Two things you gotta absorb here. 1. These appliances are basically Frankensteinian abominations to our heroes, body horror to the max, and they're singing about how they had to give in to the madness of their situation to avoid a complete psychological breakdown, because there's no escape from it. 2. And somehow, it's still not the darkest song in this movie.
Well of course it’s not the darkest. When one song is called “Worthless” and is about giving in to despair, any competition has its work cut out for it 🤣
The scary part of all this is that the machines have in a way gone off the deep end and just accepted their fate. They even see it as a funny thing to ponder, their eventual dismemberment and/or their unavoidable demise. And the fact they have given up the idea of escaping to the point of preventing others from escaping is rather shudder-worthy.
Apparently it was originally intended for older kids. I mean. Think Coraline aged kids. Don Bluth said it right. You can show a kid anything so long as it has a happy ending. It's even a little healthy to scare them. To a reasonable degree.
Imagine this in a human experimentation lab, and the people that are singing have extra surgically attached body parts. And the guy who said "you should just hang around" actually uses a noose, but since of his extra limbs, or something, he can't die. And the machine with a can opener, razor and lamp, laughs about her extra parts and dies with a smile on her face(s)
It's funny that it took me until just now, age 24, that "It ain't home on the range" being sung by the oven is a pun, as it's itself a range, a combination stove and oven!
Wasn’t it Blanky singing the higher note there? Not Toaster. Since Blanky was the one who sung “there goes the sun” and then the harmonizing is the same pitch. Must’ve been Blanky still.
As a child, this movie was sort of traumatizing. As an adult I can appreciate the dark themes and the creativity that was put into this. Even though there's a happy ending, we go through a lot before getting there and this movie serves children a big dose of reality despite centering around talking appliances. I will always love this.
@@britbeee32 @Nichole Talbot i wouldn't have it any other way. this movie is a fucking masterpiece. also, @Lindsey M greetings from all three of us in 2022 🥳
"You will die" whoa, world shattering reality, any child no matter how dumb it is knows this, it's worse for the clever ones, no one wants his child to give up at life for some stupid movie.
I just wanna know why that dumb fan commands so much attention. Of all the characters in this song I always noticed that one, and here I am at the song on youtube and the second top comment is about that fan.
I haven't seen this film since I was kid in the 90's. I forgot how awesome this song was. One of the best musical numbers I've seen in a animated film.
I adore that part of the song simply because each character sounds so different and their range meshes well. Don’t really see that happening often in movies with multiple characters singing. Usually they’d all have a verse or two to themselves, not all song simultaneously. Haunting
This also is the second Disney song I know of that has a dark theme to it that Thurl Ravenscroft was a part of. The first being his portrayal of one of the busts that sing "Grim Grinning Ghosts" in the Haunted Mansion rides.
Fun fact for anyone who reads this: If you listen to the lyrics really closely, you can hear the characters mention several references to other real movies, namely "Frankenstein" and "The House of Wax" which are both classic B movie horror films. Such amazing detail in a great movie.
Since when is Frankenstein a "B-Movie?" That catagory usually goes to films like Basketcase, Killer Klowns from Outer Space, Braindead/Dead Alive, Bad Taste, Puppet Master, Evil Dead, Maniac Cop Etc...
@@extraspooky819 once upon a time- they were considered as such. In fact. Watching the originals you’ll understand how they even by today’s standards- especially by today’s standards- they are barely even that much.
Also the overhead lamp in this scene is a blatant reference to Peter Lorre, a German American actor who was known for playing villainous characters/henchmen.
You really wanna up the creepy factor? Think about the shop lamp for a minute, not only has he seen every freaky thing in this little hardware store of horrors, he was likely riding shotgun the whole time as the shopkeep brought him down for more light while was "creatively sourcing" parts. Hence the Peter Lorre goodness, he was the good doctor Blackndeckerstein's Igor, and he not only went crazy from the horror, he started getting into it!
The freaky part is, in spite of this being one of the scarier scenes in this film, the one that traumatized me was the part where they were at that waterfall, and Kirby started chewing on his cord, about to swallow it. Just the look on his face... There's also so many scenes that as a kid, I would go "Aw, poor flower" or "Doesn't that psycho know they got feelings?!" But as an adult I realized, the sad flower had lost it's will to live, water would kill them all and not just in a nightmare, and the air conditioner didn't just "short out", up until "The Master" came back to his old house, he died in a way similar to an aneurism. This is why adults in Peter Pan's world can't fly...kiss my childhood goodbye T_T
@@hammies. Same. I somehow had forgotten about toaster's clown nightmare as an adult, but I never forgot about the waterfall scene. Honestly, it was probably the first thing that came to mind whenever I thought about this movie.
The one that ALWAYS got me was "Worthless". I didn't even know the lyrics, I just knew watching old cars basically face death was freaky and depressing
...but the master did come back, and fixed the air conditioner. Adults can do that too. You're the sum of your childhood in one place, it hasn't gone anywhere. c:
Most of the time newbies scream, but that vacuum cleaner didn't and we couldn't just improvice new lyrics (it was, of course, already determined what we'd sing at that part) in two seconds, you know...?
@@playfulwalrus8417 Oh, okay. I didn't know them well. I've only seen them during that short time they were at the Parts Shop with me and the other appliances. Not before that and not thereafter either.
Jonathon Lawson The main cast needed that mobile generator to function, didn't they? Maybe the fan just can't go very long without a constant power source (kinda like real fans).
I mean, we have a cycloptic coffee machine, a broken TV, a hanging lamp with a screw loose(Pun intended.), and a gramophone who had this spooky musical score prepared for some reason.
When I watched this film again for a few years ago, I literally listended to this song every day for months. It's one of the catchiest songs I've heard.
so you're saying that this is more catchy that worthless? i always thought that was the catchiest song in the movie, despite the dark theme of the lyrics
"There goes the sun, Here comes the night, Somebody turn on the light~ Somebody tell me that fate has been kind." "You can't go out you are out of your mind!"
+luvkirby4ever Basically the appliances from the "repair" shop are trying to tell Toaster that hope wlll only get them hurt here. It's a prison metaphor, there IS no escape, or so they believe!
I didn't ask for an analysis dude I was just quoting my favorite part. And for god's sake I know how to critically analyze things that's what high school/college level English classes are for. If prompted I would probably write an entire essay on the symbolic nature of this movie.
