adult today😂🤣!
The iron giant movie is one of my favorites growing up and favorite to this day. The scene where the giant tells the boy no following and he sacrifices himself is one of the best scenes of the film. A TV series called Truc Dodgers in the 24th and 1/2 century another favorite growing up they’ve even made an episode that basically recalls the iron giant and it has the same thing that a robot sacrifices himself and tells the Dodgers no following, This is just one of the many episodes that are hilarious to watch and I highly recommend it!!!!
I've seen this more times than I can count and the ending is the only scene in all of movies that makes me cry every single time. Sad crying at the goodbye and explosion then happy crying when we see the Giant smile while rebuilding. Flawless movie. Also Cartoon Network used to air this for 24 hours straight for a day in November for a few years in the early 2000s
God, i keep missing these bangers when they come out. Anways, this freaking movie is amazing and the whole "You stay and go. No following " was a really tear jerker.
I’ve yet to see this movie completely, I only remember seeing bits and pieces of it when it aired on Cartoon Network during 2003/2004 and for the longest of time I didn’t even know that Brad Bird who would later directed _The Incredibles_ and _Ratatouille_ was the director of this film and I also didn’t even knew that Vin Diesel was the voice of the titular Iron Giant. Lastly it’s so surreal that years after the animators worked on this animated masterpiece they went on to work on Adam Sandler’s _Eight Crazy Nights_ even the character designs on that film look reminiscent to the human designs in _The Iron Giant_
My favorite part was when Hogarth put Coco lax in Kent’s milkshake, and it made him get an upset stomach because of the laxative and he had to use the restroom 😂
The Iron Giant is seriously underrated, a childhood classic of mine! I like how the story is fun and is not afraid to take risks with the serious content. Also, Vin Diesel as the title character did a great job capturing the emotions of his character.
Another great film also done by the Warner Brothers studio that I think it was made around the same time as the iron giant is the movie Balto, it has the same animation but it goes from live action to cartoon, it’s based on a real event, It’s one of my favorite films to watch when I was little and to this day I still watch it I highly recommend it!!!!
There is an extended cut where we see a bit of the Iron Giant' alien planet origins where dean's Tv somehow catches the giant memory as show a full army of Iron giants warring before the alien planet explodes. Kinda like Krypton actually
This film was so ahead of its time. It didn’t do well in theaters, but it came out in 1999, the same year as Toy Story 2! So any and all animated films got buried by the success of that film. CGI animated films were still very new and were becoming more and more popular.
I’ve always wanted to make a live action/thriller version of this movie. It would be so dope done by the right people. Sometimes I really wish I was rich lol.
There actually is a old scene now put into nearly every copy of the film where the robot actually dreams and we get to see a small flash to his planet. It seems there are dozen of these robots, made to be conquers, and they all go to planets to wipe them out. So from frame one, the robot should have been evil. But due to one small dump, he completely forgets his objective and learns from Hugath. Even when he fixes himself later (I mean the head injury snapping back in place), our pal the giant choices what he wants to do with his abilities. It's just a fine line of if his just overriding his programming, if the giant is some type of alien life form or gain intelligence and that's what I loved about this movie so much from childhood to now. Whatever he is, he chooses to be good because it's what he wants. He isn't scared to die for others either, even when knowing what death means now and again, it's because Hugath, a simple child, taught him dying is okay. That it's not bad to die but to kill. Such strong messages before a kids film and I miss movies like this. Where kids weren't coddled or talked down too but treated like small adults. We rarely see that now
"Kent Mansley, you work for the government." I love how flatly Hogarth recites it before Mansley can say it again, like 'bro im just trynna have dinner and enjoy my night can you not rn'
I remember rewatching this movie on a flight from South Carolina back to the state of Maine, and as I was watching this opening with the lighthouse, I looked out the window of the plane and I saw the same lighthouse down below. I went "Ayo, what the fuck?" and I couldn't help but laugh.
