Mary, let me just say, your reaction to this is why I enjoyed your content for quite some time because you’re so easily in sync with whatever movies or TV shows that you decide to watch for all of us. Interestingly, I was a bit reluctant to see this , given how close the sequel is from releasing but I figured “What the hell? For old time sake.” Your knowledge of American geography is very good, which is more than I can from most people. I had a co-worker who moved to California by car, just like Riley’s family. However, unlike them, I’m from Florida and that is literally the other side of the country where it touches the Atlantic instead of the Pacific. It took more than a week for her to arrive there when it takes just a couple of hours by plane. Needless to say, keep on sharing your thoughts and emotions because that is what makes us human. Without it, we’re simply brain dead beings with an insane amount of apathy.
"Sadness is like the villain of this movie". It never gets old when people perceive sadness as the antagonist, only to come to the realization that joy is the one screwing everything up.
fr it was literally joy's fault that the core memories fell out. Core memories can be sad too like death of a loved one, a bad break up etc. and she didn't let the core memory settle
Well, Nostalgia actually does appear in Inside Out 2 for a singular scene. The idea of Nostalgia being an actual emotion isn't as good as the blue and yellow orbs, but it does now make canonical sense
This movie contains one of the best depictions of depression ever put on film: putting on a happy front to mask and deny your true feelings until they're buried so deep that you feel nothing at all but numbness. It also shows how animation can be used to not just be amusing, but to portray things that live action-films can't.
By doing her job? Fear, sadness, anger and disgust are necessary emotions, but they make everything in your life HARDER and put off people around you. Nobody WANTS to deal with those emotions and they are CONTAGIOUS or usually counter- productive to getting essential tasks accomplished. Integrating your emotions is really extremely difficult, and other people (close loved ones SOMETIMES excepted) don't want to deal with your periods of dealing with that. And shaming or trying to FORCE them to do so only makes them move further away.
@@kenle2 Joy does her job, but toxic positivity and repressing your feeling is bad for your health. Ignoring your problem is not a sane way to deal with life. That's why Lion King was right years ago with Hakuna Matata not being the answer to Simba's problem.
@@kenle2but bottling them up and not allowing yourself to feel them isn’t healthy. The whole reason sadness kept touching memories was cuz joy wasn’t letting her do HER job.
@@kenle2 Well if people don't want to deal with your periods of dealing with that, do you think it's healthy to deny how you feel ? There are ways of expressing emotions without projecting them on other people, especially with all the tools we have at our disposal nowadays. Emotions only make life harder when you don't want to accept them and deal with them. Emotions are only counter-productive when you're denying them. If you accept them and learn to channel them, they can be VERY productive.
@@TheLexoDex But all these emotions are Riley, Riley is unhealthily believing she *should* bottle up her emotions because of things her parents say like "just be our happy girl". Joy isn't really an antagonist or anything it's a metaphor for what's going on in Riley's head.
A lot of people tend to stick with Joy and shoo Sadness away. What they don't realize, is that overt Joy is a Joy for the sake of it - the most toxic kind. When mom says 'let's keep a smile', it's not because it's a nice thing to do. It's a *_right_* thing at that point, a necessity to appear joyful, despite not feeling it. It's only in the end you realize that, sometimes, Joy *_has to_* take a back seat.
Another thing I love with this film (besides showing that we need sadness and not just toxic positivity), is that it NAILED depression- it’s not sadness, it’s just a… void. No happiness, no sadness, not having any control over what limited emotions you do have.
“She’s getting brain damage and severe memory loss” yup, the realest depiction of depression that I’ve ever seen. A lot of people dismiss depression as just being sad but don’t take into account that it alters your brain chemistry and can give you memory loss.
I like to think of the "emotions" in this movie as basic versions of more complex emotions we develop as we age. Joy is also Optimism, Anger is Assertiveness, Sadness is Empathy, Fear is Caution, and Disgust is Skepticism. For me it explains why Mom had Sadness at the helm in her mind, she is more empathetic. Dad had Anger, likely being more aggressive and assertive helped him in his career. It makes sense to me.
Its funny how virtually everyone seems to think Sadness is the cause of the troubles, while she is actually just the reaction to whats going on, and the cause for everything going down is because she is not allowed to do her job.
Lewis Black as Anger was pretty much spot-on casting. His stand-up routines are often dressed in a sort of over-the-top angry tone. And he has NO problem swearing, so giving him "access to the entire swear word" panel is pretty genius.