For those interested: "Watch yourself, don't fall off of the shelf! You must be the new boys in town! What's that sound? Is someone movin' 'round? Sit down for a spell, you don't look so well. Wait a minute, I feel great, you just leave yourself to fate, you might as well just hang around. It's too late, we have to operate, just try to relax, it's a house of wax! Oh I....remember Frankenstein, shivers up my spine, whoooahh! I'm for getting out of here, No need to shout, my dear, nooo! Who will go, to that cellar down below? Trouble is a bubblin' in the brew! And while you're down there, Mr. Vincent Price, will give you good advice, He'll know what to do, you just tell him boo! He will put the voodoo in the stew, I'm telling you! It's like a movie, it's a B-movie show! It's like a movie, it's a B-movie show! I mean, look at me, barf, barf, barf, I'm a lamp, a can opener and a shaver, Oh god, I'm a mish-mash! This is weird, it's much worse than I feared, I'll close my eyes and make it disappear. This is strange! It ain't home on the range! You just tell St. Pete, that you've got cold feet! There goes the sun, here comes the night, somebody turn on the light, somebody tell me that fate has been kind, you can't go out, you are out of your mind! It's like a movie, it's a B-movie show! It's like a movie, it's a B-movie show! Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaahhhhhhh!!
Whoever typed this song 🎧 the person probably remembers the lyrics to the song. “Good for them” 👱🏻♀️👍🏻 I think 🤔 I remember seeing this Cartoon like a long time ago I think I saw it in my teen years I glad it’s on RUclips I like this song.
I loved this sequence as a kid and I love coming back as an adult and actually understanding it. That's one of the fine arts of making a great kids movie-- it's something that's approachable by a child and can be appreciated on a whole other level as an adult.
SAME. my mom tells me that i would beg her to let me watch this movie literally every day during my early childhood, sometimes more than once per day. i don’t know how that VHS tape survived being played so much. 😹 i was literally obsessed with it. and now as an adult, i read horror fiction to help myself fall asleep. something might be wrong with me.. 😅
I loved horror as a kid. 🖤 Halloween was/is my favorite holiday. Loved scary movies (especially ones that were considered "too scary for kids") & would write scary short stories for fun.
I loved this movie so much when I was little. It was my absolute favourite. Never found it creepy. But I love how dark it is compared to every other disney movie ever. A true treasure.
Its Ralph Bakshi. He famously despised and hated Disney. Sad that film history and context is lost over time. People think shrek was disney, but shrek is literally satirizing Disney. Not to mention dreamworks was created specifically to spite disney
MrFirewolf18 Hahah, that is a possibility. Actually what's really sad about the disney publishing is that this movie premiered at Sundance to huge praise and applause. It was planned for a full theatrical release, but because of Disney deciding to acquire it for TV and basically putting it on the burner for it's dark themes, it only got released straight to VHS. Imagine how popular this movie could have been if it had been published by someone else. :( It's such an underrated movie as is...
apocolypseToreador they have it on DVD at FYE now and right on the case it says "Disney" in big letters above the title, so if they didn't make it, they at least own the rights to it
So nice revisiting this scene after so many years of this particular song being stuck in my head. Brave Little Toaster is such a hidden gem in my opinion.
Listening to the hanging lamp is how I learned to do a Peter Lorre impression (especially after realizing that Phil was doing a Peter Lorre impression). It makes me wonder if Phil would've voiced the Looney Tunes Peter Lorre if he had a chance, or this one minor villain in episode two of "The Tick" titled "The Tick vs. Chairface Chippendale" who looks and (almost) sounds exactly like Peter Lorre.
Loved this song as a kid, and still do as an adult. I especially love the harmony during the "There goes the sun, here comes the night. Somebody turn on the lights" part of the song. That's where Thurl Ravenscroft (Kirby) really shines as the bass! This song, Worthless and Cutting Edge are my favorite songs of the movie. Although I would have to say this song, and Cutting Edge are very underrated. Anyone can hear "Worthless" and immediately think of this movie, while "It's a B-Movie Show" and "Cutting Edge" are usually overlooked. Such a shame. I would say in terms of "creepy Disney songs", this one is more underrated than "Hellfire" from The Hunchback of Notre Dame.
I'm so glad I randomly walked in the library one time with my mom, we never borrowed video tapes, but this just drew my attention, I grabbed it and forever, it will be my most favorite animation movie (along with Cars, with which I grew up as well).
I probably would've found it eventually anyway (cuz it's sort of my thing to watch movies about inanimate objects as characters, don't ask me why, but it's my life-long obsession for some reason), but I'm immensely glad I've gotten the chance to have the movie in my childhood memories.
As a kid, I didn't know the lyrics to this song. Looking back on it all these years later, I realized one line of it that can be taken as infinitely darker outside of the context of the film: "You just tell St. Pete that you've got cold feet." In the context of the film, they're referring to Elmo St. Peter and how they don't want to make made into amalgamations of what they used to be. Without the film's context, it could refer to St. Peter, the guy who supposedly waits at the gates of heaven, and it can turn into meaning being afraid to die. Overall dark song, but I love it.
"Just try to relax, it's the House of Wax," House of Wax was an old horror movie about a killer that covered his victims in wax and posed them as statues. He's basically saying they're in a killer's house.
My favorite part is where the unplugged rotary fan flies up into the dark ceiling just the choir vocals reach their climax. Its so beautifully messed up
I loved this movie as a kid! But I think if I knew better, I would've have watched it so many times. Now that I'm older and understand everything, I'm surprised I wasn't creeped out of my mind. I did feel uneasiness for some parts even back then, like when they met all the new appliances at the apartment, when they were taken by that repair guy that creates horrible contraptions, and then at the junkyard.
"Look at me! I mean really! Bawf bawf bawf!! I'm a canopenah, a lamp, and a shavah! Ughhohoho gaawd I'm a mishmosh!!" The accent always cracked me up as a kid, still does actually. XD
For all intents and purposes, Brave Little Toaster IS a Disney movie. It wasn't made at Disney studios though. It was made on a budget with a group of voice actors and comedians who had worked together before. It was debuted at Sundance film festival or something where Disney bought the rights to it. Incidentally, a lot of the animators on this ended up founding Pixar or working for Disney anyway.
It's a Disney movie legally, but not creatively. They just brought the rights, but what doesn't Disney buy nowadays? I know that USA has a preference for big companies and names, but I still think the fame and recognition should go to the creatives manually involved in this.
Nicolette H. Ahoyhoy! Like never. I think these instrumentals are the key to world peace. If angry folks would take two minutes to listen to Romantic Flight or Forbidden Friendship, there would be no war, no people in jail, no hurt, no heartache, just bliss and peace of soul and mind.
Of course. Many scenes where even dubbed as being too frightening or having too frightening of concepts for young children. lmao I was nine and loved it anyways. It was based off a book actually, so I'd be curious to see the original story.
My favorite part is Kirby watching the mish-mash character, which would basically be like looking at a human with other peoples limbs and other body parts writhing in their own self pity, and then just straight-faced says "This is weird" like it's just a slightly abnormal sequence of events
I never got the dark theme as a kid, but when I re-watched as an adult, I was like woah. I love how this film is so overlooked while Toy Story 3 is considered a masterpiece. Now dont get me wrong, I love both Brave Little Toaster and the Toy Storys, yet this film is much darker. Toys can last forever, appliances literally die and become "worthless" later on. So the concept here really is genius.