The coordinates were programmed into the missile launch, it wasn't tracking the giant. So him flying away wouldn't even help, his only option was to cause it to detonate before it got too close to earth.
Hey, guys! Here's a cool movie that would fit your tastes, Tim Burton's Corpse Bride. It's a stop-motion picture with a Gothic feel and light black comedy about an anxious victorian boy played by Johnny Depp who accidentally proposes to a woman beyond the grave. It's a lot like Courage the Cowardly Dog with its scared protagonist and surprisingly heartfelt relationships with the characters and the monsters.
Vin Diesel is the voice of the giant XD love this movie so much! There’s also a new version that was released of this film with two new scenes! They’re amazing! One is a dream the giant has about destroying other planets and the other is Dean and Annie taking
Yes Chance! Star Kid was one of my go-to favorite movies as a kid! It’s a piece of crap, but in the best kind of ways. The gross food ball from the refrigerator scene, dude stalking his crush at the fair, that weird-ass crab alien bad guy: that shit is classic
Here's the truth of Mansley's situation:
- Lied to a superior officer/General
- Put American citizens in danger
- Insubordination
- Treason by ordering the launch of an Atomic weapon without authorization
- Attempted desertion
Mansley was more than likely Executed
While treason can result in the death penalty, it's almost a myth that it happens. Very few people are every charged, almost no one has been convicted, and I don't think anyone has been executed via the federal government just states. And we're talking less people than you have fingers. Mansley is going away to a prison no one has ever heard of so they can test new torture techniques though.
Oh dang
Good
Yep, the only question is how?!
Damn! It didn't think of it like that. That's dark!
Fun fact : This movie was written and directed by Brad Bird, the same guy who made The Incredibles.
His Cinematic Debut
No one makes em like Bird
Bird is The Word
The guy is a true artist. I get the feeling, that's why he often includes them in his movies. Edna Mode in The Incredibles, Dean McCoppin in The Iron Giant, Gusteu in Ratatouille.
He also has three kids (I think?) that voiced in movies he directed Nicholas, Michael, and jack
Rest in peace
Sylvia Plath 1932-1963
Bernard Herrmann 1911-1975
Burne Hogarth 1911-1996
Ted Hughes 1930-1998
Mel Torme 1925-1999
Jimmie Logsdon 1922-2001
Michael Kamen 1948-2003
Frank Thomas 1912-2004
Ollie Johnston 1912-2008
James Gammon 1940-2010
Eddie Platt 1921-2010
Roger Ebert 1942-2013
Jimmie Haskell 1926-2016
Lawrence Van Gelder 1933-2016
John Mahoney 1940-2018
Edd Byrnes 1932-2020
Jimmie Rodgers 1933-2021
Cloris Leachman 1926-2021
Who are these people?
@@BlueMooMoo96 the voice actors, actress, producers and singers who songs were in this movie, Ted Hughes wrote a called the Iron Man, for his children after their mom, Sylvia Plath who took her own life in 1963
M Emmett Walsh 1935-2024
He passed on March 19th, 2024
8:44 Yes, it's the 1950s. it's theorized the reason we never see the father is because he fought in WW2. he got his wife pregnant, went off to fight, and never came back. we even see a photo of him sitting in a plane, showing that he was Air Force. Hogarth wants to take after him, which is why he's always dressing as a soldier.
It's also why everyone is so afraid of the Giant. they think he's a new weapon the other countries made to get revenge. the war is still very fresh in their minds as if it happened yesterday.
There was a deleted scene, cut out and replaced by the chloroform scene, where it’s revealed during dinner that Hogarth’s dad died in the Korean War. Hogarth gets into an argument with Mansley before going to bed instead of being drugged.
@@ammash3000 he did no wonder why we didn’t get that scene why he never appeared in the iron giant so Hogarth hues is the son of Larry Hughes?