I always wince when I see the mother talking about "If we can both be happy for him..." - it's part of what puts so much pressure on Riley, trying not to be sad even though that is what she is truly feeling
@@anthonylopez8682 Because there is no true 'villian'. There were mistakes, and there was conflict, but none of it was because someone was 'evil'. Joy wanted the best for Riley. She did. Did she go about it the right way? Absolutely NOT. Her inability to see outside her narrow scope resulted in a great many problems. First, she took complete control...there was no consensus. There was her in charge, leaving some things to others to deal with that she didn't want...kinda like a child would do. Second, she discounted Sadness and her existence. All Joy could do was think about being positive...which was her wheelhouse. She only could see that...nothing else. If she'd ever read the manual, she might have known, but I suspect she ignored anything that wasn't about being positive. Worst part was she was doing this from a genuine desire to help Riley. She really was. However, since she'd never really worked with the other emotions, they had no experience running things. Look at the parents. Their emotions worked together and collaborated. Sure, the dad's anger was in charge, but he was measured and understood his limits. He didn't fly off the handle. He was a guy looking out for his family under challenging circumstances. The mom? Empathetic all the way. Sadness was the lead there, as she was the most insightful of the three. Watching for cues from the others, being the heart of the family. They had it together due to life experiences, and Riley (and Joy) have not yet come to that crossroad. They were still growing and learning. So there wasn't a villain...but there were stakes and conflict. An opportunity for growth.
None of them are villains, both of them have good intentions for Riley, even when Joy was wrong. Why do people find weird that a character has flaws? Joy IS THE PROTAGONIST, she's supposed to learn from her mistakes and change, and she does. It's basic storytelling
@@anthonylopez8682 Well... he was just doing what he thought was right. Anger is a strong emotion, and he doesn't work well as a leader or to take rational decisions, just in small doses (unless is well developed, as Riley's dad Anger)
This is a kids' movie, but there are some adults who could learn from it. Toxic positivity can be really destructive. The first time I saw Inside Out, when the mom told Riley it would be a big help if they would keep smiling, I thought to myself, "That's not a good thing to do to a kid." A child should not be responsible for the emotional well-being of a parent. And as we see as the story progresses, keeping negative feelings bottled up can be really harmful. The broccoli pizza is an inside joke (an Inside Out joke?). Pixar headquarters are in Emeryville, California, not far from Berkeley. There's a pizza place in Berkeley called Cheese Board Pizza Collective that's connected to a cheese shop. They have a changing menu, but they make only one type of pizza every day, and it's always vegetarian. A lot of Pixar movies feature landmarks near their HQ.
As someone who constantly fights with depression the visualization of violently shutting down from the world and not being able to feel the slightest emotion is completely relatable and scary accurate.
I love that there are no perfect characters. Mom puts a burden on Riley to stay happy and have no emotional needs. Dad ignores her at dinner, then punishes her for expressing frustration. Riley steals from her parents and risks her well-being. This family clearly loves each other, and it is not contingent on perfection.
One of my favorite movies 😃 but there's always that one part with Bing Bong 🥺 " go save Riley take her to the moon for me" 😭 breaks me Everytime. another great reaction Mary 🙌🏽
When they're tossing memories, they're not just getting rid of stuff she doesn't need. They're getting rid of stuff that was associated with the island that was just destroyed. And for the record, if at any point you've ever said, "I'm not a kid anymore.", that's how you know YOUR goofball island has been destroyed.
This is definitely one of Pixar’s best animated films ever made and I’m so excited for the sequel. Seeing Bing Bong sacrifice himself for Joy to make it up top gets me every time. RIP Bing Bong. 😢
Genuinely one of the most soul crushing scenes ever made and it's wild that you can only truly appreciate it as an adult, which ironically makes you feel worse
@@MaryCherryOfficial yeah I know some people like that, and I’ve had times going into a cinema really tired and ended up sleeping for 20mins or so, regardless of the quality. It’s all good Mary, we still love ya! (And it means we get more reactions from you!)
I'm a truck driver who used to do long haul. 4 days for that trip is actually a slight underestimation, especially depending on the season. Not the kind of trip a preteen can make without encountering obstacles, some of them dangerous.
there is a lot of good nuance to the story here. i like how, initially, we are thinking that Sadness is synonymous with depression, but sadness is actually a coping mechanism and key in catharsis. as the movie goes on it reveals, bit by bit, the loss of access to emotions is a more accurate experience of depression. i can personally say that i cannot think of a better initial treatment for depression than sadness.
This film is a really great look at the concept of toxic positivity, the need to make everything "happy". Cinema Therapy here on YT does a great breakdown of it.
Something I did not notice until I watched it before the sequel: Sadness said was compelled to get involved. Riley was sad the entire time and needed Sadness to steer.