28 year old me is looking back on this thinking "wow look all the funny references and how clever the writing team is". 7 year old me is still traumatized by the idea of being locked in an insane asylum with a bunch of Frankenstein monsters who are so deformed and beyond hope that they relish in being torn apart and being put back together and they're doing everything they can to keep you there before their master returns so they can take you apart too so that you'll become one of them and join in the never ending dance of blissful torture. Hell, they're fuckin SINGING about it. I'm pretty sure one of them was holding a knife.
Dang, I feel like I've seen people like this. People who have consistently made such poor decisions in their lives, they try to drag others down to cripple the crippling loneliness.
An surprisingly scary movie taking place in an appliance prison where they rip them up for other peoples needs, and they are singing about horror movies, and the title (and some of the lyrics) are about a bad sequel to a horror movie
The voice of the green lamp (Peter Lorre-ish) is performed by the late, great Phil Hartman (SNL, Simpsons, News Radio). The late Thurl Ravenscroft voiced the vacuum. He's also famous for voicing Tony the Tiger and singing "You're A Mean One, Mr. Grinch" . Deanna Oliver, who is a Groundlings alumni, voiced the Toaster. Actor and SNL alumni Jon Lovitz voiced the radio. Joe Ranft (RIP) and John Lasseter of Pixar had a hand in making this movie. Some of the panning shots animated were experimented by early early Pixar when they did test animation for "Where the Wild Things Are" .
Listening to this song on the last day of September 2023. It just showed up in my recommendations, I liked the Worthless song a long time ago but haven't watched it in a long time. Hearing this song again, fucking hell it's phenomenal, the dark imagery, the dark undertones of the lyrics, I watched this movie a lot as a kid but never really appreciated how great the songs were. I love the genius of calling the song it's a B movie and having it be old horror movie themed. If there's one thing I will forever enjoy about RUclips it's that it's helped keep memories like these around. Suddenly I'm a kid again, watching this on TV and later watching either Homeword Bound 1 or 2. Maybe I'm playing a SNES game I rented. Sometimes or at least I'd wager a lot of times, people just desperately want to remember far better times and videos like these help provide just a momentary gateway.
I LOVE HOW THIS SONG IS BEING LISTENED TO SO MUCH STILL. I left my last comment 8 months ago and SO MANY comments have been placed after that! *That's amazing!* 🎉❤
For some reason The Little Toaster has always stayed in mind. Guess it was one of my favs as a little kid as dark and messed up as it can be lol. It's a great film and they surely don't make them like this anymore.
Oh man, this is such a great example of how this movie is way better than it has any right to be. This is a highly credible 80s pop song mixed with Broadway elements and gothic elements. They could've gotten away with not writing the 'There goes the sun' part and they didn't have to have those sweet harmonies but they did. And the animation when the shadow hands turn into shadow spiders is so cool.
Fun Fact - The designs of the appliances here were based on popular horror movies at the time. - Hanging Lamp is Dr. Frankenstein's assistant, Igor - Baby Carriage is Rosemary's Baby - Coffee Pot is a Dalek or a Jack-o-Lantern - Broken TV is meant to be the shark from Jaws - Pencil Sharpener is Norman Bates from Psycho - Fan is the Creature from the Black Lagoon - Lamp without a shade is supposed to be your classic gray alien - Waffle Iron is supposed to be your standard vampire - Casette Player is Henry from Eraserhead I'm forgetting the rest, but you get the idea.
This is my fave scene from the movie. It stuck with me enough that i started buying up old appliances for a dollar each at the thrift store and fixing them correctly so they wouldn't end up in a place like that. Also i had a major crush on the fan.
Legit one of my all-time favorite Disney movies. Highly underrated. I mean, this was the original Pixar movie. It had John Lasseter and Joe Ranft working on it and it was originally supposed to be the very first 3D-computer generated movie. That's right, before Toy Story, but Disney didn't approve of the idea and they decided to make it with Hyperion Studios. There's even a reference to A113 in it! Its the master's apartment!
Two things you gotta absorb here.
1. These appliances are basically Frankensteinian abominations to our heroes, body horror to the max, and they're singing about how they had to give in to the madness of their situation to avoid a complete psychological breakdown, because there's no escape from it.
2. And somehow, it's still not the darkest song in this movie.
Well of course it’s not the darkest. When one song is called “Worthless” and is about giving in to despair, any competition has its work cut out for it 🤣
I know what you mean that title still belongs to the song you're worthless
You're worthless...
At least these guys found some form of peace. In Worthless, all the cars are desperately trying to run away
@@plaidhatter1674 well, except for the last one that literally commits suicide
The scary part of all this is that the machines have in a way gone off the deep end and just accepted their fate. They even see it as a funny thing to ponder, their eventual dismemberment and/or their unavoidable demise. And the fact they have given up the idea of escaping to the point of preventing others from escaping is rather shudder-worthy.
Haydrion Slaughter Imagine Prisoners singing this song that would be so cool
HOW WAS THIS A KIDS MOVIE
Apparently it was originally intended for older kids. I mean. Think Coraline aged kids. Don Bluth said it right. You can show a kid anything so long as it has a happy ending. It's even a little healthy to scare them. To a reasonable degree.
Terry Pratchett called it the lobster pot effect.
Imagine this in a human experimentation lab, and the people that are singing have extra surgically attached body parts. And the guy who said "you should just hang around" actually uses a noose, but since of his extra limbs, or something, he can't die. And the machine with a can opener, razor and lamp, laughs about her extra parts and dies with a smile on her face(s)
Considering how quickly they all hid, they probably do this twice a week
They been practising
We pretty much did, yes.
Probably twice a day
rehearsal
🤣🤣🤣🤣
I always thought this movie would make a great stage musical
I'd kill for tickets to that production
I like to be in it if that was a production.
***** How would that be possible?
Oh, I'm sure there is a way.
THE MAN they made one for the Lion King. I could see this working out in some way.
It's funny that it took me until just now, age 24, that "It ain't home on the range" being sung by the oven is a pun, as it's itself a range, a combination stove and oven!
Same! It took a while!
I literally never got that until now.
Glad someone else finally noticed😂
2:33 best part. They sound amazing together. Especially Kirby's bass and Toaster hitting a higher note. Breathtaking
One of my favorite parts of the song
The most beautiful part of this song ❤
Sounds like a Father-Daughter duet.😏
Wasn’t it Blanky singing the higher note there? Not Toaster. Since Blanky was the one who sung “there goes the sun” and then the harmonizing is the same pitch. Must’ve been Blanky still.
I can only here Kirby and Blanket
"There goes the sun
Here comes the night
Somebody turn on the light.
Somebody tell me that fate has been kind."
That part makes me melt inside.
YOU CAN'T GO OUT, YOU ARE OUT OF YOUR MIND!!!!
Fave bit of the song.
Igarappappa mine is vacuum boi singing I’m getting outta here and this part
I concur
I’m all about “Oh I~ remember Frankenstein!
Shivers up my spine!
Whoa~!”