"You... stay. I... go. No following." "Superman." It is impossible to not cry at those scenes. Such an underrated classic. It's a shame it flopped when it originally came out.
Yeah brad Bird did all that work to dedicate his sister 😔
@@theartdragon1270Brad Pitt? He wasn’t in this film
@@michaelmonetti9900 oh sorry I meant brad bird my bad
@@theartdragon1270 Yup and Vin Diesel as The Iron Giant
@@michaelmonetti9900 yeah
*"Where's the Giant, Mansley?"*
The Iron Giant is one of my favorite childhood movies of all time. Since one of you asked when this movie was released, it was the year I was born, 1999.
Me two
"What if a gun had a soul and it didn't want to be a gun?"
-Brad Birds pitch for the film
You made me laugh. I have this joke. Pixar. Toy Story: What if toys had emotions. Finding Nemo: What if fish had emotions. Cars: What if cars had emotions. Inside Out: What if emotions had emotions.
You comment made me think. Brad Bird’s interview at Pixar. “Mr. Bird, what makes you think you’ve got what it takes to work at Pixar.” “Well, I wrote and directed a major motion picture that explored what if guns had emotions.” “Hired!!”
@@DavidRomigJr well I'm happy you found joy from it. I identified a lot with the iron giant when I was younger. I'm descended from 3 warrior cultures and come from a military family. I wanted to be a soldier since I was 10 and I enlisted at 19. I quit half way through training cause I didn't believe in what we were doing over there anymore but I was totally lost. All I knew was combat. Even though I hadn't seen it, it's all I taught myself from a young age. I believed it to be my destiny to fight but I have a strong heart that feels and breaks for everyone around me. So the question became; what if I don't have to be a fighter? Is it ok for me to only love?
What if a gun had a soul and it didn't want to be a gun?
"I am not a gun" was so heartbreaking of a line to me personally. I'm still trying to this day a decade later to prioritize what is important. I still have this warrior inside filled with pain and remorse and anger but I try so hard to find another way to live. Due to my mental disabilities, normal working life is difficult for me. Fighting was always simple and easy but a normal working environment is stressful and it cause emotional breakdowns if I stay at the same job too long. Makes me wonder if I can be anything but a fighter? Maybe a gun is all ill ever be good for and I missed my true calling all those years ago..
They came up with the idea from the book@@illam9500
@@DavidRomigJr - Dude. Brad Bird’s sister died because her husband shot her. “What if a gun had a soul?” was a considerably more important question to him than “what if X had emotions.”
Ironically the original premise of the novel was very much about the environment.
If it was remade today it would absolutely be taking that road.
“Iron giant” is such incredibly movie. Very moving. It’s ashamed this movie underperformed at the box office when it originally came out in theaters.
"The Iron Giant" is an absolute classic! To this day people just can't get enough of the story Brad Bird did an amazing job bringing this movie to life!!!!
This movie is a classic but I feel bad for Brad Bird because you can tell he put heart and soul into the movie, just to it to bomb hard at the box office. Glad he succeeded with directing The incredibles, 5 years later of the release of this film.
“It’s bad to kill, but it’s not bad to die” is such an amazing message. So many movies and shows depict death as the ultimate sadness, but this is the first animation I’ve seen that says it’s okay; that it’s just an inevitable part of life.
The Iron Giant is one of my favorites!!! 😄😂
Corpse bride and Coco were others I've seen. If the afterlife is anything like they depict, it actually makes this message clearer.
And Puss and Boots the last wish is the message of just embracing what you have around you before that day.
Kent Mansley really highlights that message because he’s a paranoid coward who’s terrified of death
Okay… But all those other movies you saw were right to depict death as the ultimate sadness. The only time death isn't bad is if you choose it, and even then it's still _sad._ Dying when you _didn't_ want to is definitely bad, and teaching people that it isn't bad is a poor message. Something being "a part of life" doesn't make it not bad; smallpox was "a part of life" before we got rid of it.