Sadness can’t stop touching the memories because RILEY is SAD! Even when they are outside of headquarters Hahaha I’m not sure every reactor get this haha love the reaction by the way, but joy is the villain trying to suppress sadness. Sadness is just doing her job. Those memories down low were prob Minnesota related.
My 6 year old was having a melt down yesterday. I got her to calm down and laugh by telling her stop being angry, become joy, and take a trip to goofball Island. Can't believe it actually worked.
I can really relate to Riley. I had to move away from my best friends when I graduated elementary school and I still think about them❤ I miss them so much, it’s important to not bottle up your emotions. It’s good to cry every once in a while. I remember seeing this movie in theaters when it first came out! Me and my sister got disgust and joy and sadness plushies. This film means a lot to me, it’s so good!💗💖 thank you so much for watching this masterpiece! I love your reaction!🥹
I think this movie hits deeply if you've experienced loss. For the lucky ones in life childhood, and parenting and family when children are still young, is a golden, magical time that, once it has ended, can never return. I know as a parent of two daughters, now long past childhood, I would give anything to go back and re-live those days again with them. It's the hard reality of the human experience that life moves on, things change, and sooner or later, we all experience the loss of those and those things that matter most to us.
36:08 Bing Bong brought back memories of the Jennifer Walters' scene in 'She Hulk', when Bruce is trying to figure out her threshold for stress, Jen mentions Bing Bong... "Oh put on a Pixar movie"... "When Bing Bong jumps out of the wagon in Inside Out..." 😥
This movie just hits hard showing how kids are at that age when they experience new things and can't cope with it. I can't wait to see the second one where new emotions appear.
This movie is INCREDIBLE with color theory. Riley: striped shirt as they're moving with all colors on them to show theyre in harmony, or so it seems. yellow jacket on the first day of school because she's still young enough to be excited. Striped shirt sans blue and yellow at the dinner table because all of her emotions are fighting for control with joy and sadness gone. Black jacket because she's emotionally shutting down. Emotions: joy has blue hair, backing up the theory joy and sadness go hand in hand. Disgust has a purple ascot, suggesting disgust is mainly motivated by what scares us. Anger is wearing a red tie showing how when were angry, we can't see, hear, or feel anything else. Think, "seeing red". Fearvitself is a purple, a combination of red and blue, or in this case, a combination of Anger and sadness. And finally Sadness is wearing a white turtleneck as a combination of all the emotions, like how all light is combined to make white light.
I just saw this weeks ago so I can watch 2 with fam. I got invested in the invisible friend and I don't even know how those work. 😭😂 Childhood was trauma (poverty and abuse) so I'm good. Lol but I still sympathize with the people like Riley.
My favourite Pixar movie, and a brilliant film in general. It really hits the right balance of laughing hysterically and crying your eyes out (especially Bing Bong).
13:25 Ah jeez, don't remind me of that episode of _The Buzz on Maggie._ "Tonight was supposed to be *our night,* but it's been the "Rayna & Tammy" show all over again!"
Thank you for sharing some of your vulnerability with us, I cried at Bingbong's sacrifice too. This movie was SUCH a brilliant way of showing how our minds work. I LOVE good animation projects like this, it's nice to know you can sometimes appreciate them too. Again, thanks for sharing
It always paffles me that people react to sadness like she was an antagonist and don´t realize that the emotions arent controlling riley, emotions just...are there and then you react. Sadness even says she doesnt know why she is acting this way.
6:35 Joy doesn’t understand that sadness is needed. Like when Joy was talking about the rain and sadness mentioned about the bad parts. Joy doesn’t allow Riley to feel sad when she needs to. 9:12 I’ve always seen Joy as the bad one cause she didn’t work with the other emotions. She bossed them around and didn’t allow Riley to feel sad when the situation suited it. I like how they changed Joy at the end to realize how important all emotions are and how they need to work together. 13:59 a show that has a funny episode about imaginary friends is M*A*S*H and the episode is called Tuttle. If you watch it pay attention to Radar’s imaginary friend. 17:02 it’s about a 3 day ride maybe 4 depending on speed, traffic and how many stops you take. 18:06 I like how you’re changing your view on Joy and sadness from the beginning of the video.
As someone who personally lives in Minnesota, yes, it is a long ways away from California. Minnesota is almost literally in the middle of the United States right on the Canadian border. To put it into a distance that you would be more familiar with, from where I am in Minnesota, to San Francisco, is roughly about the same distance as Sydney is to Cairns.
There was a meme summarizing Pixar movies around the time this movie came out: "What if toys had feelings? What if cars had feelings? What if Scotland had feelings?" And so on, ending with "What if FEELINGS had feelings?"
