Why Is WATERSHIP DOWN So Messed Up?!

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024
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    MUSIC
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    Watership Down OST by Angela Morley & Malcolm Williamson

Комментарии • 3,8 тыс.

  • @phaedrus4931
    @phaedrus4931 5 лет назад +1856

    "This book is for anyone who wants to read it." Richard Adams
    "Any book is a children's book if the child can read." --Mitch Hedberg
    These two would have been fast friends.

    • @RamusHelstein
      @RamusHelstein 4 года назад +20

      He selectively ignored the fact he made parts of the book discuss the kidnapping of females to use as breeding stock.

    • @NoxAtlas
      @NoxAtlas 4 года назад +70

      @@RamusHelstein you miss the point that it's a story about animals and not humans.

    • @DanJuega
      @DanJuega 4 года назад +17

      @@RamusHelstein Yeah, I came four months later to also let you know that they're animals

    • @prodwysp
      @prodwysp 4 года назад +3

      its kinda funny, now people are gonna think mitch is some philosopher or something when hes just a crackhead comdeian

    • @otaking3582
      @otaking3582 3 года назад +3

      Now I'm just imagining a preschool where they read they read stuff like Mein Kampf and Kama Sutra

  • @pongo5000
    @pongo5000 3 года назад +498

    "Think of it as the Revenant but with rabbits"
    *whispers to self* "The Rabbenant.."

  • @KharonDeLune_vtb
    @KharonDeLune_vtb 5 лет назад +1015

    The fact that even in 2019 people try to claim animation is only for children... baffles me.

    • @coenvdb6032
      @coenvdb6032 4 года назад +2

      Found the weeb.

    • @KharonDeLune_vtb
      @KharonDeLune_vtb 4 года назад +83

      @@coenvdb6032 yes, because South Park, Archer, and Rick and Morty are all from Japan. You solved the riddle, m8

    • @coenvdb6032
      @coenvdb6032 4 года назад +4

      @@KharonDeLune_vtb Those are for adolescents, AKA children AKA young adults. Thats their target audience. Adults can find them enteraining, but that goes for alot of things like lego or pokemon.

    • @KharonDeLune_vtb
      @KharonDeLune_vtb 4 года назад +45

      @@coenvdb6032 Dunno if I agree there, but to each their own I suppose. However.
      Sausage Party.

    • @coenvdb6032
      @coenvdb6032 4 года назад

      @@KharonDeLune_vtb fine, but ehh... those are facts. The target audience of those shows are 14-25. Kids, adolescents and young adults.

  • @Wayoutthere
    @Wayoutthere 6 лет назад +1179

    Another traumatized kid here.. Saw when I was 8 years old, thinking it was a cute movie about wabbits... Fuck me freddy.. I could not sleep for a week because of the 'gassing scene', the 'bloody field' one and...ffs the strangled one. Still, it's the most deep animation movie I've ever seen. The music, the art and spiritual references about life and death. Amazing.

    • @dymphnaguzman6312
      @dymphnaguzman6312 6 лет назад +10

      I am 43@iv had a verry dark,twisted childhood.The kids of my time where so much stronger then most today.Wake up little ones!To much native can kill you.

    • @JackOfen
      @JackOfen 6 лет назад +27

      Wouter d. B.
      Here is the thing. Rabbits are savage. Male Rabbits have a habbit of killing their offspring and raping each other to show dominance. Nature can be brutal and I feel like today people are only seeing nature as this pure and innocent thing, which it isn't

    • @JinxMarie1985
      @JinxMarie1985 6 лет назад +7

      Fuck me Freddy > Stephen King's Dreamcatcher?

    • @TheAkwarium
      @TheAkwarium 5 лет назад +14

      am I the only one who didn't get traumatized by this as a kid and actually liked the gore? lol Like I always took the movie for what it was and what nature really is and we've had rabbits for meat ourselves (I've watched my grandpa kill and skin rabbits countless times) and I knew how they act between each other and it wasn't shocking or scary for me at all

    • @JackOfen
      @JackOfen 5 лет назад +12

      @@TheAkwarium
      You're not the only one. I am also not a pampered city baby and I know what nature is like.

  • @caesarplaysgames
    @caesarplaysgames 6 лет назад +2237

    My grandpa showed me this movie knowing full well how fucked up it was. I was seven. Thanks grandpa.

    • @baldrickthedungspreader3107
      @baldrickthedungspreader3107 6 лет назад +117

      Your grandad loves you very much

    • @leathery420
      @leathery420 6 лет назад +147

      Trying to prepare you for the harsh realities of life.

    • @caesarplaysgames
      @caesarplaysgames 6 лет назад +18

      leathery420 True man

    • @ALPHA-gp5xs
      @ALPHA-gp5xs 6 лет назад +33

      I think I was FIVE when my mum made me watch this

    • @Chameleon1616
      @Chameleon1616 6 лет назад +27

      My granddad showed me it at around that age, except he just noticed it on sky and said it was good, i never found out whether he knew how messed up it was.
      I certainly did by the end.

  • @robjef622
    @robjef622 5 лет назад +622

    Watership Down was dark as hell, but it's a merry ray of sunshine compared to The Plague Dogs.

    • @Clara-ph7my
      @Clara-ph7my 4 года назад +43

      Poor Ralph and Snitter you are rooting for them all the way. But you kind of understand when older, the panic of a plague and to destroy, would be the only solution.

    • @rayrayfad3654
      @rayrayfad3654 4 года назад +41

      They got to the island. They did.

    • @robjef622
      @robjef622 4 года назад +6

      @@rayrayfad3654 Really? It was left rather ambiguous as to whether they made it or not.

    • @rayrayfad3654
      @rayrayfad3654 4 года назад +47

      The Unholy Messiah If I didn’t believe they made it, I’d be miserable the rest of my life.

    • @alexiscondit898
      @alexiscondit898 4 года назад +7

      True. That movie haunts me...

  • @callusklaus2413
    @callusklaus2413 6 лет назад +4059

    Jesus, did every child in Britain get traumatized by this film?

    • @annacatton5929
      @annacatton5929 6 лет назад +295

      most of us, yeah

    • @robyns8341
      @robyns8341 6 лет назад +130

      Dunno about Britain, but as a Kiwi that was made to watch it in school at about 7 years, yeah.

    • @HunterKillerSub
      @HunterKillerSub 6 лет назад +95

      Here in the Philippines as well. After watching the movie I never saw rabbits the same way again.

    • @viktorbraginski
      @viktorbraginski 6 лет назад +67

      American kids who's parents watched it in the 80s too

    • @azoxystrobin
      @azoxystrobin 6 лет назад +9

      It looks like it :)

  • @outofthegrave4073
    @outofthegrave4073 6 лет назад +1060

    I saw this in 79 when I was 18,and stoned. Blew my mind.

    • @chokabitch9342
      @chokabitch9342 6 лет назад +32

      Out of the Grave how did you live

    • @russellloomis4376
      @russellloomis4376 5 лет назад +2

      😅

    • @vasquez0656
      @vasquez0656 5 лет назад +3

      Well good for you for not getting scar for life

    • @MultiSuperGuide
      @MultiSuperGuide 5 лет назад +19

      @TheHorsePrincess QueenOfHorses You might bee exaggerating a bit there, he's not even 60

    • @leannakekai162
      @leannakekai162 5 лет назад

      Hmm... Sounds like something to try.☺

  • @SuperGreatSphinx
    @SuperGreatSphinx 5 лет назад +270

    All the world will be your enemy, Prince with a Thousand Enemies,
    and whenever they catch you, they will kill you.
    But first they must catch you, digger, listener, runner, prince with the swift warning.
    Be cunning and full of tricks and your people shall never be destroyed.

  • @dantedare2797
    @dantedare2797 6 лет назад +197

    The end of Watership Down is kind of interesting in terms of religious symbolism in that it ends with confirmation. Plague Dogs is bleak because there's no true confirmation that the island is real, or at least not concrete, but Hazel meeting the black rabbit and being shown to head into the afterlife is very confirming of the rabbits religious beliefs. The idea that there is an afterlife, that pressing onward will reward them, that there is hope, are all given legitimacy.

    • @thezerowulf507
      @thezerowulf507 5 лет назад +3

      @ClandestineOstrich that's the point though, as a outside viewer we cant be certain.

    • @phreakazoith2237
      @phreakazoith2237 5 лет назад +2

      The rabbit's story of creation serves as the movie's frame. So there is in fact little doubt of their god and the afterlife being true is it not? They live and fight and sacrifice due to their faith in this. No matter how many fall , no matter how bad the odds are they will never perish if they are one step ahead. Everything grim in the movie is brightened by this trust.

  • @zappawoman5183
    @zappawoman5183 6 лет назад +826

    Watership Down made me cry at the end, because of Hazel dying, but he wasn't worried about dying himself, only about the rabbits he was leaving behind, because he had been the leader. That got to me badly.
    Don't read The Plague Dogs by the same author, if Watership Down upsets you.

    • @yungjc2
      @yungjc2 6 лет назад +5

      Zappa Woman too late. Lol

    • @getlostinyoutubewithmyplay212
      @getlostinyoutubewithmyplay212 6 лет назад +4

      Zappa Woman thanks for spoiling it ffs

    • @merrittanimation7721
      @merrittanimation7721 6 лет назад +19

      At least Watership Down had a happy ending, at least compared to the film version of Plague Dogs

    • @ObliviouzRomantic
      @ObliviouzRomantic 6 лет назад +15

      I can do Watership Down, but I can't do Plague Dogs. I need a bitter sweet ending, not bitterly sad.