This whole song has been my favorite since I was a kid back in the 80s!
YOU HEAR THAT BOYS!? THEY WANT TO KNOW HOW TO *ESCAPE!*
GOD I love how that line is delivered.
esskaep
classic phil hartman
Why did I read this in his voice 😂
Can we just say that the voice acting for the main characters is absolutely tremendous?
you might say Kirby is GrrrrrrrrREAT
Who is watching this in 2022?? I am.
@@azia5051 yep, its a classic
I know, right?
@@azia5051 who wouldn’t
Don't hug me, I'm a toaster.
NOOo
XDDDDD
Luke M Rocks This song should be in a new Broadway Musical Movie it's totally Perfect for one
Oh jeez I just realized what you were referring to xD
i had a dhmis video on my recommendations when i saw this comment
As a child, this movie was sort of traumatizing. As an adult I can appreciate the dark themes and the creativity that was put into this. Even though there's a happy ending, we go through a lot before getting there and this movie serves children a big dose of reality despite centering around talking appliances. I will always love this.
This movie fucked me up as a kid, way more than any live-action horror movie
@@dentistdamsel1345 same here
@@britbeee32 @Nichole Talbot i wouldn't have it any other way. this movie is a fucking masterpiece. also, @Lindsey M greetings from all three of us in 2022 🥳
As messed up as it is, I think it's constructive for someone's psyche. Everyone is gonna have to deal with trauma eventually
"You will die" whoa, world shattering reality, any child no matter how dumb it is knows this, it's worse for the clever ones, no one wants his child to give up at life for some stupid movie.
I like how the fan doesn't require a cord to go up. He just doesn't give a fuck and just flys up denying the laws of gravity.
Lmao-
That is why Fan is my favourite character.
@@balloonboy5212so you're a fan?
It's like a helicoptor rotor.
I just wanna know why that dumb fan commands so much attention. Of all the characters in this song I always noticed that one, and here I am at the song on youtube and the second top comment is about that fan.
I don't why, but I have always loved the opening organ music. It gives me chills every time I hear it!
oHmega14 I agree!
For me, it's that first chorus: "Oh I~ Remember Frankenstein, shivers up my spine, Whoa~!"
Where is it from? I feel like I've heard it somewhere before.
@@George-Hawthorne I think it's the organ riff from the haunted mansion ride, but I'm not sure
@@TheVojvoda It is! When the crypt doors creak and the tombstones quake, ghosts come out for a swinging wake!
In a way, this is sort of like a prototype of Sid's room.
Plot twist its adult sids business.
I thought the same thing while watching this. I bet the minds behind Toy Story took huge inspiration from this movie.
@@jxxxmxxx391 Oh that's neat. Thanks for the information!
@@jxxxmxxx391 that totally explains it!
Fun fact, alot of the original Pixar team actually worked on this. They went on to form Pixar after this film
Good thing the humans on the other side of the door are deaf.
lmao!
Ahoyhoy ! ha! good one!
Bleachfanbk would be excellent at CinemaSins.
bleachfanbk those are some thick thick walls...
Ozma DaSilva It's possible that the other side of the door is soundproof
I haven't seen this film since I was kid in the 90's. I forgot how awesome this song was. One of the best musical numbers I've seen in a animated film.
Darkstar263 This song would be great in a Musical Movie :)
Before rewatching it, I legit didn't even remember there were musical numbers in this movie.
The songs are probably the most memorable parts of my childhood films. I don't even hestitate to return to some of the better ones.
I'm 25 and rewatched this movie yesterday. Still holds up 💜
@@NoriMori1992 same here. Except for the junkyard scene. For some reason, that was the only thing I remembered before rewatching it
*"somebody tell me that fate has been kind.."*
if you pay attention to toaster's voice it sounds beautiful
toasters voice is always beautiful what
@@epicyokai jjjjjtjjj
Ikr
That's the most replayed part of the song, and I'm willing to bet you pointing it out is why. 😆
I adore that part of the song simply because each character sounds so different and their range meshes well. Don’t really see that happening often in movies with multiple characters singing. Usually they’d all have a verse or two to themselves, not all song simultaneously. Haunting
Aw, Peter Lorre. Your legacy will never be forgotten as long as there are people who imitate your voice and appearance to an absurd degree.
This is actually scary. It's like being trapped in an insane asylum and trying to find a way to escape.
And the store owner is one of those terrible psychiatrists doing in humane tests on patients. (Not saying all are bad, but those stereotyped ones)
EmptyMan000 i looked this up, and turns out, thats exactly what the song means
More specifically, Bedlam Royal Hospital, which is the origin of all modern views of monstrous asylums, like Arkham Asylum from Batman.
Really?
more like an organ bank
Everyone's talking about how disturbing this is, but honestly can we talk about how good the song is?
Yeah, it's pretty cool!
Amazing that all these years later and this song is still just as lit as when it first hit.
Always get a chuckle out of the vacuum "This is weird" while the others are scared.
Amazing song ❤
This song was written by Van Dyke Parks, who was very influential in The Beach Boys' drug-fueled ventures in the late 1960s.
The moar you know... :D
This also is the second Disney song I know of that has a dark theme to it that Thurl Ravenscroft was a part of. The first being his portrayal of one of the busts that sing "Grim Grinning Ghosts" in the Haunted Mansion rides.
You can really tell it's his work during the bit at 2:33.
Thomas Marshall Lampy is my favorite
Pink elephants on Parade in Dumbo
Thomas Marshall Toaster is also my favorite too.
Fun fact for anyone who reads this: If you listen to the lyrics really closely, you can hear the characters mention several references to other real movies, namely "Frankenstein" and "The House of Wax" which are both classic B movie horror films. Such amazing detail in a great movie.
Funny. Made me laugh.
Since when is Frankenstein a "B-Movie?" That catagory usually goes to films like Basketcase, Killer Klowns from Outer Space, Braindead/Dead Alive, Bad Taste, Puppet Master, Evil Dead, Maniac Cop Etc...
@@extraspooky819 once upon a time- they were considered as such. In fact. Watching the originals you’ll understand how they even by today’s standards- especially by today’s standards- they are barely even that much.
They also mention Vincent Price and St. Pete, both of which produced a lot of B horror films.
Also the overhead lamp in this scene is a blatant reference to Peter Lorre, a German American actor who was known for playing villainous characters/henchmen.
You really wanna up the creepy factor? Think about the shop lamp for a minute, not only has he seen every freaky thing in this little hardware store of horrors, he was likely riding shotgun the whole time as the shopkeep brought him down for more light while was "creatively sourcing" parts.
Hence the Peter Lorre goodness, he was the good doctor Blackndeckerstein's Igor, and he not only went crazy from the horror, he started getting into it!
That's a great detail! thanks for mentioning it, makes sense actually.
The freaky part is, in spite of this being one of the scarier scenes in this film, the one that traumatized me was the part where they were at that waterfall, and Kirby started chewing on his cord, about to swallow it. Just the look on his face...