God this is a great movie. Can't believe its been nine years. So much has happened since then. I was turning 24 that summer and now I'm gonna be 33 this summer. I look forward to seeing the sequel this weekend.
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I would love to see your reaction to the second inside out 2 movie
Mary, let me just say, your reaction to this is why I enjoyed your content for quite some time because you’re so easily in sync with whatever movies or TV shows that you decide to watch for all of us. Interestingly, I was a bit reluctant to see this , given how close the sequel is from releasing but I figured “What the hell? For old time sake.” Your knowledge of American geography is very good, which is more than I can from most people. I had a co-worker who moved to California by car, just like Riley’s family. However, unlike them, I’m from Florida and that is literally the other side of the country where it touches the Atlantic instead of the Pacific. It took more than a week for her to arrive there when it takes just a couple of hours by plane. Needless to say, keep on sharing your thoughts and emotions because that is what makes us human. Without it, we’re simply brain dead beings with an insane amount of apathy.
Big fan of your
@@Hero-g7g yes I am
2:42 It really is. We are driven by our hormones.
"Sadness is like the villain of this movie". It never gets old when people perceive sadness as the antagonist, only to come to the realization that joy is the one screwing everything up.
Exactly! Sadness is my favorite emotion character
fr it was literally joy's fault that the core memories fell out. Core memories can be sad too like death of a loved one, a bad break up etc. and she didn't let the core memory settle
Don't look at me; I figured it out.
Yeah. But, Anger also has some blame when you think about it.
I love how Sadness touching happy memories and mixing them with sadness (the yellow and blue ones) is basically nostalgia.
So true
Well, Nostalgia actually does appear in Inside Out 2 for a singular scene. The idea of Nostalgia being an actual emotion isn't as good as the blue and yellow orbs, but it does now make canonical sense
I took the yellow and blue ones to be "bittersweet" because it's happy but it's sad and they exist together but separately in the same moment.
@@sarahobah bittersweet and nostalgia aren’t so different are they?
@@Etticos. I think they're quite different, yes.
Although simplified, the console shutting down is a perfect example of depression. You just don't feel anything and aren't in control
“Take her to the moon for me” makes me ugly cry every time I watch this movie. RIP Bing Bong😭
Richard Kind, the actor playing BingBong, was crying for real when he recorded the scene, you can hear it in his voice.
This movie contains one of the best depictions of depression ever put on film: putting on a happy front to mask and deny your true feelings until they're buried so deep that you feel nothing at all but numbness. It also shows how animation can be used to not just be amusing, but to portray things that live action-films can't.
When you realizew that Joy is really the one causing all the problems by trying to suppress all the other emotions.
By doing her job?
Fear, sadness, anger and disgust are necessary emotions, but they make everything in your life HARDER and put off people around you.
Nobody WANTS to deal with those emotions and they are CONTAGIOUS or usually counter- productive to getting essential tasks accomplished.
Integrating your emotions is really extremely difficult, and other people (close loved ones SOMETIMES excepted) don't want to deal with your periods of dealing with that. And shaming or trying to FORCE them to do so only makes them move further away.
@@kenle2 Joy does her job, but toxic positivity and repressing your feeling is bad for your health. Ignoring your problem is not a sane way to deal with life. That's why Lion King was right years ago with Hakuna Matata not being the answer to Simba's problem.
@@kenle2but bottling them up and not allowing yourself to feel them isn’t healthy. The whole reason sadness kept touching memories was cuz joy wasn’t letting her do HER job.
@@kenle2 Well if people don't want to deal with your periods of dealing with that, do you think it's healthy to deny how you feel ? There are ways of expressing emotions without projecting them on other people, especially with all the tools we have at our disposal nowadays. Emotions only make life harder when you don't want to accept them and deal with them. Emotions are only counter-productive when you're denying them. If you accept them and learn to channel them, they can be VERY productive.
@@TheLexoDex But all these emotions are Riley, Riley is unhealthily believing she *should* bottle up her emotions because of things her parents say like "just be our happy girl". Joy isn't really an antagonist or anything it's a metaphor for what's going on in Riley's head.
A lot of people tend to stick with Joy and shoo Sadness away. What they don't realize, is that overt Joy is a Joy for the sake of it - the most toxic kind. When mom says 'let's keep a smile', it's not because it's a nice thing to do. It's a *_right_* thing at that point, a necessity to appear joyful, despite not feeling it. It's only in the end you realize that, sometimes, Joy *_has to_* take a back seat.
Another thing I love with this film (besides showing that we need sadness and not just toxic positivity), is that it NAILED depression- it’s not sadness, it’s just a… void. No happiness, no sadness, not having any control over what limited emotions you do have.