    • @thehengy3232
      @thehengy3232 6 лет назад +2

      thanks for the spoil, bitch. I was about to smoke a bowl and watch that

  • @sole8177
    @sole8177 3 года назад +79

    "Don't worry, it's cute. It talks about bunnies:)"
    -my dad when I was like four

    • @Hannisonly
      @Hannisonly 3 года назад +4

      My parents never showed me anything like this because they are from a foreign country but I stumbled upon this and I just messed up my life and love for rabbits

  • @KaylaJohnson1995
    @KaylaJohnson1995 6 лет назад +1068

    I loved Chicken Run holy shit that got dark

    • @FarikoWishless
      @FarikoWishless 6 лет назад +14

      Kayla Johnson Lmao right?!

    • @emilydurkee8664
      @emilydurkee8664 6 лет назад +69

      I had no idea chicken run was based on a concentration camp 😭

    • @anthonyortiz264
      @anthonyortiz264 6 лет назад +30

      What gave it away the barbed wire fences or Europe with flak lights

    • @merrittanimation7721
      @merrittanimation7721 6 лет назад +45

      I mean this is the story where once the chickens stop laying eggs they are eaten as a reflection of how replaceable they are

    • @Eonchu
      @Eonchu 6 лет назад +14

      Ironically, as a kid, I loved the Watership Down movie but got too disturbed by Chicken Run and to this day I can't watch it again. Lol I am prolly the only one

  • @paysonterhune290
    @paysonterhune290 6 лет назад +821

    At least she didn't show you Plague Dogs, Grave of the Fireflies or Felidae...

    • @matthewdugan4829
      @matthewdugan4829 6 лет назад +140

      Grave of fireflies is definitely not for children, that movie hits you hard

    • @arminhillman7956
      @arminhillman7956 6 лет назад +70

      God, Grave of the Fireflies was sad, gives me chills thinking about it

    • @heiposs1227
      @heiposs1227 6 лет назад +44

      Plague dogs!! Thats the other movie I knew I watched I forgot the name of

    • @JackOfen
      @JackOfen 6 лет назад +85

      Felidae is definetly not for kids, since it's a murder mystery with references to ideals of the Third Reich that a kid wouldn't understand.
      But Grave of Fireflies is fine. Just because a movie is sad, doesn't mean kids shouldn't watch it. It's bad to shelter kids too much

    • @songsakchandrasakha7987
      @songsakchandrasakha7987 5 лет назад

      payson terhune those stuff are horrible...

  • @brycevo
    @brycevo 5 лет назад +374

    Watership Down is an Amazing movie. Both dark and disgusting, yet very well made

    • @wendychavez5348
      @wendychavez5348 4 года назад +12

      I am a rabbit lover who saw this movie as a child. I read the book in pieces over several years because the movie impressed me so deeply. Yes, it's traumatic and dark, but it's so well made that I always remembered. The book is too complex to take in one sitting... or month ... though it's still well written.

    • @CsicsiPlushHaas
      @CsicsiPlushHaas 2 года назад +3

      @@wendychavez5348 I love your bunnies!❤️🐰

    • @josefengelhardt2767
      @josefengelhardt2767 Год назад +2

      ​@@wendychavez5348This movie scarred me so much as a 14 year old that i refuse to ever watch it again. I don't like movies that are just messed up just for the sake of being messed up. I'm talking about movies like Watership Down, Martyrs and The Human Centipede.

  • @gabepollack8382
    @gabepollack8382 6 лет назад +169

    I'm actually kinda glad my parents thought this was typical Disney fair, too. For all the nightmares that the beginning scene (Fiver's premonition) gives me to this day, this movie was actually fricking brilliant (something I discovered rewatching it a couple years ago). And, yeah, more lucky sheltered kids should be aware that death and violence are, like, a major part of life before they grow up. --Another great analysis; thanks for the reminder, Ryan. I'm going to watch Plague Dogs now.

    • @Neogeddon
      @Neogeddon 6 лет назад +8

      Good luck, man. Plague Dogs is super good and it left a huge mark on me but I can't bring myself to watch it again... It's one of those.

    • @panq8904
      @panq8904 6 лет назад +16

      Be prepared for some depression and misery, I saw both watership and plague dogs as a kid and whilst both of them upset me at the time and I've definitely grown to appreciate them more as I've got older, I still find plague dogs the harder to watch of the two, it just leaves you feeling so hopeless...
      Still a great movie tho.

    • @SEReid-rz5bm
      @SEReid-rz5bm 6 лет назад +3

      The Plague Dogs is rough. Really, really rough.

    • @imgay9
      @imgay9 6 лет назад

      M'aiq the Liar Plague Dogs is a wonderful movie.

    • @luciferangelica
      @luciferangelica 6 лет назад

      M'aiq the Liar maybe children shouldn't watch, read this because they'll see they are those rabbits with the golden rings around their necks. read you ignorant beasts!

  • @dragonskunkstudio7582
    @dragonskunkstudio7582 6 лет назад +1750

    This movie always stirs strong emotions in me every time I watch it and even just watching this I feel like I'm going to cry. It's potent mixture of sadness and cuteness. No other movie give me such emotional feelings as this one.

    • @CartoonsEveryone
      @CartoonsEveryone 6 лет назад +15

      Domenic Hood If you're trying to advertise porn, then I'm gonna tell you: We don't want any of it.

    • @darkray777
      @darkray777 6 лет назад

      Dragon Skunk ii

    • @tayslore
      @tayslore 6 лет назад +2

      Dragon Skunk me too

    • @noellemarchand7444
      @noellemarchand7444 6 лет назад +11

      The contrast between childhood warmth at the cuteness with the emotional slam of what happens heightens both the feeling of innocence as well as the gravity of the message.

    • @switchamafuck78
      @switchamafuck78 6 лет назад

      Dragon 🐉jj

  • @jexxer
    @jexxer 5 лет назад +814

    I'm a grown-ass woman in my thirties and I _still_ refuse to watch Watership Down.

    • @summerscoming123
      @summerscoming123 5 лет назад +30

      Jexxer do it! You’re ready ! The time has come

    • @MADROCKS221
      @MADROCKS221 4 года назад +21

      Yes me too, I’m 46 saw it when I was 7 and I won’t watch it again.

    • @raelaash4759
      @raelaash4759 4 года назад +13

      Your loss~

    • @zachb8012
      @zachb8012 4 года назад +57

      Watership down is an amazing, powerful, and influential story. Idk if you're trying to be quirky but you're doing yourself a disservice by refusing to watch it. It does have a couple of intense scenes, but they underscore the seriousness of the story's themes. Its jarring reputation comes from being one of the first animated films to tackle a mature theme. To me the story contrasts the benevolence of the natural order between that of man. Nature kills for the greater good of all under her dominion, whereas man kills for the good of an individual. However, all living things are part of and therefore subjected to nature. Eventally we will all succumb to the power she holds over us. As her subejcts we should try to understand and respect the order of the natural world as that of the greater good, even when it seems at odds with the interests of the individual. The hawk kills to feed its own but it also kills so that the rabbits don't overpopulate and inflict greater suffering upon each other.
      Writing this comment amid the Covid-19 crisis, btw. >

    • @britneyspheres7yearsago11
      @britneyspheres7yearsago11 4 года назад +11

      Zach B you fucking owned her

  • @slimkt
    @slimkt 6 лет назад +269

    For the longest time, I thought I just imagined this film because, while I remembered scenes vividly, I couldn’t remember the name. It wasn’t until many years and many detailed descriptions typed into Google later, that I finally found the movie was not just some figment of my imagination. It’s one of those childhood films, that once in a blue moon (almost like a really bad acid trip,) I distinctly remember watching as a kid at my grandparents’ house with my sister -specifically the scene where one of the rabbits claws it’s way past a bunch of dead rabbits stuck in their burrow. I’ve asked my sister every time it pops up in my mind and she doesn’t remember it at all. I’m convinced she’s just repressed the horrifying memories.

    • @KingkyLeor
      @KingkyLeor 6 лет назад +7

      slimkt ikr? There's a kid's movie that i forgot the name that's driving me crazy, it was a film where the main characters are a family and i think it was only the kids but i could be wrong but they drank a potion that transformed them into fishes (i remember the little girl was a starfish) but they were in great danger and the movie was tense and we even see the characters almost dying and after breaking down.... I WANT TO REWATCH IT DAMNIT!

    • @Annakanerva
      @Annakanerva 6 лет назад +10

      That sounds a lot like like Help! I'm a fish from 2000.

    • @KingkyLeor
      @KingkyLeor 5 лет назад +8

      @@Annakanerva HOLY SHIT!!! I LOVE YOU AND THE POWER OF INTERNET

    • @Annakanerva
      @Annakanerva 5 лет назад +6

      @@KingkyLeor glad to help 😄

    • @PhilSmith-ni3gq
      @PhilSmith-ni3gq 5 лет назад +2

      SAME!!!

  • @scarlettcreek172
    @scarlettcreek172 6 лет назад +295

    Honastly I still think about this film today. I can’t name another film that upset me so much as a child

    • @JGArtemis
      @JGArtemis 5 лет назад +5

      Funny I adored it so much. It was one of my favorite films throughout all of my childhood. I dont remember anything scary besides the part with the weasel and that wasnt that bad. Guess i was an edgelord kid. Lmao!

    • @maddybowers8285
      @maddybowers8285 5 лет назад

      Scarlett Creek caroline

    • @DavidByrne85
      @DavidByrne85 5 лет назад

      Youre not alone Scarlett.