There's also so many scenes that as a kid, I would go "Aw, poor flower" or "Doesn't that psycho know they got feelings?!" But as an adult I realized, the sad flower had lost it's will to live, water would kill them all and not just in a nightmare, and the air conditioner didn't just "short out", up until "The Master" came back to his old house, he died in a way similar to an aneurism.
This is why adults in Peter Pan's world can't fly...kiss my childhood goodbye T_T
Me too!! The part where he was chewing his cord made me feel super freaked out
@@hammies. Same. I somehow had forgotten about toaster's clown nightmare as an adult, but I never forgot about the waterfall scene. Honestly, it was probably the first thing that came to mind whenever I thought about this movie.
The one that ALWAYS got me was "Worthless".
I didn't even know the lyrics, I just knew watching old cars basically face death was freaky and depressing
yeah, that air conditioner definitely had an aneurysm after having a nervous breakdown. This movie is so much darker than I remember it lol
...but the master did come back, and fixed the air conditioner.
Adults can do that too. You're the sum of your childhood in one place, it hasn't gone anywhere. c:
For those that don't get it, the hanging lamp is a hilarious Peter Lorre impression.
I’m wondering if the appliance modified to be can opener, lamp and shaver was an impression of Joan Rivers.
@@cadecannon159 has to be haha
@@cadecannon159 Yep, good catch, that was indeed meant to sound like her.
@@cadecannon159 It totally was.
Done by Phil Hartman, of all people. He also played the air conditioner, he was doing Jack Nicholson for that one.
1:18
Kirby: [normal voice] "I'm for getting out of here."
Everyone else: "NO NEED TO SHOUT, MY DEAR!"
Nooooooooooo
Most of the time newbies scream, but that vacuum cleaner didn't and we couldn't just improvice new lyrics (it was, of course, already determined what we'd sing at that part) in two seconds, you know...?
@@rangefromtblt4047 the vacuum cleaner name is kirby
@@playfulwalrus8417 Oh, okay. I didn't know them well. I've only seen them during that short time they were at the Parts Shop with me and the other appliances. Not before that and not thereafter either.
@@playfulwalrus8417 So yeah, we never introduced ourselves to each other properly and I never got to know their names.
3:17
...he can FLY???
why is he still there then?
It's a part store. Doesn't matter if they work or not.
Christina Fordham
i mean, if he can fly, why hasn't he flown away?
Jonathon Lawson Wouldn't you be suspicious if your plug-in fan just started flying away by itself?
mariofan1ish
true...but he could of flown out the window when the owner wasn't there
Jonathon Lawson The main cast needed that mobile generator to function, didn't they? Maybe the fan just can't go very long without a constant power source (kinda like real fans).
These appliances have clearly seen things that have scarred them for life, seeing how they've apparently lost their hold on reality.
I mean, we have a cycloptic coffee machine, a broken TV, a hanging lamp with a screw loose(Pun intended.), and a gramophone who had this spooky musical score prepared for some reason.
I think the coffee machine is naturally cycloptic
That does, in a way, make sense.
No prob!
+Lampi01 A _Brave Little Toaster_ fan fiction? Where did you post it? :D
One of the best animated musical sequences
Ahoyhoy! the best with lyri , the best instrumental is Romantic Flight from How to Train Your Dragon.
I agree with you
2/2 wolfs agree it is
That Peter Lorre tribute with that ceiling lamp was always my favorite
When I watched this film again for a few years ago, I literally listended to this song every day for months. It's one of the catchiest songs I've heard.
so you're saying that this is more catchy that worthless? i always thought that was the catchiest song in the movie, despite the dark theme of the lyrics
RS14988 Worthless is also catchy and I also listened to that alot, but It's a B-movie lasted longer for me.
"Worthless" is catchy, but as a song on its own those interludes with the Master and the TV ruin the experience.
+glassminimalist You can solve that by listening to the album version.
2:33 is just beautiful and gives me chills everytime.
Ikr
Just sit for a spell. You don't look so well.
"There goes the sun,
Here comes the night,
Somebody turn on the light~
Somebody tell me that fate has been kind."
"You can't go out you are out of your mind!"
luvkirby4ever By far my favorite part of the whole song
+Josh Layng here here
+luvkirby4ever Basically the appliances from the "repair" shop are trying to tell Toaster that hope wlll only get them hurt here. It's a prison metaphor, there IS no escape, or so they believe!
I didn't ask for an analysis dude I was just quoting my favorite part.
And for god's sake I know how to critically analyze things that's what high school/college level English classes are for. If prompted I would probably write an entire essay on the symbolic nature of this movie.
+luvkirby4ever I wasn't trying to be rude, sorry.
For those interested:
"Watch yourself, don't fall off of the shelf!
You must be the new boys in town!
What's that sound? Is someone movin' 'round?
Sit down for a spell, you don't look so well.
Wait a minute, I feel great, you just leave yourself to fate,
you might as well just hang around.
It's too late, we have to operate,
just try to relax, it's a house of wax!
Oh I....remember Frankenstein,
shivers up my spine, whoooahh!
I'm for getting out of here,
No need to shout, my dear, nooo!
Who will go, to that cellar down below?
Trouble is a bubblin' in the brew!
And while you're down there, Mr. Vincent Price, will give you good advice,
He'll know what to do, you just tell him boo!
He will put the voodoo in the stew, I'm telling you!
It's like a movie, it's a B-movie show!
It's like a movie, it's a B-movie show!
I mean, look at me, barf, barf, barf,
I'm a lamp, a can opener and a shaver,
Oh god, I'm a mish-mash!
This is weird, it's much worse than I feared,
I'll close my eyes and make it disappear.
This is strange! It ain't home on the range!
You just tell St. Pete, that you've got cold feet!
There goes the sun, here comes the night,
somebody turn on the light,
somebody tell me that fate has been kind,
you can't go out, you are out of your mind!
It's like a movie, it's a B-movie show!
It's like a movie, it's a B-movie show!
Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaahhhhhhh!!
Whoever typed this song 🎧 the person probably remembers the lyrics to the song. “Good for them” 👱🏻♀️👍🏻 I think 🤔 I remember seeing this Cartoon like a long time ago I think I saw it in my teen years I glad it’s on RUclips I like this song.
Who is Saint Pete in regards to this scene? I know who Vincent Price is but I’m not sure what the first pope has to do with horror movie references
Sgt. Xana, I 'm pretty sure it's referring to the junk shop owner Elmo St. Peters but I could be wrong
@@XANApwnsSaint Peter is a saint in Christian lore. He guards heaven's gate so souls see him once thry enter Heaven.
The only thing the ending needs is a whistle note.
I loved this sequence as a kid and I love coming back as an adult and actually understanding it. That's one of the fine arts of making a great kids movie-- it's something that's approachable by a child and can be appreciated on a whole other level as an adult.
Wish these guys could teach me their secret when it comes to shadow puppets.
