Character Reactions: How To Create Emotion in a Story (Writing Advice)
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- Опубликовано: 14 май 2024
- Learn how to write believable and effective character reactions--with examples from Fallout, Harry Potter, Seinfeld, John Wick, and more!
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Ghostbusters (1984). Bill Murray: "Okay...She's a dog." Great under-reaction to a mind-blowing event that illustrates the character's unflappability.
Pretty much all Bill Murray’s reactions in that movie are gold…
Murray built a career on not emoting.
Indiana Jones reacting to the man showing up with the sword in Raiders.
This was one of the greatest reactions in cinema history because it ignored established tropes and shattered expectations. *Everyone* expected Indy to grab his "signature" weapon, the whip, and have a "whip vs sword" duel. And Indy appears to consider that, for a moment. Then he gets the perfect look of "I don't have time for this s***" on his face, pulls his gun and BANG...fights over.
Not a single word of dialog, but Harrison's facial expressions "tell" us exactly what he's thinking.
Allegedly one of the great moments of improvisation as well. The story goes that Ford was recovering from the flu and still felt poorly. The actor with the sword played along, and we got movie gold.
Kicking myself for not including that in the video
@@blshouseI'm pretty sure that he, and many others, had dysentery. They were also running out of film and money. Ford - after they'd rehearsed the scene - realised the scene didn't work from Indy's perspective, suggested the gun, Lucas agreed and so was born one of the greatest short scenes in film history.
His "I know" as a reaction to Leia's "I love you!" was also one of Ford's, but he did discuss it beforehand, despite the urban legend.
@@WriterBrandonMcNultyyou mean whipping yourself?
One of my favorite reactions is Goldfinger's, when Bond is facing being sliced in half by a laser:
Bond (to Goldfinger): Do you expect me to talk?
Goldfinger (matter-of-factly): No, Mr. Bond, I expect you to die!
That's such a great scene. Showing that you can bring tension and suspense without heavy action. Bond gets away with it not using gadgets, but his wits and by subtly manipulating a villain who is not easy to manipulate.
@@ludovico6890 Also a subversion of the villain monologue. Why reveal your plan to the hero when you can just get over with it?
Roy Scheider after seeing the shark for the first time in Jaws, stunned, and saying his iconic line, "You're gonna need a bigger boat!" Classic
It might be urban legend but I remember reading somewhere that he ad-libbed that line. If so, it's utter brilliance on his part.
He actually covered this one in his latest video!
My favorite character reaction is from Han Solo in The Empire Strikes Back
In that cloud city, upon unexpectedly meeting Darth Vader, Han Solo shoots him immediately - it doesn't work, but that moment just speaks volumes for Han Solo's character. No dialogue, just a brilliant "actions-speak-louder-than-words" moment!
Han always shoots first, just ask Greedo.
Han Solo has one of my favorite reactions. When Leia says "I love you." and he replies "I know." (which was not in the script)
Awesome moment. Doesn't even hesitate. It's so Han.
@ShinGallon amen. Though for some absurd reason George Lucas went back and changed it to Greedo shooting first in the re-releases, the original has Han shooting first, and that's exactly what Han Solo would do.
@@NDB-Semper Oh I know, I grew up with the original versions, and haven't watched the changed versions since they first came out. I see no reason to when fans have given me good high-quality versions to watch.
Every reaction of the Dude but especially after Jesus yells at him and he just goes “yeah, well, that’s just like, your opinion, man”
I hadn't heard of this, and reading it out of context is hilarious.
@@mrtruman4339 It's from The Big Lebowski. Legendary film
I love how Bruce Willis interacts with Chris Tucker in The Fifth Element. The perfect summation of his "I'm too old for this shit" attitude throughout the first half of the movie and it shifts as he begins to really get invested.
Also Chris Tucker's reaction after the climax scene, where he just starts yelling and storms out.
Just about every reaction by Bill Paxton in "Aliens".
The reaction of the kids in "The Goonies" when they turn around and see the pirate ship. It was an honest reaction, as they hadn't seen the set up until that point!
My favourite reaction is Marge Gunderson in Fargo during the Mike Yanagita scene. When he switches sides of the booth to sit next to her. She's assertive enough to tell him she prefers him to sit over there. Then smiles and breaks what is a very awkward situation "just so I can see ya". You see that she is both assertive and calming within 10 seconds.