  • @Fractal_Eclipse
    @Fractal_Eclipse 5 лет назад +92

    Even watching this video brought on a feeling of discomfort I haven't felt in years. This film gave me real trauma. I have never recovered fully from the gassing scene.

    • @elspethturk4273
      @elspethturk4273 4 года назад +3

      G T I still cannot believe my parents sat there and let us watch something So disturbing. WTF?

    • @EvripidouM
      @EvripidouM 2 года назад +2

      More disturbing is that it happens irl

    • @Anna-dk6uv
      @Anna-dk6uv 2 года назад +1

      You're an empath who can recognize suffering in others, that's a good thing

    • @b.o.3815
      @b.o.3815 Год назад

      we watched this on the last day on 3rd grade, im 27 now and JUST started being able to handle disturbing media

    • @ND_Scribble
      @ND_Scribble Год назад

      There was a gassing scene?!
      I have to go back and watch it again. It gas been yrs. The remake is ok, not great.

  • @Katy133
    @Katy133 6 лет назад +55

    Thank you SO much for making a video on Watership Down. I'm an animator, and 1978's Watership Down is one of my two favourite films ever; the other film being Yellow Submarine. I first saw the film when I was around eight years old, and I think Watership Down is beautifully animated, voice acted, and has wonderfully-detailed backgrounds.

  • @JurassicRod
    @JurassicRod 6 лет назад +2738

    My parents recorded Watership Down off of the tv for me when I was about 3 and I watched it every Easter. I think that's why I could then never get into Disney films. They seemed far too bland in comparison.

    • @dakotadawn5789
      @dakotadawn5789 6 лет назад +29

      Lol

    • @CartoonsEveryone
      @CartoonsEveryone 6 лет назад +89

      Disney movies are amazing.

    • @JurassicRod
      @JurassicRod 6 лет назад +222

      It's not that I think they are bad, they just never did anything for me. Partly because I hate musicals and Disney films always had so many damn songs in I had to fast forward through. I was just always more into action animation. The one Disney cartoon I loved was Gargoyles but it's a nigh on forgotten show.

    • @CartoonsEveryone
      @CartoonsEveryone 6 лет назад +46

      Rods toy box Well there's a handful of Disney films without songs in them. One I would suggest is The Black Cauldron. It's not the best film, but I think it's worth the watch.

    • @kalahne
      @kalahne 6 лет назад +9

      This was highkey one of my favourite movies when I was four, I feel you bud.

  • @thethoughtcriminal8786
    @thethoughtcriminal8786 5 лет назад +26

    I watched this film with my mother when I was nine. I was crying at a couple parts and my mom wanted to turn the movie off. "No, mom, I need to see what happens to the rabbits." It was a great story and even then I knew it....I knew that it was important that I see it. And it stayed with me too this very day....over thirty years later. Most films for adults do not have this quality of good storytelling.

  • @caesarplaysgames
    @caesarplaysgames 6 лет назад +210

    Dude you are spot on about how this movie scared kids into thinking Woundwort would come for them. I was literally terrified of that happening I had so many nightmares lol.

    • @0zzysaurus
      @0zzysaurus 6 лет назад +8

      I think he was talking about how the narrator explains that communities of rabbits still talk about Woundwort's legacy to scare youngsters into behaving, as opposed to people in real life telling their kids that a rabbit is going to kill them XD

    • @michaelalangordon6120
      @michaelalangordon6120 6 лет назад +15

      SnowBooper ! The Rabbit is going to kill you. Unless you have the Holy Handgrenade of Antioc

    • @caesarplaysgames
      @caesarplaysgames 6 лет назад +1

      SnowBooper ! Yeah I know but as a kid I remember hearing that line and thinking it was true lol

    • @PoeticProse7
      @PoeticProse7 6 лет назад +2

      Indeed. My brother, a clinical psychologist jokes that he joined the Marines to get away from the nightmares this movie gave all of us. I still can't stand the song or sitting through the whole thing even on Xanax!

    • @piplup2009
      @piplup2009 6 лет назад

      "run away!"

  • @tori.w4308
    @tori.w4308 6 лет назад +329

    Once they aired this film on Easter....many angry parents and scarred kids.

    • @iliwyskira8619
      @iliwyskira8619 6 лет назад +34

      Tori .W hahah i remember that oh my god my parents were so confused as they'd seen it and we were like wtf is this on and my younger brother wanted to watch it bc he didn't know what it was.

    • @ChrisD__
      @ChrisD__ 6 лет назад +21

      Someone who saw drawn bunnies on the movie poster, but didn't watch it.

    • @thebatman4279
      @thebatman4279 5 лет назад +2

      Theres at least one news article on this every year. They always seem to show it on Easter and parents always complain. A bit cruel really to the unsuspecting.

    • @ManubibiWalsh
      @ManubibiWalsh 5 лет назад +1

      oh my godddddd

  • @george9041
    @george9041 5 лет назад +782

    Cartoons being child-friendly.
    Watership Down: *hold my beer*

  • @vicenteortegarubilar9418
    @vicenteortegarubilar9418 6 лет назад +1511

    Oh boy can't wait for the remake for this one.
    P-13 with a rap remix in the ending

    • @Alex-sd4up
      @Alex-sd4up 6 лет назад +6

      yes, I watched it and I loved it

    • @smugwendigo5123
      @smugwendigo5123 6 лет назад +13

      Vicente Ortega Rubilar rabbits from Compton

    • @LordPiccolo
      @LordPiccolo 6 лет назад +28

      Directed by Michael Bay ofc

    • @TheWoostergirl
      @TheWoostergirl 6 лет назад +31

      And, of course, made in CGI.

    • @skootergirl22
      @skootergirl22 6 лет назад

      Vicente Ortega Rubilar it should be so toned from the messege it is presenting, oh and the blood.

  • @shammydammy2610
    @shammydammy2610 6 лет назад +435

    Lol...my dad used the same "it's animated, it must be for children!" logic when he took me (then a child) to the theater to see Wizards. Awwwwwwkward.

    • @iu.lia.na.
      @iu.lia.na. 6 лет назад +6

      shammy dammy Mine were never like that, dad used to love watching marvel cartoons with me 😆

    • @shammydammy2610
      @shammydammy2610 6 лет назад +52

      There's a bit of a difference between Marvel Cartoons and Wizards...and my father found the experience to be very awkward. (But that's what he got for not actually looking at its rating.)

    • @offthebooktv3646
      @offthebooktv3646 6 лет назад +3

      shammy dammy when he talked about the alwaus innocent thing first movie i thought of was wizards

    • @SelloutSnake
      @SelloutSnake 6 лет назад +23

      Out of curiosity, what happened in Wizards that was awkward? I never watched it, obviously

    • @bobthebuilder2922
      @bobthebuilder2922 6 лет назад +2

      Harry, you're a wizard

  • @spartakas659
    @spartakas659 5 лет назад +73

    This story still intrigues me. I’ve never looked at a rabbit without thinking is that an officer rabbit on a wide patrol. Amazing.

    • @Pfeffa
      @Pfeffa 2 года назад

      Me too lol. When they freeze, the first thing i think is "tharn"

  • @iv0rysh0es39
    @iv0rysh0es39 6 лет назад +166

    Black Cauldron was a superbly dark animation as well.

    • @sebastianjones29
      @sebastianjones29 5 лет назад +1

      I agree It was bloody brilliant. I watched it recently and its still great

    • @theclawless1225
      @theclawless1225 5 лет назад

      dang, 166 people actually liked black cauldron. I guess there's a movie for everyone.

  • @lillylake
    @lillylake 6 лет назад +149

    Bright eyes burning like fire
    Bright eyes, how can you close and fail?
    How can the light that burned so brightly
    Suddenly burn so pale
    Bright eyes .

    • @RyanHollinger
      @RyanHollinger  6 лет назад +16

      I cut it from the credits because I couldn't chance a CR claim... Btw, I miss Casper.

    • @robharris5782
      @robharris5782 6 лет назад +3

      It's such a beautiful film Patricia. The little rabbits they are so brave...

    • @jkishhabi
      @jkishhabi 6 лет назад +13

      This song helped me grieve and cope with the death of my first dog. Still cannot sing it without some healthy tears.

  • @s-boy4613
    @s-boy4613 4 года назад +118

    "Why was watership down so messed up!?"
    Felidae: _"How cute...."_

    • @papaquaalude8227
      @papaquaalude8227 4 года назад +34

      S-Boy only problem is that felidae wasn’t advertised for kids and didn’t get a child friendly rating. yeah, it’s more messed up, but they made it pretty clear it wasn’t for kids

    • @Cptsimian33
      @Cptsimian33 4 года назад +5

      True but Felidae never got a U for "universal" rating (one down from PG)

    • @TheSwanqueenAndTheEldricth
      @TheSwanqueenAndTheEldricth 3 года назад

      Haha lol so true

  • @mrgavsterman
    @mrgavsterman 6 лет назад +137

    lol, we literally just finished watching this movie at school today and i saw it in my recomended videos. Well played FBI guy in my phone

    • @talknight2
      @talknight2 6 лет назад +8

      Google and Facebook are always listening.

  • @mattybrownvhsarchives9460
    @mattybrownvhsarchives9460 6 лет назад +34

    I saw Watership Down when I was 5 years old. My parents had no clue what they had rented for me. Simultaneously scarred me for life and cemented itself as one of my favorite films of all time. Funny how that can work that way.