Coral Roper me too how do they do it considering they don't have hands
Same here. How did they make those shadow bats for them to fly around without any well shadow hands?🤔
THIS MAY BE MY MOST FAVORITE COMMENT IN THIS ENTIRE COMMENT SECTION.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@@rangefromtblt4047 Thank you 😁
A lot of people seem to have been creeped-out by this...but it *CAPTIVATED* me when I was a child.
Then again I grew up to become a Horror Writer...
+Harry Krinkle I don't know why, but it oddly reminds me of some Conker's Bad Fur Day characters.
SAME. my mom tells me that i would beg her to let me watch this movie literally every day during my early childhood, sometimes more than once per day. i don’t know how that VHS tape survived being played so much. 😹 i was literally obsessed with it.
and now as an adult, i read horror fiction to help myself fall asleep. something might be wrong with me.. 😅
@@TheoWren Same.
This was always my favorite part of the entire movie for some reason
I loved horror as a kid. 🖤 Halloween was/is my favorite holiday. Loved scary movies (especially ones that were considered "too scary for kids") & would write scary short stories for fun.
2:43 damn toaster hitting that note
she’s gonna be hitting you next =)
I thought the soprano here was Blanket
@@charliem.1368 BRUH
But little toaster’s singing part with that quintet singing just chilling down my spine
Who cares about the toaster, did you hear the fan at the end?
"Did you hear dat boys? DEY WANT TO KNOW HOW TO ESECAPE! HU! HUHUHUH!"
BLoop BLop HUHUHUHUHUHUHUHUHUHU
BLoop BLop HUHUHUHUHUHUHUHUHU
+BLoop BLop HAHAHAHAAHAHAAHAHA!!! I don't get it...
+BLoop BLop I still don't get it!
You just have to laught like we do.
Like we were the other vilain whit him.
( Roleplaying ).
I'm 19 years old and I still find the beat and music of this song so catchy.
Me two
Ahoyhoy! me as well
***** Ahoyhoy! Me fifth
***** Ahoyhoy! Sideways elated mug ( smiley face ), nice!
***** Ahoyhoy! What does lol mean?
2:06 - 2:13 "I'm a can opener, a lamp, and a shaver... OMG; I'M A MISH-MASH"!!
No.... you're a fire hazard !
True
You're inspiration for Sid from Toy Story, not surprisingly since this was made by much of the same team.
The character literally kills themselves.
No she’s Joan Rivers
@@luisvera5245 Nah Lampy does the exact same thing with his cord at the beginning of the song.
I loved this movie so much when I was little. It was my absolute favourite. Never found it creepy. But I love how dark it is compared to every other disney movie ever. A true treasure.
cupcake is a special treat 🍰
It wasn't made by Disney. (Disney only bought the broadcast/distribution rights after the fact; they had no hand in producing it.)
cupcakewilleatu me too.
Disney did do The Black Cauldron (which was pretty killer imo). But yes, this movie is top-tier (kid-friendly) darkness.
Its Ralph Bakshi. He famously despised and hated Disney.
Sad that film history and context is lost over time. People think shrek was disney, but shrek is literally satirizing Disney. Not to mention dreamworks was created specifically to spite disney
This might be the coolest Disney song that nobody ever talks about.
This was not made by Disney. It was distributed by Hyperion and made by two relatively unknown studios.
I think Disney likes to think its theirs because the guys that made this eventually went on to start Pixar.
MrFirewolf18 Hahah, that is a possibility. Actually what's really sad about the disney publishing is that this movie premiered at Sundance to huge praise and applause. It was planned for a full theatrical release, but because of Disney deciding to acquire it for TV and basically putting it on the burner for it's dark themes, it only got released straight to VHS. Imagine how popular this movie could have been if it had been published by someone else. :( It's such an underrated movie as is...
a cult children's classic
apocolypseToreador they have it on DVD at FYE now and right on the case it says "Disney" in big letters above the title, so if they didn't make it, they at least own the rights to it
Holy hell, I forgot how much of an absolute banger this song is! ♥️🔥
The bass during the chorus is a thing of beauty.
That fan at the end is so badass!
true!!! so is this song though
A S C E N D
Fan is my favourite.
So nice revisiting this scene after so many years of this particular song being stuck in my head. Brave Little Toaster is such a hidden gem in my opinion.
absolutely. it’s my #1 favourite from early childhood.
The lamp is Phil Hartman doing a Peter Lorre impression.
Melissa Miller He did. Tim Stack did the desk lamp. Phil Hartman did the green one hanging from the ceiling.
Listening to the hanging lamp is how I learned to do a Peter Lorre impression (especially after realizing that Phil was doing a Peter Lorre impression). It makes me wonder if Phil would've voiced the Looney Tunes Peter Lorre if he had a chance, or this one minor villain in episode two of "The Tick" titled "The Tick vs. Chairface Chippendale" who looks and (almost) sounds exactly like Peter Lorre.
He was also the Air Conditioner from earlier in the film.
Chairface Chippendale was voiced by Tony Jay
Lol I figured this out after days of research so thanks for posting this for others
Such and underrated movie, and one of my absolute faves.
This movie was so creative. Especially their music. This brings me back so far. 😊
Loved this song as a kid, and still do as an adult. I especially love the harmony during the "There goes the sun, here comes the night. Somebody turn on the lights" part of the song. That's where Thurl Ravenscroft (Kirby) really shines as the bass! This song, Worthless and Cutting Edge are my favorite songs of the movie. Although I would have to say this song, and Cutting Edge are very underrated. Anyone can hear "Worthless" and immediately think of this movie, while "It's a B-Movie Show" and "Cutting Edge" are usually overlooked. Such a shame. I would say in terms of "creepy Disney songs", this one is more underrated than "Hellfire" from The Hunchback of Notre Dame.
Kirby sounds so good in the first song, the one that goes “Time flies by in the city of light”, his singing voice is so underrated
2:33 I really like that harmony XD
Tehwugginator Perfection and all sung by appliances, plus a blanket.
Five-part harmony!
You can't go out, you are out of your mind! Its like a movie, Its a B- movie show! Its like a movie, Its a B- Movie show!
My god I’m happy my older brother kept his vhs collection, otherwise I wouldn’t have found this amazing movie
I'm so glad I randomly walked in the library one time with my mom, we never borrowed video tapes, but this just drew my attention, I grabbed it and forever, it will be my most favorite animation movie (along with Cars, with which I grew up as well).
I probably would've found it eventually anyway (cuz it's sort of my thing to watch movies about inanimate objects as characters, don't ask me why, but it's my life-long obsession for some reason), but I'm immensely glad I've gotten the chance to have the movie in my childhood memories.
@@rangefromtblt4047 on the off chance you (or OP) haven't already seen them, I have to recommend checking out the two sequels!
I jammed out to this song as a kid
As a kid, I didn't know the lyrics to this song. Looking back on it all these years later, I realized one line of it that can be taken as infinitely darker outside of the context of the film: "You just tell St. Pete that you've got cold feet."