Yes! And the way she stares straight ahead until he moves, showing that she's unyielding on this.
Ha! Another Fargo! (For me it's Steve Buscemi's "Whoa, Daddy!")
My favorite reaction is from Shikishima in Godzilla Minus One.
I love the way he reacts right after Godzilla uses his atomic breath to destroy the city and “kill off” his lover, Noriko.
The parallel with Godzilla letting out a roar of triumph after destroying an entire city juxtaposed with Shikishima falling on his knees and screaming at Godzilla in anguish is beautiful storytelling.
I totally agree.
His deeply emotional reaction made it totally believable that he would definitely sacrifice his life to kill Godzilla and get revenge for Noriko’s death. When the plane exploded in Godzilla’s mouth, I had not doubt that he was in the plane when it exploded and was shocked when I saw him in his parachute.
Great movie!
Eomers reaction to finding Eowyn on the battlefield.
The cry, throwing away his sword and helmet, but most of all the look for someone to help or explain.
It breaks my heart every time.
Meeting scenes in The Office(US) are really fun because all these characters are packed in a small room reacting in different ways
I'm surprised that no one has mentioned the crew from Alien reacting to Kane's death in the chestburster scene. An iconic, authentic response to a horrific moment, and a great example of enforced method acting, as the cast was unaware of how gross and visceral the special effects would be. The audience feels the horror with the crew due to the relatability of their reactions.
Great call. Really wish I had included the chestburster scene in this video
I'm really happy you didn't. It's a nice scene and illustrates the point but it's very gross and some people like me can't even look at it. (If you want to know how I know it's good when I can't look at it, well, I saw it once and then had nightmares). Please think about the sensitive viewers and avoid scenes that are too gross.
My favorite reaction is from Doctor WHO, the episode Vincent and the Doctor. Spoiler alert, at the end of their adventure with Vincent Van Gogh the Doctor takes Vincent to the present to a gallery showing all of his paintings, and while he stands speachless, the Doctor asks the curator to describe what he thinks of Vincent Van Gogh. What follows is a man reduced to tears as he hears and sees that his life and work wasn't as meaningless or worthless as he had thought. It is beautifully written, acted, directed, that scene is a masterpiece and jerks my tears every time.
Yes! And the fact that it ended up changing nothing in the long run. He still lost his battle to his internal demons. So bittersweet.
One of my favorite episodes!!!
Val’s reaction in Tremors when the grabboid kills itself in the irrigation ditch. Nothing profound at all, just a perfectly timed and portrayed character moment.
“Out cold, my ass. We killed it. We killed it! Fuuuuuuuuuuu*k YOU!”
The emotional response of Arthur just before the climax of Joker is pure gold
There's one thing I'd like to add, tho it's more technical. Basically, what I think it's really important is how alive and vivid the description of emotions is. Show don't tell works well, but sometimes you want the reader to be able to sense the emotions (couldn't find better word). It's also worth pointing out that we usually feel many emotions at the same time. Fear, anxiety, and weird excitement can all be there. We're full of conflicted emotions.
While editing my book I did one round especially about reactions and making the emotions feel more alive. Basically it was descirbing emotions more and with more poetic way (metaphoras etc). It was realism tho so the emotions were even bigger part of the story, but even action-packed genres emotions can really separate good and great writer from apart.
And while I'm saying "describe better", it's just how I do it. We all have different styles and not everyone wants to use metaphoras and allegories while describing emotions. And what I'm not saying is drag the scene as long as you can with a lot of description. Sometimes "Her heart beated like she was running a marathon." works without any additional information. Especially in the middle of dialogue. If it's just a character alone in their room having a panic attack, then I'd describe it more.
Great point with conflicting emotions. That's the best recipe for tension in a story. Also, emotions can be obvious or understated, which is where it gets interesting.
Wrath of Khan. "Our shields are dropping." "Raise them!" "I can't!"
00:30 Tommy Wisseau popping up with that "if they're NOT, the story becomes laughable..." made me spit out my coffee. 🤣 Thank you, Brandon.
Hahaha what a story, Nathan!
You're tearing me apart with your analysis!
My favourite character reaction is probably Doctor Loomis' at the very end of Halloween. Michael Myers disappears after being killed, and he barely flinches, as he'd expected it all along.