“She’s getting brain damage and severe memory loss” yup, the realest depiction of depression that I’ve ever seen. A lot of people dismiss depression as just being sad but don’t take into account that it alters your brain chemistry and can give you memory loss.
Yet you forget everything except the things that make you sad.
The Charlie Chaplin movie LIMELIGHT is another powerful depiction too.
Depression isn't even sadness. It's a void where emotion should be
@@AllanTidgwell When the console shuts down and Fear says "guys, we cant make Riley feel anything"
Yep
I quote Sadness's "slow down and obsess over the weight of life's problems" probably too much haha
Fun fact: Some countries changed Riley’s disgust for broccoli to green peppers as those were their respective children’s hated veggies.
I relate more to that. Bell peppers are gross and make you burp them up all day, but I like broccoli.
for greens, I like spinach better
Oque eu faço com essa informação?
The Bing Bong sacrifice is one of the most emotional moments in cinema ever.
NãoKKKK
I like to think of the "emotions" in this movie as basic versions of more complex emotions we develop as we age. Joy is also Optimism, Anger is Assertiveness, Sadness is Empathy, Fear is Caution, and Disgust is Skepticism. For me it explains why Mom had Sadness at the helm in her mind, she is more empathetic. Dad had Anger, likely being more aggressive and assertive helped him in his career. It makes sense to me.
No that doesn't make sense to you.
The "what the-- THIS AGAIN??" from anger was so perfectly delivered lmao
Its funny how virtually everyone seems to think Sadness is the cause of the troubles, while she is actually just the reaction to whats going on, and the cause for everything going down is because she is not allowed to do her job.
Lewis Black as Anger was pretty much spot-on casting. His stand-up routines are often dressed in a sort of over-the-top angry tone. And he has NO problem swearing, so giving him "access to the entire swear word" panel is pretty genius.
I always wince when I see the mother talking about "If we can both be happy for him..." - it's part of what puts so much pressure on Riley, trying not to be sad even though that is what she is truly feeling
Sadness isn't the villian, Joy is. Sometimes you need a good cry.
i think villain is a strong word, but yes, her excessive positivity did more harm to Riley than good
What about anger he's the one who made Riley push everybody away and caused all the islands to collapse.
@@anthonylopez8682 Because there is no true 'villian'. There were mistakes, and there was conflict, but none of it was because someone was 'evil'. Joy wanted the best for Riley. She did. Did she go about it the right way? Absolutely NOT. Her inability to see outside her narrow scope resulted in a great many problems. First, she took complete control...there was no consensus. There was her in charge, leaving some things to others to deal with that she didn't want...kinda like a child would do. Second, she discounted Sadness and her existence. All Joy could do was think about being positive...which was her wheelhouse. She only could see that...nothing else. If she'd ever read the manual, she might have known, but I suspect she ignored anything that wasn't about being positive. Worst part was she was doing this from a genuine desire to help Riley. She really was.
However, since she'd never really worked with the other emotions, they had no experience running things. Look at the parents. Their emotions worked together and collaborated. Sure, the dad's anger was in charge, but he was measured and understood his limits. He didn't fly off the handle. He was a guy looking out for his family under challenging circumstances. The mom? Empathetic all the way. Sadness was the lead there, as she was the most insightful of the three. Watching for cues from the others, being the heart of the family. They had it together due to life experiences, and Riley (and Joy) have not yet come to that crossroad. They were still growing and learning. So there wasn't a villain...but there were stakes and conflict. An opportunity for growth.
None of them are villains, both of them have good intentions for Riley, even when Joy was wrong. Why do people find weird that a character has flaws? Joy IS THE PROTAGONIST, she's supposed to learn from her mistakes and change, and she does. It's basic storytelling
@@anthonylopez8682 Well... he was just doing what he thought was right. Anger is a strong emotion, and he doesn't work well as a leader or to take rational decisions, just in small doses (unless is well developed, as Riley's dad Anger)
I find the message of this movie so deep! We need sadness in our lives so that we can actually make bonds and have happiness!
This is a kids' movie, but there are some adults who could learn from it. Toxic positivity can be really destructive.
The first time I saw Inside Out, when the mom told Riley it would be a big help if they would keep smiling, I thought to myself, "That's not a good thing to do to a kid." A child should not be responsible for the emotional well-being of a parent. And as we see as the story progresses, keeping negative feelings bottled up can be really harmful.