In the context of the film, they're referring to Elmo St. Peter and how they don't want to make made into amalgamations of what they used to be. Without the film's context, it could refer to St. Peter, the guy who supposedly waits at the gates of heaven, and it can turn into meaning being afraid to die.
Overall dark song, but I love it.
I always thought it meant that they'd lie to Elmo so he'd let them out. :)
"Just try to relax, it's the House of Wax,"
House of Wax was an old horror movie about a killer that covered his victims in wax and posed them as statues. He's basically saying they're in a killer's house.
Vincent Price also gets mentioned, he played the killer in House Of Wax.
I think the lamp said “wacks”, it just makes more sense
My favorite part is where the unplugged rotary fan flies up into the dark ceiling just the choir vocals reach their climax. Its so beautifully messed up
I loved this movie as a kid! But I think if I knew better, I would've have watched it so many times.
Now that I'm older and understand everything, I'm surprised I wasn't creeped out of my mind. I did feel uneasiness for some parts even back then, like when they met all the new appliances at the apartment, when they were taken by that repair guy that creates horrible contraptions, and then at the junkyard.
That ceiling lamp used to creep me out as a kid.
"Look at me! I mean really! Bawf bawf bawf!! I'm a canopenah, a lamp, and a shavah! Ughhohoho gaawd I'm a mishmosh!!" The accent always cracked me up as a kid, still does actually. XD
For all intents and purposes, Brave Little Toaster IS a Disney movie. It wasn't made at Disney studios though. It was made on a budget with a group of voice actors and comedians who had worked together before. It was debuted at Sundance film festival or something where Disney bought the rights to it.
Incidentally, a lot of the animators on this ended up founding Pixar or working for Disney anyway.
Pfisiar22 Disney helped in certain areas and bought the rights, but it's NOT a Disney movie.
The more you know. *Fuckin rainbows everwhere.*
Um, no, Disney had no part in actually making it; the fact they bought the rights after the fact doesn't make it in any way a "Disney movie."
It's a Disney movie legally, but not creatively. They just brought the rights, but what doesn't Disney buy nowadays? I know that USA has a preference for big companies and names, but I still think the fame and recognition should go to the creatives manually involved in this.
@@berserker3414 Not on Disney+
staying strong and watching in 2016!!! whose with me?!
this song is SO catchy!!!
hell yeah!! best song in the movie or the others.
Ahoyhoy! best instrumental ever! along with Romantic Flight from How to Train Your Dragon.
Ahoyhoy! me too!
Hells yeah bro! Ever since I was like nine I fell in love with this song and I don't think I'll ever grow out of it any time soon!
Nicolette H. Ahoyhoy! Like never. I think these instrumentals are the key to world peace. If angry folks would take two minutes to listen to Romantic Flight or Forbidden Friendship, there would be no war, no people in jail, no hurt, no heartache, just bliss and peace of soul and mind.
As you can see here, private Frank Bennedetto had a troubled past before enrolling in the homestarmy during the early 2000's
Eric Head heh nice
Nice upchuck, Bennedetto!
Eric Head Omg yes!!
I 1000% appreciate this comment. Thank you.
I'll be sure to come back to this comment next labor day
man...this movie scared me so bad when I was little...
Dynaimus The Creeper Momma same
i liked it allot. i don’t think i was scared at all watched it so much and still do
Poes.
It's creeped me but i loved it!
Well it wasn't actually meant to be a kids movie. The director said that in an interview.
Da more u kno.
This movie is a bit dark when you think about it.
Of course. Many scenes where even dubbed as being too frightening or having too frightening of concepts for young children. lmao I was nine and loved it anyways. It was based off a book actually, so I'd be curious to see the original story.
I watched it as a kid. Had no idea how screwed it was.
Watched it again as 27. Oh boy!
I know right first watched at 5, watched again at 19
That's what makes it a great film. ;)
understatement
Ahoyhoy! Phil Hartman was the greatest teal hanging lamp ! he just lit up the whole sound room with that voice!
GroenFan Phil Hartman was also going to voice Zapp from Futurama the guy who wants Leela as his girlfriend but she loves Fry.
He’s also the air conditioner.
And Jon Lovitz was the radio!
No age is too old to love this movie. It will never be "Worthless" to me.
RIP Phil Hartman
he’s that huge lamp that sounds like egor frankstines hump assistant
Which one is Hartman?
Joshua Orro Phil Hartman warned his wife to stop using those drugs but she didn't listen. He should've just left her to begin with.
Joshua Orro If Phil Hartman haven't been killed he would've gotten the chance to voice Zapp Brannigan in Futurama.
Grungus Khan Yeah it totally would.
My favorite part is Kirby watching the mish-mash character, which would basically be like looking at a human with other peoples limbs and other body parts writhing in their own self pity, and then just straight-faced says "This is weird" like it's just a slightly abnormal sequence of events
I just realized how much screen time that fan got during this song.
Yeah, that fan seems to be their icon or something.
I love how batshit insane they look in every scene they’re in lol
The Fan is my favourite.
Also the Fan looks like Kermit
That Fan and the Green Lap are the OG's of this Song!!
I never got the dark theme as a kid, but when I re-watched as an adult, I was like woah. I love how this film is so overlooked while Toy Story 3 is considered a masterpiece. Now dont get me wrong, I love both Brave Little Toaster and the Toy Storys, yet this film is much darker. Toys can last forever, appliances literally die and become "worthless" later on. So the concept here really is genius.
I don't know why, but I LOVE the animation on that tape recorder for the line "You can't go our you are out of your mind!".
That fan always gave me nightmares as a kid... I'm 19 now and it still wierds me out.
Dalton Shute lol your 22 now.
A Major Weeaboo 23 actually. Lol
@A Major Weeaboo turning 29 tomorrow. 🤣🤣🤣
Ahhh the memories
Is it bad i find the little fan dude adorable?
No =^)
+Ratchet-Mamma I find him terrifying. But I guess I can see how he could be adorable. If he weren't terrifying.
Lacrimosa no it is kinda funny how he flies like Rayman
I do too. i know he's supposed to be creepy but he just comes off as cute to me.
Lacrimosa I like the Broken TV
28 year old me is looking back on this thinking "wow look all the funny references and how clever the writing team is". 7 year old me is still traumatized by the idea of being locked in an insane asylum with a bunch of Frankenstein monsters who are so deformed and beyond hope that they relish in being torn apart and being put back together and they're doing everything they can to keep you there before their master returns so they can take you apart too so that you'll become one of them and join in the never ending dance of blissful torture. Hell, they're fuckin SINGING about it. I'm pretty sure one of them was holding a knife.
The Pencil Sharper looks like he was holding the knife cause he was a reference to Psycho
Dang, I feel like I've seen people like this. People who have consistently made such poor decisions in their lives, they try to drag others down to cripple the crippling loneliness.