  • @JustSomeDinosaurPerson
    @JustSomeDinosaurPerson 5 лет назад +98

    Honestly agree with Adams. Sometimes, I just want to write a story and ready a story. Doesn't need to have a message or be masterfully interwoven with themes. In fact, I am kind of tired of thematic writing or at least how people portray it as the pinnacle, the golden rule, and necessity. If that is your cup of tea, by all means continue to enjoy it. But I swear that there are very few messages to deliver or themes to explore that I haven't already experienced by this point.

    • @iiiivvvv9986
      @iiiivvvv9986 3 года назад +5

      I get that, but I also feel that reading a story then afterwards realising that it had a subtle meaning to it can make the story feel all the more impactful

    • @withyouxxx
      @withyouxxx 3 года назад +1

      lolwut, then why you here when you can avoid.

    • @_ee75
      @_ee75 3 года назад

      But it always has a meta meaning, even if you don't intend to

  • @xengar
    @xengar 6 лет назад +94

    That unintentional symbolism plagued J. R. R. Tolkien to his death as well. Many during his time found allusions to religious iconography, environmentalism, and social commentary on World War 1 and 2. He frequently explained that he never intended any of it but people still saw what they saw. Unlike C.S. Lewis or Madeleine L'Engle who never cared for subtlety.

    • @dialaskisel5929
      @dialaskisel5929 6 лет назад +17

      This is the constant conversation that we get in this postmodern age. People write about what they think and experience, and show things from their own viewpoint. Even if they didn't intend it, the things they write, the stories that they reveal about themselves and what they've seen and thought about can give deeper insight about their own world view. Just because you weren't intentionally trying to write a commentary on how we cope with an awful reality, doesn't mean that you didn't end up doing just that. And, in that sense, the "ownership" of a story's message or interpretation doesn't belong to the author - it belongs to his audience.

    • @Carewolf
      @Carewolf 6 лет назад +14

      But then you have to analyse it this way. English teachers will however insists on finding the secret meaning behind all works of literature, regardless of whether there is one or not, leading to a lot of total bullshit.

    • @aisadal2521
      @aisadal2521 6 лет назад +7

      Carewolf Art is subjective, and what it means to one person, can mean something *completely* different to one another, despite what others may tell you. Nobody should tell you how to analyze something for the sole purpose that "this is the correct and only meaning for this work of art" (school of course is the exception since you're doing it for an assignment, unless you have *A LOT* of wiggle room and are actually able to state your interpretation on it, in which case, by all means, go ahead and do so).
      We must all decide for ourselves for what something means to us, in which case we are *choosing* to analyze something in *our* own way, that nobody but *us* sees and believes. The "secret" meaning may be there and be a bit of a revelation to someone, and then it may not be there for someone else, because it didn't resonate with them. It's all about a matter of perspective

    • @Carewolf
      @Carewolf 6 лет назад +3

      True, and you can analyse that, and you can analyse the story structure or unintended parallels, what you CANT do is pretend that this was the author intend when the author didn't intend it, and at least my teachers kept doing the latter.

    • @andurilan
      @andurilan 6 лет назад

      Youve never been to Art school huh?
      SOME aspects of SOME Arts is subjective.

  • @dodg1988
    @dodg1988 6 лет назад +311

    The Revenant+Rabbits=The Rabinant

    • @Odinsday
      @Odinsday 6 лет назад

      Can someone make this a thing please?

    • @zachb8012
      @zachb8012 6 лет назад +1

      The rabbits found a new habitat. Rabitat.

    • @olleselin
      @olleselin 6 лет назад +1

      Hearthstone+Hares=Harestone

    • @eelektrosszeboss3346
      @eelektrosszeboss3346 6 лет назад +1

      Rabbits discover drums. Rabbit-tat-tat

  • @kylefreeburg9353
    @kylefreeburg9353 5 лет назад +36

    Man, I remember the first time I saw this movie. I was five or six, and I was at my friend's house. I was super sick, so much so my mom had to pick me up later; so I watched this movie as a young boy drifting in between consciousness and fever dreams. It was crazy

  • @VideoSage
    @VideoSage 6 лет назад +378

    Adams sounds like a military man, who recreated the world as he said saw it, without understanding the ideas behind it.

    • @outlawscar3328
      @outlawscar3328 4 года назад +54

      I think people like Adams and Tolkien who claim they don't use allegory and symbolism know they're full of shit, they just want people to decipher meaning for themselves as it is very private to the them and they view it as the reader's responsibility to interpret. That's my theory anyway.

    • @MatthewSpencerKociol
      @MatthewSpencerKociol 3 года назад +19

      @@outlawscar3328 I bet there's a couple reasons he Adams claims it's not symbolic, Your reason makes sense, in that he doesn't want to spoonfeed meaning to readers and sometimes a story is best enjoyed without over-analyzing it to death. I think also it might be more valuable to see this story as a form of criticism or commentary. Don't focus too much on symbolism, besides just imagining if the rabbits were people, for example. Well when we make war stories about humans fighting in wars and struggling to survive, we don't really boil it down to symbolism do we? No, we look at the stories of humans in war and conflict through a lense of critiquing, analyzing and commenting on the dynamics of human nature, and symbols don't matter at that point. It's basically just "look how cruel living things are to each other, and yet at the same time look at how some of us cling on to hope and optimism." Again, no symbol interpretation is needed, as you can basically just quote the characters themselves.

    • @mioda_ibs5777
      @mioda_ibs5777 3 года назад +12

      @@outlawscar3328 actually Adam didn't care for interpretation. He recieved many fan mails from people who each gave their own theory and questions such as is it based on the cold war, is hazel Jesus Christ. He always scoffed and gave the same answer each time. Its just a story about rabbits, nothing more.

    • @iiiivvvv9986
      @iiiivvvv9986 3 года назад +6

      @@outlawscar3328 or they just wrote a cool story which happened to carry heavy symbolism as a result of their good writing?

    • @outlawscar3328
      @outlawscar3328 3 года назад +1

      @@iiiivvvv9986 Go read the Lord of the Rings again and then tell me there's no direct allegory to Christian myth or World War II.
      Also tell me the Ring isn't symbolism for power and its corrupting and addictive nature.

  • @rbdriftin
    @rbdriftin 6 лет назад +480

    One of my all-time favourite animated films based on one of my all-time favourite novels. Both are gorgeous, pastoral masterpieces that utterly capture the idea of nature in all of its states, both the beauty and the violence.

    • @bobhill9803
      @bobhill9803 6 лет назад +2

      police, Police, POLICE!!!!!

    • @randomanimation9300
      @randomanimation9300 6 лет назад +2

      Bob hill
      ???

    • @KoltiraMemeweaver
      @KoltiraMemeweaver 6 лет назад +1

      rb driftin Hell yes 👍🏻

    • @warbunny13203
      @warbunny13203 6 лет назад +1

      rb driftin nevet read the book but now i might have to if i can get, loved the movie🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

    • @emarskineel
      @emarskineel 6 лет назад +1

      Bob hill boy ain’t right

  • @ersturdevant2831
    @ersturdevant2831 4 года назад +355

    "Watership Down" is a masterpiece.

  • @raksh9
    @raksh9 6 лет назад +190

    For another heartbreaking animation, watch The Plague Dogs, from the author of Watership Down, same producer, too. It's horrific but so good.

    • @denniscat9395
      @denniscat9395 6 лет назад +6

      yes - Snitter the terrier's story will rip your soul apart.

    • @merrittanimation7721
      @merrittanimation7721 6 лет назад +1

      Just for clarification for those unfamiliar with the story, the protagonists are forced to eat a man at one point due to their starvation despite their (Snitter's really) love for humanity. That film is messed up.

    • @das8.kapitel260
      @das8.kapitel260 6 лет назад

      I Love Watership Down. Its a metaphore for living togther

    • @thebatman4279
      @thebatman4279 5 лет назад

      The author must've been an incredibly dour man to have come up with such grim, hopeless stories.

  • @poofylove2
    @poofylove2 6 лет назад +527

    Omg so this movie wasn't a hallucination.

    • @tadpolegaming4510
      @tadpolegaming4510 6 лет назад +15

      poofylove2 could never remember the name, but it started showing up again everywhere last year

    • @SafeTripHome33
      @SafeTripHome33 6 лет назад +12

      I remember i was like why am i being allowed to watch this

    • @Amogus-bi6du
      @Amogus-bi6du 6 лет назад +1

      I remember this movie so vividly from my childhood, but I could never think of the name... Until this video

    • @ohdonpiano3936
      @ohdonpiano3936 6 лет назад

      poofylove2 when this movie is scarier than some of Stephen Kings books...

  • @bubbles2215
    @bubbles2215 4 года назад +105

    I loved this movie when I was like 4. But after seeing some clips as an adult, I see it’s actually terrifying. What the hell was wrong with me.

    • @niklasmolen4753
      @niklasmolen4753 4 года назад +9

      I saw it when I was a child and remember it as a little dark sometimes. Saw it with my son and he screamed and said we should turn it off. Now as an adult, I realize that it is not a children's movie.
      The rabbits are just a wolf in sheep's clothing.

    • @akatie888
      @akatie888 3 года назад +4

      A child's perception is much different from an adults, go watch The Last Unicorn and look at the reviews

    • @schattenvolkofficial1121
      @schattenvolkofficial1121 3 года назад +4

      😄 Thank you, I was around 4 or 5 when I first watched this in German TV and I wasn't terrified but spellbound ... maybe also because I clearly remember I assumed the "bigger bunnies" being parents defending their children (Pipkin, Fiver and all smaller bunnies) against real REAL bad bunnies!) 😁 So the message it brought to me was entirely good. Hope can be desperate, but it still is hope & worth fighting for ... only I wasn't able to put that in words back than. ^^

    • @johnboehmer6683
      @johnboehmer6683 2 года назад

      Maybe you saw an edited version when you were 4? It could also be that everyone was tougher and stronger years ago, PC woke crap has softened everyone, maybe that's it...