The broccoli pizza is an inside joke (an Inside Out joke?). Pixar headquarters are in Emeryville, California, not far from Berkeley. There's a pizza place in Berkeley called Cheese Board Pizza Collective that's connected to a cheese shop. They have a changing menu, but they make only one type of pizza every day, and it's always vegetarian. A lot of Pixar movies feature landmarks near their HQ.
That's the worst pizza place I've ever heard of.
I cant see how this movie made for kids, i mean maybe visually but the whole context? Nah pretty sure this is for adults too
Disney Pixar
When you're a dad who has moved a lot in his life, and his kids have too, this movie hits my father-heart. I tear up too.
As someone who constantly fights with depression the visualization of violently shutting down from the world and not being able to feel the slightest emotion is completely relatable and scary accurate.
"Take her to the moon for me..." has always resonated with me
I love that there are no perfect characters. Mom puts a burden on Riley to stay happy and have no emotional needs. Dad ignores her at dinner, then punishes her for expressing frustration. Riley steals from her parents and risks her well-being. This family clearly loves each other, and it is not contingent on perfection.
One of my favorite movies 😃 but there's always that one part with Bing Bong 🥺 " go save Riley take her to the moon for me" 😭 breaks me Everytime.
another great reaction Mary 🙌🏽
"I hate crying in public..." - proceeds to cry in a globally available public video. Poor Mary. This is a great movie.
Nothing, like a good cry before going to sleep. This movie always brings tears.
When they're tossing memories, they're not just getting rid of stuff she doesn't need. They're getting rid of stuff that was associated with the island that was just destroyed.
And for the record, if at any point you've ever said, "I'm not a kid anymore.", that's how you know YOUR goofball island has been destroyed.
But there are some memories. We truly don't need anymore, but the important ones never get forgotten.
The control panel truning black and Fear saying we can't make feel anything was a good representation of depression.
This is definitely one of Pixar’s best animated films ever made and I’m so excited for the sequel. Seeing Bing Bong sacrifice himself for Joy to make it up top gets me every time. RIP Bing Bong. 😢
Me too.
Disney and Pixar
@@данЫчреакции Moreso Pixar than Disney though.
Same.
This movie truly is another win for Pixar. It’s apparently so good, it even got a sequel.
Yeah almost a decade later...
Almost like the incredibles
@@IDiggPattyMayonnaisefor Pixar that's normal
@@IDiggPattyMayonnaiseIncredibles 2 had to wait even longer. I'd rather it done right over done right away 🤷🏾♀️...
Just watched inside out 2. Pixar is back baby!!!! They absolutely nailed the sequel!
But she is gay
What Mary said on 29:42 was something I was Not Expecting, especially with the Clip of Glen Quagmire 😵💫
Fun fact: originally they wanted more than 20 different emotions but the idea was cancelled because that's too much
OR... they saved it for part 2 😉
@@mshippy19 and part 2 will be a mess considering thatr we're in a middle of the crossroads between 2 future. bad future with another crossroads in it
A lot of emotions can be mixed in with other emotions too
💛💚❤️💙💜 chain
My mother would never have made it through this movie.
💛💚❤️💙💜
💛💚❤️💙💜
💛💚❤️💙💜
I like that part 29:41, but i guess it's just Quagmire in me that like it🤭🤭🤭🤭. It really shock me when you said that....
R.I.P. Bing Bong
Genuinely one of the most soul crushing scenes ever made and it's wild that you can only truly appreciate it as an adult, which ironically makes you feel worse
Yes. His complete loyalty and dedication to Riley's happiness and dreams and his willingness to sacrifice everything for her is deeply moving.
Sadness cannot control her actions as human emotions are uncontrollable.
In about 5 years, Mary can re-watch every film she's ever reacted to again for the first time, given how her memory is 😅
Goldfish memory
Tbf movies at the cinemas is not ideal. No subtitles, snacks and drinks and toilet breaks and sometimes sleeping (for me)
@@MaryCherryOfficial yeah I know some people like that, and I’ve had times going into a cinema really tired and ended up sleeping for 20mins or so, regardless of the quality.
It’s all good Mary, we still love ya! (And it means we get more reactions from you!)
@@MaryCherryOfficial Can you please react to kung fu panda 4
Fun fact: Disgust is the most universally recognizable emotion there is.
This film always makes me emotional! I'm excited to see the 2nd one!😊
I once googled San Francisco - Minnesota with public transport. It said something like 4 days, so yeah, that`s CRAZY.
I'm a truck driver who used to do long haul. 4 days for that trip is actually a slight underestimation, especially depending on the season. Not the kind of trip a preteen can make without encountering obstacles, some of them dangerous.