I second that. I remember a documentary about Halloween where Donald Pleasance mentioned how he made two scenes: one where he was surprised, and one where he wasn't. John Carpenter and Debra Hill thought the latter was haunting.
At the end of The Proposal where Sandra Bullock’s character, known for being a dominating boss but she fell in love with Ryan Reynolds’ character during a trip. He comes back to her office and she tries to ignore him and he yells saying “Margaret, STOP TALKING.” She was so surprised, and then looked at all her workers, who just began to act like they didn’t hear anything and went back to working 😂. It was a moment of her being vulnerable in front of her workers for the first time
Oogway reacting to the news that Tai Lung broke out of prison. "That IS bad news" was a line that subverted what we expected him to say.
My favorite character reaction is from Berserk during the eclipse, such a painfully strong scene
In "While You Were Sleeping," Lucy (Sandra Bullock) thinks her romance with Jack Callaghan is over. But Jack (Bill Pullman) enters the train station where Lucy works and places an engagement ring in the token tray of her booth. Lucy's expression of surprise is priceless! Similar to Paula's (Debra Winger) reaction when Zack (Richard Gere) whisks her away from her boring factory job at the end of "An Officer and a Gentleman."
The entirety of The Princess Bride has such unique original reactions, but they are so well grounded in the characters that they are absolutely authentic.
You know what’s a REALLY good scene to show the diversity in character reactions. King’s addressment letter to thr continental congress in the HBO mini-series John Adams. They all had very different facial reactions suited to the news.
One of my favorite reactions is in the Lord of the Rings, is after Gandalf's death with the Balrog. Especially Aragorn's you can see his pain, you can feel it but he has to soldier on. He has to lead the fellowship to safety, he wants to break down, but he can't. Truly a potently written scene.
My favorite is Dorothy's reaction to Jerry Maguire's entrance in the penultimate scene of the movie. Her stunned silence for his epic "You complete me" speech feels perfect for her character as she's trying to process what is happening before reacting, and then telling him to "shut up" makes you briefly think she's going to reject him again. It's beautiful writing and acting.
One of my other favorites is Mr. Stevens's discrete attempt to hide the burnt toast in the final scene of The Remains of the Day. It's almost as heartbreaking as the previous scene because it shows it's back to business as usual for him when he could have changed his life forever moments ago.
One of my absolute favorite movies is The Fifth Element, due in large part to Gary Oldman's performance as Zorg. And one of my favorite moments is when Father Cornelius says "You're a monster, Zorg." and his reaction is just a little nod and "I know."
It's such a matter-of-fact acknowledgement of Cornelius' assessment of his character, but it's almost slightly regretful. As if he knows he's a monster and doesn't exactly *want* to be one, but he feels helpless to fight against his nature. It's such a little moment but it has always stuck out to me.
Love that movie! Great choice!
A case with four stones in it! Not one or two or three but four! Four stones! What the hell am I supposed to do with an EMPTY case!?
@@YophiSmith Yeah, his every other reaction being very intense made the one I mentioned that much more interesting to me. God I love that movie.
Or when his servant explains how he’s not on the plane, he responds with a calm “Are you making fun of me?” 😂
Could you make one on how to write a believable investigation?
Ooo, that's a good one. Adding this to my list.
Forrest Gump has some of the best and hilarious reactions. "Mama always said..." 😂
Plenty of surprises for sure
I liked when Dave Chappelle looked into the coffee shop and told Tom Hanks that his awaiting blind date was very pretty (Meg Ryan in You’ve Got Mail) and Tom grabs some nearby architectural element for support and enthusiastically says “She had to be! She had to be!”
Best part of the movie. Just watched YGM a few months ago and loved the whole coffee shop sequence. Definitely watch Shop Around the Corner if you haven't already (it was the inspiration for YGM)
My fav reaction is Nice Guy Eddie in Reservoir Dogs, when Mr. Orange is trying to justify shooting Mr. Blond and Eddie goes "this cop?" and just shoots the cop dead. It's a shock and it establishes that Mr. Orange is in deep shit.
At the end of Saw, during famous "Hello Zepp" scene, when Adam discovers truth about John Kramer was the "dead" guy the whole time.
Dirty Rotten Scoundrels has a lot of great reactions, culminating when Freddie and Lawrence find out that they've been the dupes all along. While Freddie is raging about it, you see Lawrence's admiration building as he realizes how perfect the con was. The contrast between their reactions makes the scene so much stronger than what it would have been to see each character's reaction separately.