What like most about the missile scene in this movie is that it really shows how much the Giant learned from his experiences on Earth. Because it was thanks to Hogarth that the Giant learned that he may have been created to be a living weapon, But he could be way more than that and he chose to be a force for good.
And since the Giant knew that the whole thing with the missile was because of him, Giant didn't want to see another planet get destroyed because of him. So he realized that the best way save the Earth was to save it from himself and so the Giant sacrificed himself by letting himself get blown up by the missile.
He may have turned out to be alive in the end, But the point is The Iron Giant's sacrifice managed to show people that he was a hero.
This was one of my favorite childhood movies. I found a new appreciation for it rewatching it again as an adult. I still tear up when the Giant sacrifices himself and repeats the same line Hogarth told him in different context. You don't need a giant budget or tons of celebrities to make a great movie. All it takes is something as simple as this movie. I wish there were more movies like this, focus on a great engaging story, characters and world rather than the things going on in movies today.
One of the first animated movies I ever saw and still one of my favorite movies.
VERY Underrated
You misinterpreted the gun scene. The giant didn't start hating guns suddenly. The image and concept of a gun triggered dormant memories of his true purpose.
As an adult, I discovered that the two men that talked to Kent at the train wreck scene were characters based the late animators, Frank Thomas and Ollie Johnston.
This movie as made in 1999, and fun fact Vin Diesel voices the Iron Giant.
39:52
YOU REALIZED HOW MUCH HARDWARE I BROUGHT OUT HERE😤?! YOU JUST BLEW MILLIONS OF UNCLE SAM’S DOLLARS OUT OF YOUR BUTT😤!!
Cracks me up as a kid, and still as an adult today😂🤣!
Kent Mansley voiced by the legendary Christopher McDonald is a great villain.
Short answer: YES
Slightly longer answer: OF COURSE!! IT'S MADE BY THE GENIUS OF BRAD BIRD AND a genuinely heartfelt story with AMAZING animation.
The iron giant movie is one of my favorites growing up and favorite to this day. The scene where the giant tells the boy no following and he sacrifices himself is one of the best scenes of the film. A TV series called Truc Dodgers in the 24th and 1/2 century another favorite growing up they’ve even made an episode that basically recalls the iron giant and it has the same thing that a robot sacrifices himself and tells the Dodgers no following, This is just one of the many episodes that are hilarious to watch and I highly recommend it!!!!
Such a great movie. This one takes me back to my childhood every time. I remember seeing this in the theater. Thanks for reacting to this!
That movie you were talking about is where I first heard that "what do you call a cow with no legs?" joke.
One of the most underrated animated movies.
I've seen this more times than I can count and the ending is the only scene in all of movies that makes me cry every single time. Sad crying at the goodbye and explosion then happy crying when we see the Giant smile while rebuilding. Flawless movie.
Also Cartoon Network used to air this for 24 hours straight for a day in November for a few years in the early 2000s
The squirrel scene got chance dying 🐿️🤣💀
This movie is a classic.
One of the best animated movies ever.
I used to have it on VHS back in the day.
To answer your question in the title, yes it is. Glad you boys loved it.
everyones talking about “the feels” and “the message”
dude as a kid i didnt gaf. but it was funny af and thats why i liked it
The iron giants guns are fucking SICK!!!! Truly shows he’s from outer space!!!
This movie is an absolute masterpiece!
I remember watching it on VHS so many times as a kid!
And the deleted dream scene was something else!
God, i keep missing these bangers when they come out. Anways, this freaking movie is amazing and the whole "You stay and go. No following " was a really tear jerker.
I’ve yet to see this movie completely, I only remember seeing bits and pieces of it when it aired on Cartoon Network during 2003/2004 and for the longest of time I didn’t even know that Brad Bird who would later directed _The Incredibles_ and _Ratatouille_ was the director of this film and I also didn’t even knew that Vin Diesel was the voice of the titular Iron Giant.