    • @TheGoldenDunsparce
      @TheGoldenDunsparce Год назад +1

      It was the same with me! I saw it when I was about 7 or 8, and it was exciting and thrilling to me. The violence and gore didn't seem to affect me as much as it did when I watched it again a few years ago. The scene where the rabbits' burrow was tilled and all the holes filled up with dirt and dying screaming bodies horrified me. I think as a kid, it was just a cartoon, but as an adult, it was a story and I felt more connected with the characters and their suffering

  • @lovelylaurenyoutube
    @lovelylaurenyoutube 6 лет назад +265

    This movie really stressed me out so much as a kid. Wtf where they thinking when they rated it PG?

    • @mellonmarshall
      @mellonmarshall 6 лет назад +14

      the trouble with the rating is that there was no PG, that won't appear for another 4 years and there is also no 12. All you have is a U or a A which is like a 15 so they had to go with the lower rating, if the BBFC was to rate in today, they gone on record to saying it is a 12/12A but no one is letting them rerate it

    • @epuslso9209
      @epuslso9209 6 лет назад

      except pg is an american based rating. also lauren while i agree that it doesn't fit the modern pg rating it should be said that america at the time had 3 ratings PG,R,AO/XXX PG-13 wouldn't hit until Indiana Jones. Also PG fi9lms frequently showed bare TnA

    • @IceLizardsUnited
      @IceLizardsUnited 6 лет назад +23

      Pg stands for Parental Guidance. Which means it's up to the Parent to decide if their child should watch the movie or not. By this definition, watership down does in fact fit in with the PG rating. If a child is made upset over what they say, it is entirely the parents fault.

    • @schsas7743
      @schsas7743 5 лет назад +5

      @@IceLizardsUnited very true except in the UK, dont know about the US, the film came out as a U and not PG.

    • @BlackavarWD
      @BlackavarWD 5 лет назад +3

      @@IceLizardsUnited
      That's exactly what I was gonna reply!

  • @therespectedlex9794
    @therespectedlex9794 6 лет назад +64

    One memorable scene (if I remembered it fully):
    Big Wig "I told you I wanted to impress you, and hope I have."
    The General "And I told you Bigwig... I would kill you..!"
    See, fun for all ages, and quintessentially English.

  • @im19ice3
    @im19ice3 5 лет назад +114

    i'm so depressed and traumatized forever, that fields full of blood thing, at no age could i have taken that calmly

    • @judegoodchild930
      @judegoodchild930 4 года назад +11

      That scene was and still is terrifying

    • @nocturnal5eyedmoth151
      @nocturnal5eyedmoth151 4 года назад

      I wanna see it now

    • @judegoodchild930
      @judegoodchild930 4 года назад

      wølf North :0 ドギー‹‹‡›› do it

    • @iceink
      @iceink 3 года назад +5

      I watched this movie as a kid I completely forgot about that scene in particular, seeing in this video past my 20s and it made me very uncomfortable, in an odd way I don't think any other horror could because it's recalling a primal thing embedded in my psyche as a fricking child

    • @coquimapping8680
      @coquimapping8680 3 года назад +1

      I took it calmly.

  • @SEReid-rz5bm
    @SEReid-rz5bm 6 лет назад +60

    The film of "The Plague Dogs" messed me up....and I watched it a year ago, as a full-grown adult.
    Seriously, that movie is the definition of "bleak".

    • @CartoonsEveryone
      @CartoonsEveryone 6 лет назад +14

      I would prefer Watership Down over The Plague Dogs any day. The Plague Dogs freaked the shit out of me.

    • @AnonEMus-cp2mn
      @AnonEMus-cp2mn 6 лет назад +14

      I haven't seen both Watership Down or The Plague Dogs, but the one film that solidified the definition of "bleak" for me was actually the War of the Worlds (2005). Watching that film at age 9 was pretty crazy, and filled with the longest feeling of dread and hopelessness watching on a large-screen TV with surround sound and pitch-black night with no lights on. I hadn't yet been exposed to films of this sort before so I had no idea what to expect, much less recognise famous actors. So I was watching with a fresh set of eyes.
      I believe the greatest thing that affected me was watching the real faces of the people in the background. There's a greater scale of horror watching others getting wiped out being at the wrong place at the wrong time. Entire families, everyone moving to survive. And finally, the perspective of the few survivors while in the distance other humans, just like them and just like me were being hunted down in the distance by ominous and ever-present adversaries like those seemingly never-ending nightmares. All of these concepts were new to me, and I was seeing its portrayal in live-action realism.

    • @mattybrownvhsarchives9460
      @mattybrownvhsarchives9460 6 лет назад +11

      I too saw The Plague Dogs a few years ago for the first time (at age 30) and the end brought me to tears. I can't remember the last time a movie left me feeling truly injured. Its an amazing film but doesn't have the same balance of beauty and brutality that makes Watership Down so rewatchable. The idea of watching The Plague Dogs again sounds unpleasant but I'll always respect it for being able to make me feel the way it did... just when I thought I'd seen it all.

    • @CartoonsEveryone
      @CartoonsEveryone 6 лет назад +8

      Matty Brown VHS Archives I know a movie I can't even bare to watch a second time. It's called _The Grave Of The Fireflies._ It's so super depressing.

    • @SEReid-rz5bm
      @SEReid-rz5bm 6 лет назад +3

      Agree completely. And "injured" is absolutely how it felt...well put.

  • @Achromasloth
    @Achromasloth 6 лет назад +310

    I greatly dislike the “reputation” this movie (and by extention, the book) has.
    It seems to me like everyone dismisses or remembers the movie as “omg so violent, scarred, chilhood trauma xd” without looking at the truly great things and ideas the story has.
    Anyways, great video, you’ve earned a sub.

    • @IsThatEtchas
      @IsThatEtchas 6 лет назад +36

      It's one of my favourite movies ever. I probably watched it first when I was 7 or so. Loved it then, still love it now. I also dislike its reputation and generally just how it's looked at and discussed. Even the framing of this video "why is watership down so messed up" irks me because it's not "messed up" especially not when compared to nearly any PG13 movie.

    • @donnylurch4207
      @donnylurch4207 6 лет назад +20

      I haven't seen it yet, but as a child of the 90s who was shown a lot of spookier, shocking kids films from the 80s, I for one think we need more kids movies that aren't afraid to get frighteningly real with their audience. I feel much of today's children's media talks down to its audience, but I'd like to see a comprehensive study to find out if that's just my bias. There was plenty of patronizing drivel in my day, as well.

    • @SEReid-rz5bm
      @SEReid-rz5bm 6 лет назад +20

      I think the blame--as usual--lies with the marketing, which I'm glad Ryan mentioned. Watership Down is a great film and a beautiful story, but it falls into that grey area that marketing execs hate, where they're not sure if it's for kids or adults ("it's a cartoon? but there's blood and violence? we *must* have clearly defined categories, people!!") and they mess up audience's expectations for what the film is trying to say. It's a tragedy, really, because the movie is incredibly well done. I think if it had been marketed correctly it might not have quite the bad reputation it does, now.

    • @HedgeHominoid
      @HedgeHominoid 6 лет назад +10

      yeah
      but unfortunately a ton of us were exposed to this movie WAY too early, by (grand)parents bought "the cute disney-esque bunny cartoon!!" without checking out the actual content.
      Plus the advertisements and ratings didn't help; by, bizarrely, avoiding all the "dark and scary" bits
      It's an excellent movie, coming back to it as an adult. One of my favorites!
      And tbh it probably wouldn't have bothered me back then, if i KNEW what it was about.
      Unfortunately my family had me *expecting* "Bambi with Rabbits," therefore the whole thing was a shock.
      i have a feeling a bunch of other tiny kids were exposed to it similarly, so i don't blame 'em
      I would recommend they watch it though, when they're ready

    • @justinambru8529
      @justinambru8529 6 лет назад +3

      Yes I agree there is a meaning of this movie and it is very complex and deep meaning. I personally love this movie because it gives us a story of rabbits in nature and how they have to survive in order to stay alive.

  • @skylargrace6542
    @skylargrace6542 5 лет назад +74

    You should do Why the Plague Dogs is so messed up!

    • @robertcooper4th259
      @robertcooper4th259 7 месяцев назад +1

      Y
      That’s not someone’s weird poor attempt to claim something is for children, that’s an attempt to be depressing to an extreme while being recognised as based in reality

  • @morningstarghuleh1087
    @morningstarghuleh1087 6 лет назад +370

    I can watch the most vicious horror movies, but I still can't bring myself to watch Watership Down, or read the book. That bloody Bright Eyes song still makes me bawl like a little baby, I had to try to hold it together in a store a few weeks ago when it was played on the radio. Failed. Failed miserably. Watching this made me cry enough, I really don't think I will survive the movie. No way in hell am I watching Plague Dogs either.

    • @xunox9304
      @xunox9304 6 лет назад +13

      I watched some of it with my friend, wouldn't recommend it, I think it literally starts with them drowning a dog until it almost dies and then bring it back up before it does.

    • @morningstarghuleh1087
      @morningstarghuleh1087 6 лет назад +4

      @@xunox9304 😭 no way could I handle that

    • @xunox9304
      @xunox9304 6 лет назад +8

      Yeah, and that's the beginning.

    • @morningstarghuleh1087
      @morningstarghuleh1087 6 лет назад +8

      I looked up the movie and the book, didn't watch anything, but managed to cry for the entire day because that's all I could think about. Didn't help either that on the day I was looking it all up, it was the anniversary of my dogs death. Urgh.