Mary's reaction to Bing Bong jumping off the rocket and sacrificing himself is probably a top 3 moment on this channel 🥲
I love how hockey is a happy and angry memory....
there is a lot of good nuance to the story here. i like how, initially, we are thinking that Sadness is synonymous with depression, but sadness is actually a coping mechanism and key in catharsis. as the movie goes on it reveals, bit by bit, the loss of access to emotions is a more accurate experience of depression. i can personally say that i cannot think of a better initial treatment for depression than sadness.
This film is a really great look at the concept of toxic positivity, the need to make everything "happy". Cinema Therapy here on YT does a great breakdown of it.
Something I did not notice until I watched it before the sequel: Sadness said was compelled to get involved. Riley was sad the entire time and needed Sadness to steer.
Sadness can’t stop touching the memories because RILEY is SAD! Even when they are outside of headquarters Hahaha I’m not sure every reactor get this haha
love the reaction by the way, but joy is the villain trying to suppress sadness. Sadness is just doing her job. Those memories down low were prob Minnesota related.
I think it's so adorable how emotionally invested Mary is in this flick. LOL
If you love Up and Inside Out then ur gonna love Soul which was also written and directed by Pete Doctor.
“All sadness wanted to do was touch the balls” is a quote that I feel will be stuck in my mind forever more 😂
Love this film. That one scene with Bing Bong always breaks me.
My 6 year old was having a melt down yesterday.
I got her to calm down and laugh by telling her stop being angry, become joy, and take a trip to goofball Island.
Can't believe it actually worked.
That’s actually pretty neat
8:33 Mary: "Oh god I hate crying in public so much!"
*Cries in every reaction watched by thousands and thousands of people.
8:30 as you regularly cry for all 250k of us in your reactions. Thank you for continuing to put yourself out there for all of us.
29:41 made me laugh so hard and is probably one the most out of context moments on your channel
My personal reaction: 😢-☹️-😟-😧-😏
I loved this one, it has one of the funniest ending scenes, when Riley give the bottle back to that boy
Ok the Quagmire clip was some surprise tonal whiplash and I have to admit I couldn't stop chuckling. 29:42
😂😂
Such a great movie. Really puts things in perspective
I can really relate to Riley. I had to move away from my best friends when I graduated elementary school and I still think about them❤ I miss them so much, it’s important to not bottle up your emotions.
It’s good to cry every once in a while. I remember seeing this movie in theaters when it first came out! Me and my sister got disgust and joy and sadness plushies. This film means a lot to me, it’s so good!💗💖 thank you so much for watching this masterpiece! I love your reaction!🥹
To put it in Australian perspective: running away from California back to Minnesota would be like running away from Perth to Darwin.
This was great. I teared up a bit. My fav part is that you already did this re-re-review 3 months ago. Them memories, right?!
No I didn’t. Listen to my intro.
@@MaryCherryOfficial I was joking. I meant that your memory was dumped. RIP Bing-Bong.
I was SO excited to see this upload :)
Jesus frigging Christ, Mary;
Now I'm weeping
Still a classic and one of Pixar’s best and one of the best films of 2015. Sadness is my spirit animal and I’m looking forward to see the sequel
Disney and Pixar
The concept of the film is brilliant, and it is beautifully directed
I watched it again recently because of the sequel too and even knowing what's coming it still made me cry. Very well done movie to do so.
Rolling the dice with a Disney reaction right after Toho lol, but I really love this movie and can't wait for the new one!
I think this movie hits deeply if you've experienced loss. For the lucky ones in life childhood, and parenting and family when children are still young, is a golden, magical time that, once it has ended, can never return. I know as a parent of two daughters, now long past childhood, I would give anything to go back and re-live those days again with them. It's the hard reality of the human experience that life moves on, things change, and sooner or later, we all experience the loss of those and those things that matter most to us.
Take her to the moon for me😭
😭😭😭
36:08 Bing Bong brought back memories of the Jennifer Walters' scene in 'She Hulk', when Bruce is trying to figure out her threshold for stress, Jen mentions Bing Bong... "Oh put on a Pixar movie"... "When Bing Bong jumps out of the wagon in Inside Out..." 😥
This movie just hits hard showing how kids are at that age when they experience new things and can't cope with it. I can't wait to see the second one where new emotions appear.
This movie is INCREDIBLE with color theory.
Riley: striped shirt as they're moving with all colors on them to show theyre in harmony, or so it seems. yellow jacket on the first day of school because she's still young enough to be excited. Striped shirt sans blue and yellow at the dinner table because all of her emotions are fighting for control with joy and sadness gone. Black jacket because she's emotionally shutting down.