Lastly it’s so surreal that years after the animators worked on this animated masterpiece they went on to work on Adam Sandler’s _Eight Crazy Nights_ even the character designs on that film look reminiscent to the human designs in _The Iron Giant_
My favorite part was when Hogarth put Coco lax in Kent’s milkshake, and it made him get an upset stomach because of the laxative and he had to use the restroom 😂
49:58 They'd better bury this man UNDER THE JAIL!!
I definitely didn’t tear up a little when the iron giant flew to the nuke 😂❤
I remember seeing this movie in the cinema back in the day, what good memories. u__u and Mr. Dean is based on Jeff Goldblum, just so you know. 😂😂😂
The Iron Giant is seriously underrated, a childhood classic of mine! I like how the story is fun and is not afraid to take risks with the serious content. Also, Vin Diesel as the title character did a great job capturing the emotions of his character.
Another great film also done by the Warner Brothers studio that I think it was made around the same time as the iron giant is the movie Balto, it has the same animation but it goes from live action to cartoon, it’s based on a real event, It’s one of my favorite films to watch when I was little and to this day I still watch it I highly recommend it!!!!
The Giant
Made of Iron
Has a heart
Larger than the Universe ❤
This is one of the most underrated animated movies of all time.
There is an extended cut where we see a bit of the Iron Giant' alien planet origins where dean's Tv somehow catches the giant memory as show a full army of Iron giants warring before the alien planet explodes. Kinda like Krypton actually
This film was so ahead of its time. It didn’t do well in theaters, but it came out in 1999, the same year as Toy Story 2!
So any and all animated films got buried by the success of that film. CGI animated films were still very new and were becoming more and more popular.
A childhood favorite classic and I remember I use to own the iron giant remote control action figure back when I was a kid when I saw the film
I've been waiting for part 2 for 25 years lol😂
This is gonna be a fun reaction.
The Iron Giant is one of my favorites!!! 🤩🤩
fun fact: i belive that there was a deleted scene that showed exactly where the giant came from and what its purpose was
There was only one movie because it was criminally underrated and didn't get that much money in the box office.
From the director that brought you Disney & Pixar's The Incredibles!!!!! 😀
I still cry even to this day when he leaves to save everyone at the end, man.
I’ve always wanted to make a live action/thriller version of this movie. It would be so dope done by the right people. Sometimes I really wish I was rich lol.
There actually is a old scene now put into nearly every copy of the film where the robot actually dreams and we get to see a small flash to his planet. It seems there are dozen of these robots, made to be conquers, and they all go to planets to wipe them out.
So from frame one, the robot should have been evil. But due to one small dump, he completely forgets his objective and learns from Hugath. Even when he fixes himself later (I mean the head injury snapping back in place), our pal the giant choices what he wants to do with his abilities.
It's just a fine line of if his just overriding his programming, if the giant is some type of alien life form or gain intelligence and that's what I loved about this movie so much from childhood to now. Whatever he is, he chooses to be good because it's what he wants. He isn't scared to die for others either, even when knowing what death means now and again, it's because Hugath, a simple child, taught him dying is okay. That it's not bad to die but to kill.
Such strong messages before a kids film and I miss movies like this. Where kids weren't coddled or talked down too but treated like small adults. We rarely see that now
"Kent Mansley, you work for the government."
I love how flatly Hogarth recites it before Mansley can say it again, like 'bro im just trynna have dinner and enjoy my night can you not rn'
God tier movie
I LOVED this movie as a kid and even now as a 26 yr old man. Always got emotional towards the end when the iron giant had to sacrifice himself 😭🥹
The only scene i remember from Starkid is when he orders fastfood in the robot suit 💀💀💀
YESSSSSS! This Movie is sooo special to me! Im so glad to see other ppl enjoy it too!!