    • @teaartist6455
      @teaartist6455 6 лет назад +11

      The book is great, it's one of the inspirations for warrior cats but way better. It does have it's dark moments (okay, a lot of dark moments) but it's a lovely view into the world of rabbits and I'd recommend it to anyone over the age of maybe 9-12, depending on how you feel about that stuff.
      (Oh and the age suggestion is from personal experience, it may not be correct for everyone)

  • @benmcfee
    @benmcfee 6 лет назад +37

    Ah, Watership Down! How many children had their first existential crisis because of this movie?
    I'm guessing it was more than two.

  • @thereviewingarea4719
    @thereviewingarea4719 5 лет назад +29

    12:34 That scene where the rabbit said "that's no good" i thought it was cute.

    • @TimeBunny
      @TimeBunny 4 года назад +3

      The Reviewing Area Pipkin is such an adorable little rabbit 🐇

    • @silviabutti8336
      @silviabutti8336 3 года назад

      Pipkin is a mood

  • @DOOM-kronicills
    @DOOM-kronicills 6 лет назад +76

    I feel like I’m getting depressed just watching small clips of the film

    • @CartoonsEveryone
      @CartoonsEveryone 6 лет назад +3

      The ending always brings me down.
      Don't get me wrong, it's got a positive ending. It's just a bitter sweet ending.

  • @schizoidboy
    @schizoidboy 6 лет назад +57

    I saw this film as a kid and I never felt traumatized by it. If anything the violence is not mindless but well placed and not having the restrictions a kids' film has it was able to do a lot more. Incidentally anything involving animals might as well be animated even today with CGI. If anything this always seemed an intelligent film that didn't insult my intelligence, and I don't mind the religious overtones because it just gives more character to the film by including what the rabbits believe.

    • @missmgmnt
      @missmgmnt 6 лет назад

      schizoidboy I loved this movie when I was a kid. I watched it over and over. My brothers and sister didn’t like it. The story was so emotional - it sucked me in!

  • @reesemckartnee8812
    @reesemckartnee8812 5 лет назад +33

    This is in the catergory of films that are way beyond of understanding, like chicken run too or the last unicorn.

  • @jessus1026
    @jessus1026 6 лет назад +83

    Came across your Courage the Cowardly Dog video, then Coraline and now this - you netted yourself a new subscriber, friendo.
    Surprised I never had a run-in with the movie until I was about 13-14 (I saw King's It when I was 6, lol), but I totally understand what del Toro meant about how Watership Down could be a sort of rite of passage for kids interested in storytelling and animation. I remember how the movie didn't really shock me in the graphic department (don't get me wrong, General Woodwort was portrayed _terrifyingly villainous_ and the gassing scene was really dark) so much as the message behind it, as you so succinctly pointed out so well.
    I don't really know how my abilities as a writer and artist would have panned out if I didn't read more than just the school's "required reading" or go out of my way to find foreign movies I heard about on early 2000s message boards that sounded interesting and it's sad when I hear the younglings ask where I get my ideas from...

  • @tamar7065
    @tamar7065 6 лет назад +627

    Honestly there's a lot of edgelords in this comment section lol. "DON'T BE A SNOWFLAKE THIS PREPARES KIDS FOR THE REAL WORLD"
    Like... if your "real world" involved run-ins with dangerous cultlike groups and your friends dying like flies to random outside threats then, just as your first heads-up, you _may_ have had a bad childhood.

    • @chokabitch9342
      @chokabitch9342 6 лет назад +56

      Tamar H. I think it’s more like you need to teach kids the world isn’t gonna treat them right and sometimes it’s not your job to fix the worlds problems and no matter what you keep moving on

    • @skaterdude7277
      @skaterdude7277 6 лет назад +34

      there are plenty of places like that in the world. Even in the idealistic world of the US. Take a wrong turn in my city, St. Louis, you wear clothes that make you look like you got status and wealth, you leave valuable shit in your car on the wrong block, or just in general don't pay attention, you will be taken advantage of.

    • @bug6582
      @bug6582 6 лет назад +69

      God I hate when people say we need to prepare kids for the real world. They’re fucking kids! There are ways to teach them about our world in a lighter manner. You can still teach kids about life without being an edge lord.

    • @transgeek2345
      @transgeek2345 6 лет назад +4

      Tamar H. Undoubtedly, about time someone says it.

    • @transgeek2345
      @transgeek2345 6 лет назад +9

      Totally Anonymous I apologize for your loss. Life is surely tough, but nonetheless if our intent after all the pain we go through is to feed it to others, then we’ve already let the worst happen, and that’s the death of our humanity and of hope.

  • @otaking3582
    @otaking3582 5 лет назад +34

    "They're not humans, so it's perfectly okay to show this much violence to young children!"
    At least that's the logic the MPAA gave to Transformers: The Movie before they threw in an "Oh shit'

    • @KrisFrost4359
      @KrisFrost4359 4 года назад +1

      They threw in the "oh shit" to get a PG rating because G/U rated movies didn't get as many screenings per day, apparently.

    • @otaking3582
      @otaking3582 4 года назад

      @@KrisFrost4359 Yeah. The whole "They did it so that parents would have to come along and know what toys to buy" theory doesn't really hold much water when you consider that Arcee and Unicron didn't even make it past the prototype phase.

    • @Cptsimian33
      @Cptsimian33 4 года назад

      Optimus Prime ...... NOOOOOOOOOOOO!

  • @Azriel884
    @Azriel884 6 лет назад +57

    Why is Guillermo Del Toro so effing cool???

  • @mindyauron9137
    @mindyauron9137 6 лет назад +584

    It took like 4 year to suppress this from my memory
    Oh boy, here we go with round two of the night terrors this brought
    Edit: I feel some weird kind of closure after seeing this. Thank you

    • @tadghspalding2765
      @tadghspalding2765 6 лет назад

      Mindy Auron r

    • @GoatMen
      @GoatMen 6 лет назад +9

      The fear of death this film inspired in me as a child has shaped so many of my views later in life. From politics to philosophy and religion.

    • @armydog4264
      @armydog4264 6 лет назад

      Loser/ pity for you

    • @mindyauron9137
      @mindyauron9137 6 лет назад +10

      luciferangelica oh shut the fuck up

    • @mindyauron9137
      @mindyauron9137 6 лет назад +9

      Darren Hawkins I don’t need your fucking pity

  • @Scrofar
    @Scrofar 5 лет назад +29

    As shocking and graphic as the content never stopped being, I am very weirdly thankful that it was part of my childhood. Yes, I may have yeeted out of the room to avoid the Violent Scary Parts(tm) every time, but there's something beautifully alluring and--as Ryan described--comforting that made me watch it over and over again. sans the Violent Scary Parts(tm).

  • @merkules6
    @merkules6 6 лет назад +23

    I got this on VHS as a 10-year old kid, not sure if it was from my parents or grandparents. I don't know if they knew how it was, but at least they let me watch it over and over again and never seemed surprised or said anything. I instantly loved it and the violence never bothered me, I recall it surprising me but that's about it. I always thought the film was just showing the harshness of nature and life, and how people destroy nature and take living space from other animals. I think I've seen this like a hundred times. It's one of my favourite animated movies and always has been.

  • @montanajoe4636
    @montanajoe4636 6 лет назад +28

    I remember watching this at my grandparents when I was like 5. It surprised me at how graphic it was, but that didn’t stop me from watching it over and over!

  • @user-cu1yo7ty5j
    @user-cu1yo7ty5j 3 года назад +6

    I thought Simba's dad getting pushed off that cliff was cruel enough when I was a kid, until I watched this movie.

  • @Asgard314
    @Asgard314 6 лет назад +52

    When I read it I felt like I was reading a fantasy novel. Like Lord of the Rings, y'know?
    We had a group of characters each fitting some sort of role (leader, seer, fighter, etc.) escaping some predetermined calamity to find a place of their own.

  • @ujustgotpwned2008
    @ujustgotpwned2008 6 лет назад +1233

    Warning: absolutely do not watch Watership Down while high.

    • @brendanmiller8632
      @brendanmiller8632 6 лет назад +87

      ujustgotpwned2008 eh that's gonna be a challenge for me

    • @KoltiraMemeweaver
      @KoltiraMemeweaver 6 лет назад +12

      I already love the movie and book. Probably won't do anything to me while high

    • @devilinav7494
      @devilinav7494 6 лет назад +47

      That would completely harsh my mellow.

    • @mybraineatseverything7404
      @mybraineatseverything7404 6 лет назад +1

      ujustgotpwned2008 excellent advice!!!

    • @jleggett5995
      @jleggett5995 6 лет назад +16

      Or do, if you love horror films.

  • @Fembro
    @Fembro 5 лет назад +60

    It’s the revenant with rabbits
    Best analogy ever

  • @brittanicatheamerican8983
    @brittanicatheamerican8983 6 лет назад +49

    funny because back in the day when it was the 30s, animation was often targeted towards adults

    • @alfa01spotivo
      @alfa01spotivo 6 лет назад +7

      yeah its weird to think. Mickey Mouse being a jerk to Minne and Porky swearing

    • @maximillianlylat1589
      @maximillianlylat1589 6 лет назад +7

      Especially when betty boop was made as a sex icon, she's the first animated waifu basically.