And then, just before the ending, when Freddie promises to replace the butler's VCR that he broke, and the butler just says, "Oh, shut up."
In The Boys, when Hughie tells A-Train he never apologized for his girlfriend's death, then A-Train sincerely accepts and apologizes to Hughie, but Hughie still punches A-Train.
That scene was perfect. There's more to that than we give it credit for. From what I understood, Hughie knew A-Train was being honest, but subconsciously, he wasn't satisfied, he wanted conflict, he wanted to discuss and say much more, it came out as an impulsive/instinctive reaction. This from a parody show.
My favorite comedic character reaction is from Sam Rockwell’s character in Galaxy Quest. When they land on an unknown planet and someone opens the hatch to the ship, he freaks out and says, “Is there air?!? You don’t know!!!”
Great line and he delivers it perfectly.
Lucy seeing a guy getting a new foot attached while a gun battle rages in outside:
"I wasn't ready for today..."
My favorite scene isn't any one in particular, but when enough stuff has happened to someone, they break mentally for a little bit and just start laughing at how ludicrous their life has gotten.
Reactions I makes me think of 2 scenes:
1. Jurassic Park. A lot of food ones but especially when the main characters first see the Brontosaurus.
2. The Incredibles when Bob gets mad at his car so he picks it up in a rage and the faces of the kid on the tricycle plus Bob's face when he sees the kid.
I love reactions that show how a character finally broke/changed. In the last episode of Fallout, when the big reveal happens, Lucy reacts perfectly to what she learns. It wasn't her happy-go-lucky response, but that the wastelands finally got to her.
Thank you for this! Just getting to a part in my writing where emotional information is revealed, so I'm stumbling on reactions. Thank you again!
Thrilled to hear it helped! Best of luck with your story
The chemistry between the main cast of Red Dwarf makes for some hilarious reaction scenes
My favourite reaction is from Breaking Bad: Walt's reaction to Hank's death.
I have no idea why (or even if it's my favorite) but the first reaction that pops into my head when you ask what my favorite is is Griffin Dunne in After Hours: "Ohhh woww!"
I don't know why, just his delivery, I guess. It's so perfect for the moment. And so distinctive. It says so so so much about who he is, his current mental state, the accumulation of craziness over the night...
It's both comic and tragic at the same time. I can't even remember exactly what he's reacting to but it's just so perfect.
The second one that pops into my head is Steve Buscemi's "Whoa Daddy!" in Fargo.
What's your favorite character reaction? Let us know!
Love to see your channel growing, outstanding content. That's a subscription I'll always keep, lot of laughs and a ton more of useful advice.
Thanks for the kind words! Thrilled to hear the videos are helping
My favorite set of reactions that comes to mind is the aurora borealis and steamed hams dialogue between Principal Skinner and Superintendent Chalmers on The Simpsons.
Darth Vader in RotJ: unspeaking, facial expressions impossible, manages with lighting and positioning to express shock, resolve, and anger in only a few moments.
We'd feared Vader, been impressed by him, but in the end we could understand him.
Great point on the lighting/lightning
Iwan Rheon (Ramsay's actor) is an amazing actor and I refuse to believe that that reaction was anything to do with him and the fault of direction/writing.
Maybe I'm biased towards my country of Wales but it seems real out of pocket for him to have been ok with that moment 😂
Some of the best were improv. Heath ledger in Dark Knight when the bomb doesn't go off; indiana jones in raiders shooting the swordsman; lots of stuff from seinfeld; robin williams in character; eddie murphy in bev hills cop when he is trying to get into the restaurant; etc
I'm glad you made a video on this subject. Character emotions and reactions are my favorite. Something I'd like to add is that writers shouldn't get too eager to show reactions that reveal hidden characteristics. Basic example: If the character was raised as an assassin and that's all they know but there is a part of them that values human life, there should be a lot of moments proving the assassin quality, especially in the beginning. And the moment when their reactions changes to show the growth of their inner characteristics should have a trigger (something to make it different from the rest) and be a big deal. Some writers get so into the character arc, or they are uncomfortable making characters act a certian way, that they start writing reactions that are out of character early in the story or disproportionately common compared to the reactions we'd expect based on the backstory. Hope that makes sense. lol
Will you make a video on writing better prose? I find it very hard to write descriptively and my chapters usually end up looking more like movie script then something from a book
It's been a while since I did something prose-focused, but I'll add this to my list. Highly recommend trying this technique to boost your prose style: ruclips.net/video/r8qpidis3Ko/видео.html
In the Chinese drama, Ruyi's Royal. Love in the Palace, the Emperor visits her at the end to try to make amends between them. She is kind to him and he first believes she is willing to reconcile. She then reminds him of a poem she had read in her youth that compares the love between a man and woman to a bloom that blossoms beautifully in the beginning but dies in the end. With no confrontation whatsoever, she has let him know that her love for him is over. It is so in character to her.