An surprisingly scary movie taking place in an appliance prison where they rip them up for other peoples needs, and they are singing about horror movies, and the title (and some of the lyrics) are about a bad sequel to a horror movie
Paul Deddens Does this song have a deeper meaning that I'm not getting?
A Major Weeaboo Imagine prisoners singing this song it would be so cool and awesome :)
Lampi01 -
Jesus Christ, no one should ever go through that
Hope that place gets shut down for good
The Hanging Lamp is the creepiest out of the others but he's got the funniest voice ever. XD
It's Phil Hartman (Troy McClure from The Simpsons) doing a Peter Lorre impression. And I agree. Completely!
@@JavertRA
Cool
You see? You never know what he'll do next!
Hes so spontaneous.
He's my favorite character!!😂 That dude was so Creepy!!
This movie is an absolute masterpiece and the soundtrack is completely flawless.
no matter how many times i listen to this i can't help but hear the first line as "fuck yourself, dont fall off of the shelf"
I can't either now, not that that's a bad thing, but it really does sound like that
+Multi lol it does kinda sound like it
+Multi thanks!!! now thats all i hear
+Multi that;s what I heard the first time
+Multi ME TOO!!
The voice of the green lamp (Peter Lorre-ish) is performed by the late, great Phil Hartman (SNL, Simpsons, News Radio).
The late Thurl Ravenscroft voiced the vacuum. He's also famous for voicing Tony the Tiger and singing "You're A Mean One, Mr. Grinch" .
Deanna Oliver, who is a Groundlings alumni, voiced the Toaster.
Actor and SNL alumni Jon Lovitz voiced the radio.
Joe Ranft (RIP) and John Lasseter of Pixar had a hand in making this movie. Some of the panning shots animated were experimented by early early Pixar when they did test animation for "Where the Wild Things Are" .
I've never seen this movie before, but 2:33-2:49 really gives me chills. I can only imagine what it must have been like to watch this as a kid.
"Somebody tell me that fate has been kind," well, I wasn't planning on sleeping tonight anyway.
H E ' S S O S P O N T A N I O U S .
W-well... well... well... Well how do we escape?
Did you hear that boys? They want to know how to *e s c a p e!*
*HEH-* HEHEHEHEHEHEHEEHEHE-
*Cue gramophone horror music*
@Jigglypuff The pokémon You must be the new boys in town?
@@TonyTechnic What's that sound? Is someone movin' 'round?
I like how the record player had the most terrifying horror soundtrack ready to play at a moments notice
I love that squeaky laughter at the beginning. It's creepy, but also kind of cute at the same time.
This cartoon is much better and deeper than i remember.... freaking excellent 👌👌. The level of issues it deals with....wow.
Listening to this song on the last day of September 2023. It just showed up in my recommendations, I liked the Worthless song a long time ago but haven't watched it in a long time.
Hearing this song again, fucking hell it's phenomenal, the dark imagery, the dark undertones of the lyrics, I watched this movie a lot as a kid but never really appreciated how great the songs were. I love the genius of calling the song it's a B movie and having it be old horror movie themed.
If there's one thing I will forever enjoy about RUclips it's that it's helped keep memories like these around. Suddenly I'm a kid again, watching this on TV and later watching either Homeword Bound 1 or 2. Maybe I'm playing a SNES game I rented. Sometimes or at least I'd wager a lot of times, people just desperately want to remember far better times and videos like these help provide just a momentary gateway.
ESCEYPE
I always thought the Air Horn said "Escape,Escape! WOOT WOOT WOOT!"
mysterioso2006 v
mysterioso200
mysterioso2006 *YA HEAR DAT BOYZ*
Hilda Berg This song should totally be in a new Musical Movie it's perfect for a new Musical Movie like Broadway
I LOVE HOW THIS SONG IS BEING LISTENED TO SO MUCH STILL. I left my last comment 8 months ago and SO MANY comments have been placed after that! *That's amazing!* 🎉❤
I see it still ranging lol
@@ANGRYBEEDRILL ✨ You know it, haha. 👉😎👉
Through all my years the voices of the radio left and vacuum I can remember clear as day I don't know why
For some reason The Little Toaster has always stayed in mind. Guess it was one of my favs as a little kid as dark and messed up as it can be lol. It's a great film and they surely don't make them like this anymore.
I like how the hanging lamp is a parody of Peter Lorre
This may just be the most badass Disney movie ever made.
1000000%
Brings back old memories. Such good times.
god, I love that 1:10 OOOOH IIIIII remember frankenstein!.." Damnit, too catchy!
+Lampi01 That actually makes sense, I can hear and see the similarity.
@Lampi01 - tbh this is better than thriller
Oh man, this is such a great example of how this movie is way better than it has any right to be. This is a highly credible 80s pop song mixed with Broadway elements and gothic elements. They could've gotten away with not writing the 'There goes the sun' part and they didn't have to have those sweet harmonies but they did. And the animation when the shadow hands turn into shadow spiders is so cool.
Also I would love to see a live performance of this
Fun Fact - The designs of the appliances here were based on popular horror movies at the time.
- Hanging Lamp is Dr. Frankenstein's assistant, Igor
- Baby Carriage is Rosemary's Baby
- Coffee Pot is a Dalek or a Jack-o-Lantern
- Broken TV is meant to be the shark from Jaws
- Pencil Sharpener is Norman Bates from Psycho
- Fan is the Creature from the Black Lagoon
- Lamp without a shade is supposed to be your classic gray alien
- Waffle Iron is supposed to be your standard vampire
- Casette Player is Henry from Eraserhead
I'm forgetting the rest, but you get the idea.
I thought Hanging Lamp was just your run-off the mill Peter Lorre impression?
I never thought of that!
I thought the hanging lamp reminded me of Igor!
Im assuming Mismash is Frankenstein
Very good observation. 👍👍
This film needs a remaster Fathom Events re-release I loved this as a kid when i would rent this on video cassette
This is my fave scene from the movie. It stuck with me enough that i started buying up old appliances for a dollar each at the thrift store and fixing them correctly so they wouldn't end up in a place like that.
Also i had a major crush on the fan.
Hahahaha, a crush on the fan? That's amazing! 😂😂😂😂
If it makes you feel any better I had a crush on Kirby- BFBFNSNDN 😂😂😭😭
@@Artfullixi feel pretty good about it actually, thanks. Kirby's a good choice too tbh, a voice of reason you can rely on.
@@rangefromtblt4047yeah! They've all got such wacky fun vibes but the fan just, gosh, you know what i mean?
Legit one of my all-time favorite Disney movies. Highly underrated. I mean, this was the original Pixar movie. It had John Lasseter and Joe Ranft working on it and it was originally supposed to be the very first 3D-computer generated movie. That's right, before Toy Story, but Disney didn't approve of the idea and they decided to make it with Hyperion Studios. There's even a reference to A113 in it! Its the master's apartment!
Wasn't A113 also used in Wall-E, or am I remembering things wrong?