    • @Lynxan
      @Lynxan 6 лет назад +2

      That's because back then all film was just made and ages where not thought about. Hell, I think the whole cartoons are for kids only thing started in the late 70's to 80's when it was getting on TV just for that reason with nothing with any one else in mind. At least in the 60's you didn't need extra warnings to tell parents that you might not want your kids to go out and see things like Friz the Cat and Coonskin, yet bring out a CG film like Sausage Party or South Park the movie and theaters have to break out extra signs to remind parents that R means R.

  • @eclipsedbadger
    @eclipsedbadger 6 лет назад +60

    Whenever people say the movie is messed up I just wanna ask "hey, duderino...dude...DID YOU READ THE BOOK THO?"
    because the book is far more brutal, more twisted and sad. I mean, I recall MURDERS and more.
    It's the same with the Ga'Hoole books. You go all "oh cool, a book about owls cool!"
    First book starts with attempted murder. Includes what can only be called child psychological and physical abuse. Books get more brutal at points after that.
    ...so, children books are kind of fucked up

    • @JuiceMaestro
      @JuiceMaestro 6 лет назад +3

      Tejoncita There is murder/attempted murder in the movie tho

    • @fabihabushra54
      @fabihabushra54 6 лет назад +3

      Yeoooo loved both books so much tho

    • @ViktorTheMusician
      @ViktorTheMusician 6 лет назад +2

      I remember reading the Ga'Hoole books BECAUSE of the violence. I'm sure if i read Watership Down I'd wanna see the adaptation be as gruesome as the book, even as a 9 year old kid. (Not that we were trying to be edgy, we just thought it was cool and mature or something)

    • @KoltiraMemeweaver
      @KoltiraMemeweaver 6 лет назад +1

      The novel is fucking brilliant

  • @carved_cuts
    @carved_cuts 5 лет назад +26

    2:35 I remember seeing this scene as a child and fainting for the first time. It's how I discovered my bloodphobia. Looking at it now, still makes me a little dizzy. 😅

    • @FoxRivers778
      @FoxRivers778 5 лет назад +2

      I bet blood draws are a nightmare for you. I had a bad experience with them as a kid. I almost fainted taking my pulse in middle school. Now I can have a blood draw sitting up without getting dizzy but I still can't look. I also don't like taking my blood pressure and it's harder to look at blood in movies and TV now more than before.

  • @TheMightygamer150
    @TheMightygamer150 6 лет назад +123

    I remember finding this vhs tape when I was little without the box or anything and it showed the cover of peaceful landscape with bunnies and figured it be a happy good movie. Boy was I wrong after watching those horrible scenes I was so confused and scared first seeing it

  • @Zeennuh
    @Zeennuh 6 лет назад +796

    I've never watched this movie and I want to cry
    Edit: 9 minutes in I cried

    • @jarjarjamjar4597
      @jarjarjamjar4597 6 лет назад +5

      Ohwont you tell us bout those rabbits gorge

    • @pilcrow182
      @pilcrow182 6 лет назад +20

      Yeah, I've never seen it either. The scene at 5:50 with the cars made me laugh hard, and the "Violet's gone!" line around 9:57 came close to bringing me to tears. I think I may need to watch this movie...
      Oh, and if the scenes here bother you, do yourself a favor by NEVER watching Grave of the Fireflies.

    • @fazepizzanuke7654
      @fazepizzanuke7654 6 лет назад +9

      Pussy

    • @CorbCorbin
      @CorbCorbin 6 лет назад +5

      I'd suggest staying away from Schindler's List, as it involves actual people, not a metaphor, with rabbits.

    • @PierreFrancesco
      @PierreFrancesco 6 лет назад +2

      Same here.

  • @jxomxo
    @jxomxo 3 года назад +9

    I don’t even have a major childhood connection to Watership Down so having watched it for the first time a couple of years ago helped me to appreciate it for the brilliant work of art that it truly is and is often forgotten to be. It makes me sad that people only want to look at this film as “the scary animated film about rabbits” that they watched as a kid and haven’t bothered to check it out since. It’s a powerful film that deserves so much more respect in discussion.

  • @Pedro.G.
    @Pedro.G. 6 лет назад +19

    "Bright eyes, burning like fire
    Bright eyes, how can you close and fail?
    How can the light that burned so brightly
    Suddenly burn so pale?
    Bright eyes" T_T our dad made us watch this when we were just 5 and 4 years old, and that song still to gets me even after 23 years, damn

  • @msjkramey
    @msjkramey 6 лет назад +388

    This looks fucking terrifying...

    • @sektorispiar2988
      @sektorispiar2988 6 лет назад +43

      J Girl Oh it is, especially if you go into it unprepared. This ain't Bambi (and even that movie had its own intense moments).

    • @cormacbn0165
      @cormacbn0165 6 лет назад +17

      I really enjoyed it as a child. Its not that bad

    • @CartoonsEveryone
      @CartoonsEveryone 6 лет назад +9

      I was terrified of this film when I was little. I did almost everything just to get rid of the VHS tape. After years has gone by, it kinda grew on me. But I'll only watch it early in the morning.

    • @lucapeyrefitte6899
      @lucapeyrefitte6899 6 лет назад +3

      J Girl it really does it makes me scared

    • @satanicjerome4015
      @satanicjerome4015 6 лет назад +11

      Eh, it looks that way but it really isnt. I remember watching this when I was around 5-7 and not being scared. I am a little unsettled that my parents showed to me at that age tho...

  • @1990Cornetto
    @1990Cornetto 5 лет назад +79

    Has anyone seen Wizards? That is one film I will never forget.

    • @banannasticker
      @banannasticker 4 года назад +12

      Fritz?! They killed Fritz!! Those dirty lousy rotten stinking faeries! They killed Fritz!

    • @rotisseriepossum
      @rotisseriepossum 4 года назад +2

      I could listen to that narrator forever

    • @ento7035
      @ento7035 4 года назад +3

      I know this is 9 months old, but should I watch wizards? I've heard of it but never if it was any good and RUclips really seems to want me to watch it.

    • @rotisseriepossum
      @rotisseriepossum 4 года назад +3

      Francelia Valerio I highly recommend it. It’s a good intro to Ralph Bakshi (and arguably his least controversial film), but also it’s just a rly good movie. It’s a little clunky at times but I think part of that is due to (some p noticeable tbh) budget problems. Definitely go into it with an open mind; personally, I think it’s more of a passion project, as opposed to Bakshi’s other films that are more political. There’s some political message to it, but it’s very basic/on-the-nose.
      But yeah, I say definitely watch wizards whenever you can, it’s free on RUclips and there’s an interesting twist at the end (subversion might be a better word? I’m not sure but it’s partly why wizards is one of my fave movies)

    • @Chandramukhi-Li
      @Chandramukhi-Li 4 года назад

      Zzzz 😴 Heavy Metal was better

  • @MortarIvy
    @MortarIvy 6 лет назад +120

    This movie horrified me as a child. With all my anxiety problems, I wonder if they’re connected.

    • @blatchie4608
      @blatchie4608 6 лет назад +12

      Was just thinking the exact same thing

    • @charliegriffiths147
      @charliegriffiths147 5 лет назад +4

      It is...messed up. I watched it with my Dad, and I’m young, but I’m chill with adult themes such as violence, so my dad lets my watch older stuff, and yet, truly, this kid’s film is one of the most mentally damaging films I have ever seen.

    • @epicspirit78
      @epicspirit78 5 лет назад +1

      Me too..... i think its related

    • @gls3578
      @gls3578 2 года назад

      Finally seeing this kind of comment. Could not believe this many people advocating over “kids should watch these kind of content cause it teaches about death”. There are other ways… Once I got watched a horro movie and I do believe it is connected to my anxiety too so I hope you get over it friend, I feel you.

  • @edenroseart
    @edenroseart 6 лет назад +84

    I watched Watership Down when I was about 5 or 6 years old, it messed my older sister up a bit but I loved this story, I still love it and I understand why my mind is so messed up today lol.

  • @QueSarahSarah72
    @QueSarahSarah72 5 лет назад +9

    Each person has their own life experience and philosophy of life. So even if an author claims not to have meaning in their story, it will have meaning nonetheless because it often (not always) reflects the author's perceptions of the world around them.
    This, as you point out very eloquently, happened in Richard Adams' novel.

  • @Wolfboy183
    @Wolfboy183 6 лет назад +9

    Watership Down is one of my all time favorite movies. This movie shows kids that nature is brutal, but that the rabbits can endure and live on and build a new world for themselves. The chaos between death and success. The movie also showed that people grieve over lost ones, as did Fiver when he thought Hazel was dead. Efrafa shows how harsh social order can get, and Hazel and Bigwig showed how they can create a peaceful social order (ex. Watership Down with the Efrafans and the Sandleford rabbits). The kind of movie parents should watch with their kids, and explain the hard shit to 'em.

    • @roedhunt
      @roedhunt 6 лет назад

      Beautiful summary! But you forgot the hilarious bird, Keeha, which still cracks me up to this day. Beeg vater!

  • @hilmethan
    @hilmethan 6 лет назад +230

    you talking with your hands that much around the coffee mug gives me anxiety

    • @Orinslayer
      @Orinslayer 6 лет назад +13

      WheatThicks123 Now that you mention it, he really is living on the edge.

    • @gabe5499
      @gabe5499 6 лет назад +4

      THIS!

  • @kappakappa1307
    @kappakappa1307 5 лет назад +12

    0:09
    All parents thought this seeing the start of the trailer for sausage party.
    Everybody gangsta till the sausage gets a glock

  • @MachadoFilmes
    @MachadoFilmes 6 лет назад +122

    Hey son look at these cute animated films I brought you,
    *'watership down', 'Fritz the Cat' and 'barefoot Gen'*

    • @shadows-sweet-embrace
      @shadows-sweet-embrace 6 лет назад +11

      Barefoot Gen is actually a great film, full of hope. It's about moving on after a tragedy. The bombing happens in the begaining and the rest of the film is just Gen's life after that point.