When George squeezes the mustard!
Hahaha I was trying to find that clip!
Love your videos. Thanks for making them. Really helpful and informative.
Glad you like them! Thanks!
The type of reactions i like is intimidation/fear scenes. It intrigues me when a character is at the presence of another character like a villain, badass character or some kind of creature that causes other character(s) to be at the mercy instilling fear and dread to insinuate this character/creature is not one to be messed with even when the villain has a theme to go with it to announce their presence. I especially like it when the villain would intentionally harm or threaten someone while making a stone cold face or devious smile.
Under rated. Green goblin going, “oh”. And being smashed by his glider. Could have gone overly theatric.
In the trailer for Italian Spiderman, the reaction to the murdered woman in the school; happens at around the 35 second mark. Nothing will ever beat that
RUclips and their algorithm... I haven't been notified of any of your videos in the last two months, and I have the bell activated. I'm just going to add your channel to my bookmarks and take a look every week.
That’s weird. Thanks for subscribing though. Glad you enjoy my stuff
I seen it a few times where something bad happens and people's reactions are quite wrong.....either it doesn't sound real, or the sound they make doesn't match. You can tell if someone is really crying on screen, or doing it on put on....like an overpowered thing.
Thank you. As a follow up video…possibly how to write different character reactions, please.
I could use this too. I struggle to capture in words how subtle facial expressions work.
Ons of my favourites is in Unforgiven, when William Munny (Eastwood) is told that Little Bill (Hackman) tortured and killed Ned (Freeman) after Ned left them, and was heading home
He takes the bottle of whiskey, and starts drinking slowly. Something he gave up when he met his deceased wife, and strived to be a better man
You can see the anger bubbling beneath the surface, you can tell he's becoming his old self again - the merciless killer, who he tried so hard to leave behind him.
And there's no doubt that he's going to make Little Bill and his cohorts pay in blood
You make me want to watch it again :)
@@Redskirt thanks :)
Undercover Brother, when Conspiracy Brother goes off on Undercover Brother again, and he very calmly ask, "Concspiracy Brother, can I get a list of the words that trigger these fits?"
I liked Mel Gibson's reaction in Braveheart when he realizes Robert the Bruce has betrayed and undermined everything William has been doing.
When you said we should give a variety of reactions to our characters, you made me remember the Matrix 2 and 3: almost everyone was speaking like the Oracle. Everyone was wise, mystical and spoke like they know a truth they think they don't shouldn't share yet.
Don't get me wrong. I loved the Oracle in the first The Matrix, but finding everyone speaking like her in the next two movies was boring
When Agent Kujan looks over the bulletin board in Sgt. Rabin's office and he drops the coffee cup as his expression goes from amused self-satisfaction to shocked disbelief when he realizes who Keyser Soze really is.
Alan Wake 2. Alan Wake’s reaction to the end of the musical scene. “Didn’t see that coming.”
My wife and I loved it.
Can u teach us or any ideas on how to get the audience to be captive by storytelling in the first 30 seconds, so to get them to listen from start to finish? I'm still learning. Thanks.
This video might help: ruclips.net/video/50w4QGdChII/видео.html
Poor old Iwan will forever be known as 'Ramsey' for the rest of his career...!
He'll always be Simon to me... or Barry. Same thing. (Misfits from e4 was glorious)
In sev7en in the final scene, watching detective mills go through all the stages of grief in a couple of minutes is devastating.
You mastered making writing advice videos
Randall “Tex” Cobb. Raising Arizona. When he’s picking through the debris of the trailer, looks up, and sees “fart” written on the wall.