I remember rewatching this movie on a flight from South Carolina back to the state of Maine, and as I was watching this opening with the lighthouse, I looked out the window of the plane and I saw the same lighthouse down below. I went "Ayo, what the fuck?" and I couldn't help but laugh.
The scary part about this is that bomb wouldn't have even killed the robot and there's a whole army of them...
I know the movie star kid
The alien suit he wore was living
Brad Bird directed this movie
Mostly know for directing the Incredibles and Incredibles 2 as well as some early episodes of the Simpsons.
The coordinates were programmed into the missile launch, it wasn't tracking the giant. So him flying away wouldn't even help, his only option was to cause it to detonate before it got too close to earth.
YES! The Iron Giant! Another classic!
I love the iron giant as a kid.
Hey, guys! Here's a cool movie that would fit your tastes, Tim Burton's Corpse Bride. It's a stop-motion picture with a Gothic feel and light black comedy about an anxious victorian boy played by Johnny Depp who accidentally proposes to a woman beyond the grave. It's a lot like Courage the Cowardly Dog with its scared protagonist and surprisingly heartfelt relationships with the characters and the monsters.
Another great movie. Another great reaction. Glad you guys enjoy it.
In regards to security at rhe power station, you'd be disturbed to know that most powetr stations have no security at all
The iron giant would fit very well into the Justice League or the Justice Society. He surely also would be honored to meet his idol Superman.
Such a beautiful story; what if a gun discovered it had a soul, and decided not to be a gun anymore. What a profound concept
Ah man this movie is amazing ever since I was little, they don’t make movies like this anymore
Kinda weird how the same animation team that animated this film, also animated Eight Crazy Nights... 🤪
One of vin diesels firsts movies
You guys are gonna love the mom in this movie❤❤❤
7:28 yup! With the little kid from Jurassic Park.
I'm sure you two heard of Vin Diesel, because he voiced The Iron Giant.
The mom is voiced by Jennifer Anniston!
49:56 fun fact, that movie takes place in the Cold War. Saying “Screw our Country” is treason.
i had this on vhs!!!! i loooooooved this movie,also vin diesel voiced the iron giant
Oh yeah Star Kid. The movie with the kid from Jurassic Park.
“YOU JUST BLEW MILLIONS OF UNCLE SAM’S DOLLARS OUT OF YOUR *BUTT!!!”* I love General Rogard, he may be my favorite character in this movie 😂
Bruh I literally was watching right now when you posted this 😂
Absolutely a masterpiece, completely and irrevocably changed my little 5 year old mind for the better
Vin Diesel is the voice of the giant XD love this movie so much! There’s also a new version that was released of this film with two new scenes! They’re amazing! One is a dream the giant has about destroying other planets and the other is Dean and Annie taking
Yes absolutely it is
A sequel was in development but sadly it got cancelled 😔
Mummy why you cry. BABE WHY ARE YOU NOT!
Only one movie (sadly). But if you know the original story, even as much as the adaptation is changed, it isn't a surprise.
14:53 MOMMY!!
0:52 Late 90s
Such a amazing movie
Aye Wall E REALLY good too. This movie is just a solid GREAT classic!
You guys need to watch Rango next it's an amazing film.
This video deserves more likes am I right?
Yes Chance! Star Kid was one of my go-to favorite movies as a kid! It’s a piece of crap, but in the best kind of ways. The gross food ball from the refrigerator scene, dude stalking his crush at the fair, that weird-ass crab alien bad guy: that shit is classic
46:35
Yeah… everyone in that first tank are DEAD. Like no way that shot didn’t kill everyone in that tank.
I love iron giant his my favorite and my hero i think and his in the game multiverse
OMG YES I LOVE U GUYS FOR THIS IM CREAMING
I love this movie!! It was the first movie I ever watched I am 18 yrs old and i still adore it! damn does time fly by?
legit watched this last night