    • @MachadoFilmes
      @MachadoFilmes 6 лет назад +15

      Lesbian Lioness
      Yes, it does end with a positive message, but the amount of corpses pulverizing in the air, eyeballs melting, babies and little kids dying that a kid would experience before the hopeful ending, though.

    • @canidayy7792
      @canidayy7792 6 лет назад +23

      Don't forget Felidae and the Plague Dogs!
      (Both of which are fantastic movies but MAN. Grim as fuck)

    • @zvimur
      @zvimur 6 лет назад +9

      The reason for using anthropomorphic animals, is to avoid a Grave of the Fireflies.

    • @canidayy7792
      @canidayy7792 6 лет назад +1

      Barefoot Gen wasn't anthropomorphic, but otherwise yeah. GoF was grim as fuck.

  • @tdfern1
    @tdfern1 6 лет назад +19

    Man I never thought animals & violence in a animated film can be so heavy, even back then.

  • @lexiconwaffle
    @lexiconwaffle 4 года назад +26

    It's not just animation. I remember being given Howard the Duck to watch, during a primary school group sleepover. The scars are real... -_-

    • @Jonathanest90s
      @Jonathanest90s 4 года назад

      LexiconWaffle DUCK TITS! Woo hoo

    • @punjar3
      @punjar3 4 года назад +3

      In fairness, having to watch a movie as bad as Howard the Duck would also scar a lot of adults.

  • @skeletonssky
    @skeletonssky 6 лет назад +16

    6:34 every creepypasta with hyper realistic in a nutshell

  • @jdprettynails
    @jdprettynails 6 лет назад +46

    This is the kind of story I can really empathise with and enjoy.....as an adult. The overall message can be good for kids. But I keep thinking about the age I was I watched it (and other people my age) and this film fucked us up. I still have never seen this all the way from beginning to end and I still feel ill when I think about Bigwig's death scene. I was way too young to appreciate or understand this film. As a kid I had a fondness for the Animals of Farthing Wood. Which had a similar message and tone, but was much tamer in its depiction of violence. Which was still there, but not enough to leave lasting mental scars. A lot of American kids were traumatised by Bambi. But I was made to watch Watership Down several times before I'd ever seen Bambi. (At least Thumper gets to live and have babies! There's hope for rabbits yet!)
    Watership Down....rated U.
    Five of the Harry Potter films...rated 12.

    • @BlackavarWD
      @BlackavarWD 5 лет назад +1

      Bigwig didn't die.
      The "speech" was a little premature. But the SPEECH could make me cry at any age!! 😢
      What genius put that scene on the cover of the video?! Maybe someone's desperate attempt to WARN people!? 😓

  • @shellyrourke8994
    @shellyrourke8994 4 года назад +4

    I remember watching this when I was around nine years old. I loved it and always cried when the elderly Hazel dies at the end. But I felt comforted that his offspring would remember him and his journey and pass this wisdom onto their children. Imagine my horror when I read the book and discovered Hazel's offspring and grandchildren completely thought the whole thing was a myth or just a bedtime story and within just a few generations it would be twisted beyond all recognition and dismissed as folklore. THAT traumatised me more than anything. I was heartbroken. Every time I read the first line of the book, about the time of the primroses, I start to bawl and have to pause and pull myself together. I'm 48!!!

  • @em_bushell
    @em_bushell 6 лет назад +25

    My granny bought the dvd when I was young without knowing what it was. After watching it, we were both completely terrified and gave me nightmares for weeks

  • @wackyruss
    @wackyruss 6 лет назад +4

    Ha! They rented Watership Down on VHS for us when we were kids at the recreation center (Ed White Youth Center in Seabrook, TX) where we went after school each day to hang out and wait for our parents to come pick us up after they got off work. I guess they thought, "Hey it's a cartoon about BUNNIES!!!!" We were scarred for life. Later I read the book and also named all my pet rabbits after characters from the book and cartoon. The opening scene with the terrifying Black Rabbit plus that creepy "Bright Eyes Burning Light Fire" song are permanently emblazoned in my psyche.

    • @BlackavarWD
      @BlackavarWD 5 лет назад +1

      You might want to look up the lyrics. Just sayin

  • @rosemarypaul6093
    @rosemarypaul6093 2 года назад +4

    How exactly did the BBC think that was acceptable viewing for ALL ages? I wouldn't let anyone under 25 see this...and no one over 75!

  • @CKimDancer
    @CKimDancer 6 лет назад +85

    This movie never came to my country, so when i watched (mostly 'cause i was utterly terrified by the animations clips youtube keep recommending me) i was already 25. So it was a brand new fresh experience to me with an old animation movie. And boy... Boy, oh boy! What a masterpiece! I've start watching because of the gore but, in the end, what captivated me was the strong characters, awesome storytelling, unique voice acting and the memorable dialogue. It is now one of my favorite movies ever! I'm very happy this movie keeps getting attention! Thanks, Ryan! ((:

    • @vinceortega6552
      @vinceortega6552 6 лет назад

      C. Kim h him k him ill

    • @biggus6633
      @biggus6633 6 лет назад

      C. Kim
      You sick fuck!!!

    • @jordanpowell2242
      @jordanpowell2242 6 лет назад

      C. Kim same in Northern Ireland we didn’t have electricity thanks to a brutal sectarian war but I did watch the flim later in the states

    • @13thmistral
      @13thmistral 6 лет назад

      for me i especially loved the legend behind it.
      Kinda makes it like a grounded fantasy movie in a way.

  • @katherines2271
    @katherines2271 6 лет назад +5

    I remember it was a stinking hot summer day in Australia, I was only about 10 years old when I stumbled upon the VCR tape Watership Down (ah, good ol VCR's). My dad and Aunty had taught me how to survive from an early age, ride horses, how to hunt and skin, what plants i can and can't eat, how to track ect; so when i watched this I felt like I was watching through a helpless perspective, I have a great respect and love for all animals as it is, even though I know how to hunt, but as Guillermo Del Toro said, it really did feel like a right of passage, a sort of...understanding of the bigger picture so to speak.
    Modern day animations have truly lost that enchanting aspect of storytelling though. I feel like nothing that comes out in modern times has any real substance or deep life lessons, like how they used to when I was little; even Disney have become dulled down, I mean Lion King - shows the cycle of life and death, Snow White - she's seen in a freakin coffin for crying out loud, and need I mention Bambi - his mother being shot, still makes me tear up every time but the overall message of Bambi (that I perceived at least) was, even in the hardest of times, you have to just keep going, to be strong, and resilient to whatever life throws at you.
    But these are lessons of life that I can't help but feel are crucial for kids growing up and venturing further into the "real" world, a sort of softer way of education in the fact that life is cruel and can be harsh, but to also equally know that it's just as important to rise up to the occasion and be strong in the face of adversity. (That's what i took from these movies any way).

  • @jl.7739
    @jl.7739 4 года назад +3

    I saw this as a kid (must haven around 7-9 years old) I remember that I was shocked but also intrigued by the „mature“ visuals and general handling of the story. The movie left a deeper impact on me than any Disney movie o can say. I think children can handle such themes at a certain age. It doesn’t have to be singalongs all the time.

  • @mqtism
    @mqtism 6 лет назад +229

    Some how NOBODY is concerned about how much violence that’s in warrior cats books

    • @furiousmagician5912
      @furiousmagician5912 6 лет назад +16

      Yep, when I read darkest hour I.... wellllll

    • @AsrielofRose
      @AsrielofRose 6 лет назад +40

      I love Warriors.
      Goodness. Watership Down reminded me of Warriors. I don't want Warriors made into a movie... I fear they might ruin it. XD

    • @heiposs1227
      @heiposs1227 6 лет назад +32

      I loved Warriors. I also found it weird I had to buy it in the child section when theres desth injuries and and birth

    • @phoenixfritzinger9185
      @phoenixfritzinger9185 5 лет назад +7

      Or animorphs

    • @laurene988
      @laurene988 5 лет назад +15

      Oh yeah, I never actually thought about that but it does have a lot of deaths. Even main characters and their close friends die (often terribly)

  • @DragonballBlack
    @DragonballBlack 6 лет назад +381

    This should be the NEXT Pixar Movie

    • @benzielke7149
      @benzielke7149 6 лет назад +33

      They will never remake this film because society today is too pussified.

    • @SecretsFrostxxxollieporter
      @SecretsFrostxxxollieporter 6 лет назад +22

      But they are remaking it. Netflix is making a mini series this year!

    • @benzielke7149
      @benzielke7149 6 лет назад +11

      If they do remake this it will be a watered down pussified version. I wouldn't be surprised if they had a gay or trans rabbit or some stupid shit in it too.

    • @Whatever4690
      @Whatever4690 6 лет назад

      I am complaining that hollywood would make it into propaganda against trump.

    • @SecretsFrostxxxollieporter
      @SecretsFrostxxxollieporter 6 лет назад +3

      Seriously? Look I know what media today is like but I don’t think rabbits have issues about sexuality and gender 😂

  • @novikovPrinciple
    @novikovPrinciple 4 года назад +23

    Every time I hear someone say "cartoons are for kids", I resolve to eventually send their grandkids bootleg copies of Watership Down.
    For cultural preservation, of course.

  • @TMMReznor
    @TMMReznor 6 лет назад +5

    WD has been one of my favourite movies since I was young. It's so beautifully made and emotionally touching.