Or Philip J. Fry’s classic “I’m shocked. Shocked! Well, not that shocked.”
Great video! Important tips to remember both in plotting and editing. Got it saved to review later.
My favorite character reaction is Amy Adams in Arrival. I love watching the emotional side of her character as a mother and the logical side of her character as a scientist war with each other as the story progresses and she slowly pieces together what’s actually happening and the final payoff is just so satisfying and emotionally devastating and I love the moral questions and quandaries that it poses And it fit her character so well. everything built up to that moment with the final reveal and her reaction to that revelation in real time is so good
That is one of the most overrated stupid films ever
My favorite reaction is from need for speed most wanted, during the end of the game we escape with our car after officer mia let us escape, officer cross tells his other police that he want everyone to chase after us, the other cop says "everyone?" And he make an absolute classic line saying "EEVRYONEE!!!!" screaming it with the top of his lungs, it was both funny and engaging
“Leon” 1994. Same reaction.
Great reaction? You know in Liar Liar when Jim Carrey spits out the water and yells, "COME ON!"
This is great. Thank you so much for the rules, tips, and guildelines.
Would you make a followup, and give tips on how brainstorm up good reactions, please?
What a perfectly timed video. Thanks, Brandon!
Haven’t even watched it yet…already clicked like based on the title alone.
This video appears in the recommendations beside it's own comment thread. Is that some sort of grandfather paradox?
It's just THAT recommendable, apparently
Norman Stansfield in movie Leon, when they ask him how many police they should bring. Or when he sees that his suit is damaged.
The Incredibles when Dash suddenly realizes he can run on water and just starts laughing
"Wait a minute. Wait a minute, Doc. Ah... Are you telling me that you built a time machine... out of a DeLorean?" - Marty McFly (Back to the Future)
That whole scene features wonderful reactions from both Marty and Doc. The fact that they're reacting so differently tells the viewer so much about the characters and the situation.
My favorite movie reaction was from John Wick 1 when Viggo found out why his son was struck. That single word “Oh” before hanging up spoke volumes about how much of a bad mofo John was before we even see him picking up a gun.
Two old school theatrical ones both from my favorite actress, I think Fay Wray's reaction to Kong in his introduction scene sells the whole movie she convinced the audience that she believed Kong was real so the audience in another 30's horror movie with Lionel Atwill (mystery of the wax museum) her character has to react to the reveal of the real fiend and the reaction was completely out of character for her timid naive character she pointed that out to the director but he refused to change the scene. It becomes a weak moment in an otherwise strong film
Do you create your own videos, edit etc? They're getting better and better. Very helpful insight as always. Thanks Brandon!
I was waiting for this
In the TV series Hannibal, when Will Graham realizes that Hannibal risked getting caught by authorities on the off chance that Will would want to flee the country with him. He just stares at Hannibal and accepts his fate. Absolutely heartbreaking.
Tom cruise’s reaction to the maneuvre of the enemy jet in Top gun maverick
Great video
Thanks!
The Truman Show, last scene. When Christof says "Say something goddamn it, you're on television, you're live to the whole world!"
And Truman replies: "In case I don't see ya, good afternoon, good evening, and good night." And walks away.
"Yep." 😂
Never have seen the movie, but Ryan O' Neal's hammy ridiculous reaction from Tough Guys Don't Dance is it's own meme.
In Robin Hood, starring Kevin Costner, when Scarlett tells him he is his half brother and he is gonna kill him because his father abandoned him. He is just so happy to learn he has a brother and he holds him in his arms instead of running away.
Rollo tomasi dialogue between Exley and Captain Smith - L.A. Confidential
Great movie. Rewatched it a couple years ago as part of an Organized Crime list
When Harry Potter finds out Cedric diggory is his heavenly father in the Harry Potter senior year.
Trust it's a real thing. Freaking hilarious.
Do you have any videos about how to choose a genre to write?
It is a shame you didn't show animated feature films in your videos. It is always live action ones
I don't watch a whole lot of animated stuff. That said, I did love The Bad Guys and Puss in Boots 2 when I watched them last year. PIB2 had some really cool world building gimmicks with the map. Might try to work that into a future video.
I like T1 for this. Kyle explains to Sarah why shes so important in the stolen car. It also carries on with kyle being questioned by the police "I don't know, I didn't build the f***king thing!" T1 n T2 hit differently than the others because of this.