Emotions: joy has blue hair, backing up the theory joy and sadness go hand in hand. Disgust has a purple ascot, suggesting disgust is mainly motivated by what scares us. Anger is wearing a red tie showing how when were angry, we can't see, hear, or feel anything else. Think, "seeing red". Fearvitself is a purple, a combination of red and blue, or in this case, a combination of Anger and sadness. And finally Sadness is wearing a white turtleneck as a combination of all the emotions, like how all light is combined to make white light.
17:04 it’s about the distance from Perth to Melbourne
Touching balls part --- I literally said "that's what she said," and then the Family Guy clip happened.
Yes, where is Michael Scott when you need him?
I just saw this weeks ago so I can watch 2 with fam. I got invested in the invisible friend and I don't even know how those work. 😭😂 Childhood was trauma (poverty and abuse) so I'm good. Lol but I still sympathize with the people like Riley.
My favourite Pixar movie, and a brilliant film in general. It really hits the right balance of laughing hysterically and crying your eyes out (especially Bing Bong).
Disney Pixar
13:25 Ah jeez, don't remind me of that episode of _The Buzz on Maggie._
"Tonight was supposed to be *our night,* but it's been the "Rayna & Tammy" show all over again!"
Thank you for sharing some of your vulnerability with us, I cried at Bingbong's sacrifice too. This movie was SUCH a brilliant way of showing how our minds work. I LOVE good animation projects like this, it's nice to know you can sometimes appreciate them too. Again, thanks for sharing
Hiiiiii my name is also cherry without the Mary but also I cried and also became sadness that really sad f for bing bong😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢 0:22
Mary - I hate crying in public!
Also Mary - Cries on video pretty often.
Just came back from watching inside out 2, it was so good. Can’t wait for all the reactors to watch it too
yayyyy
sadness is so me 😭
Joy makes me smile everytime I watch Inside Out. To be honest, I am excited that Inside Out 2 is coming out tomorrow in theaters.
Remember seeing this year's ago at the cinema before I went into my freshman year of highschool such nostalgia ❤💜💛💙💚
It always paffles me that people react to sadness like she was an antagonist and don´t realize that the emotions arent controlling riley, emotions just...are there and then you react. Sadness even says she doesnt know why she is acting this way.
I love this movie so so much I can’t wait for inside out 2. My dad is taking me to go see Inside out 2 next week.
26:08 thats all of ours childhood down there, knowing full well it aint coming back
6:35 Joy doesn’t understand that sadness is needed. Like when Joy was talking about the rain and sadness mentioned about the bad parts. Joy doesn’t allow Riley to feel sad when she needs to. 9:12 I’ve always seen Joy as the bad one cause she didn’t work with the other emotions. She bossed them around and didn’t allow Riley to feel sad when the situation suited it. I like how they changed Joy at the end to realize how important all emotions are and how they need to work together. 13:59 a show that has a funny episode about imaginary friends is M*A*S*H and the episode is called Tuttle. If you watch it pay attention to Radar’s imaginary friend. 17:02 it’s about a 3 day ride maybe 4 depending on speed, traffic and how many stops you take. 18:06 I like how you’re changing your view on Joy and sadness from the beginning of the video.
Thanks for the video. I enjoyed it.
Emotions make us human. They help us understand the world around us. Both good and bad.
My sister loves this movie.
She's pretty young and I can see how kids and some more emotionally immature people would like this.
this movie helped alot of kids that struggled to express their emotions , amazing movie
17:00 Well Mary, yes, Minnesota is pretty far from San Francisco.
Inside Out 2 is very good btw.
I was 13 years old when I saw this movie and next week on my birthday I'm gonna see the sequel at 22 years old! Time flies 😌
Wait for the second part. It's just as good, and it has adult gags. It's nice when Disney also cares about older audiences.
This movie is a fun way to help understand people's emotions.
Weird Riley's mom and dad appeared in fregging State Farm insurance commercial, huh?
I've lived in Minnesota and California (San Francisco area). It is about a 20 hour drive from MN to CA.
As someone who personally lives in Minnesota, yes, it is a long ways away from California. Minnesota is almost literally in the middle of the United States right on the Canadian border. To put it into a distance that you would be more familiar with, from where I am in Minnesota, to San Francisco, is roughly about the same distance as Sydney is to Cairns.
There was a meme summarizing Pixar movies around the time this movie came out: "What if toys had feelings? What if cars had feelings? What if Scotland had feelings?" And so on, ending with "What if FEELINGS had feelings?"
Disney Pixar
God this is a great movie. Can't believe its been nine years. So much has happened since then. I was turning 24 that summer and now I'm gonna be 33 this summer. I look forward to seeing the sequel this weekend.