Disney Brutes vs Karma Part 1
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- Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
- I noticed a link between some brute like Disney villains and how they get brutally killed.
Here's a video showing the similarities between the villains in Tarzan, Oliver & Company, Atlantis: The Lost Empire and The Great Mouse Detective.
I thought of using Gaston's death from Beauty & The Beast too but then I realised it might ruin the flow of the video after already having 4 scenes included.
Let me know what you think.
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Part 2 • Disney Brutes vs Karma...
Part 3 • Disney Brutes vs Karma...
Part 4 • Disney Brutes vs Karma...
Chapters
0:00 Setup
1:37 Chase
7:14 Resolution
Brand new video out that includes Disney scenes around the theme of friendship but mixed with some adult themes so it doesn't end up in the you know what section. ruclips.net/video/ExOdvDmXG6Q/видео.html&ab_channel=NonsensicalReality
Disney was like "Y'all think being a villain is cool? **Kills villain in a brutal way** You still want to be a villain?"
Meanwhile Disney in real in life:”We are literally the villains of entertainment.”
@@williamhanna9718 Why do you think they keep making movies about the villains nowadays?
Yeah, there's something to be said about being taken out in a cool way. I'd still want to be a villain.
@@williamhanna9718 kinda just an unethical business overall
disney now: the real heros were the villans inside us all along
Tarzan was the most horrifying. We don’t directly see it, but the light from the lightning making a silhouette of his hanging body while Tarzan looks at it in horror just makes for 4 year old trauma.
I would argue Oliver and Company. Sikes became Explosive giblets, all over the train that was likely full of people.
@@Ucatty2 well that is only implied since we don't visually see it happen. Tarzen is stronger because we could actually see a shadow of the lifeless body.
Tarzan is probably the biggest reason I have trauma 😂😨 it legit begins with an innocent baby ape being horrifically chased and killed, it's last few moments living in fear as his parents are forced to watch him be taken away from them, helpless. Then It ends in a hanging man.
T r a u m a
@@steampunkemo9211 you do not have trauma from a Disney movie you are coddled and sheltered and need to touch grass and have real problems if you think Tarzan is traumatic
@@XYZ-chalky Someone doesn't know what a hyperbole is
Rather than lower himself safely to the ground, Basil puts in the enormous effort to actually gain altitude with that contraption just so his friends would know he's okay as soon as possible.
And to let the audience know more importantly 😁
That’s one thing he doesn’t have in common with Sherlock Holmes. Homes would just go to the ground and wait for them to land.
I’m pretty sure that propeller could only take Basel up.
@@spenserfarman3045 you just got to slow down the rotor so you don’t have enough lift to stay in the air but you’re not gonna fall to the earth either that’s how helicopters land.
@@spenserfarman3045 I don't think you know how propellors work
I love how throughout the movie, we see Ratigan as this calm, calculating villain with a sense of humour and yet in certain parts, we see this mask slip. (Anytime anyone calls him a rat) the feral anger rears its head for brief moments except for right at the end where Basil and Oliva are about to escape and that persona he has been faking finally shatters. His eyes go wild, his clothes rip and he runs on all fours while growling and snarling. He tried so hard to keep up his false appearance but when cornered, he revealed his true self. A big dirty rat.
Vincent Price pulled him off spectacularly his performance and Basil's VA are one of the reasons why I love the film.
Ratigan is one of the greatest Disney villains of all time.
Aye, that part always stuck with me. He looked truly terrifying with his ragged clothes, wild eyes, and the menacing snarl. I know that the Great Mouse Detective was largely based upon the Sherlock Holmes mysteries, but I can't help but think that it had echoes of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde in the concept art and writing phase.
He thought himself to be a man of civility and cunning, but in his final moments, he became something completely different. A feral rabid beast unrecognizable to what it once was.
Remy did a better job at being more calm then him
You never realize how amazing and distinct the art style of Atlantis is until you see it put next to some other spectacularly animated movies. Just another reason I love ATLE
Atlantis is a really underrated movie
Ultimately underrated movie. Like treasure planet
The character designer for ATLE is the same guy who created Hellboy
@@yukole6245 Atlantis and Treasure Planet are like the painting of David and God touching lol.
I still love it to this day, decades later. Just like Fox's 'Titan A.E.' movie as well. The animation just doesn't get old for me ever.
Can we just talk about how impressive Tarzan's gunfire impersonation was. Like not only did he have to make the right sound but also made it loud enough to fool Clayton.
i think he synced it up with the thunder somehow
@@TokyoDrift456 That would be inconsistent since the thunder was immediately after the lightning flash every time in this scene.
@@TheOuroboros777 i really want to know how that happened because that was WAY too loud for it to have just been an impression on it
I like to think he was testing to see if Clayton would hold up to his bluff.
I don't it was as loud as a gunshot. It's easy to scare someone with a loud noise when you have a gun directed at them.
That scene from Atlantis always freaked me out even as a kid, just the unhuman screeches and how it was like a painful mutation, I don't know it was just very unsettling
Yeah, I remember the awesomeness of flying mechanical fish with blue energy beams.
Then they showed the blue calcification and the red veins, those soulless eyes. It was horrifying, it didn't stick but it was still a terrifying image to see as a child.
Still awesome though, wish there was more like Atlantis.
I didn't find it too bad...
Then he started moving.
He was still alive and had consciousness, that meant he was still the same person but brutally manipulated into a crystal-like mutation, he did bring this upon himself and I'd say it's one of the more painful villain deaths because it seemed like he still had nerves being pulled apart while he moved because his own body would impale him repeatedly
When i first watched Atlantis i was like "Oh ok, he's finally dead" then he started moving and it freked me out hah
@@massgunner4152 yes the worst it got when he started to scream like he's not human anymore.
Sikes was pretty much killed on impact with the train before the explosion. Nothing says instant death more than catching a dislodged engine block to the legs and lower body. Of course, nothing is said about the innocent train operator who was probably killed or severely injured in the collision. What a waste of a perfectly good Lincoln Continental MKIV.
Clayton’s death was fast too. His neck had to have snapped from falling that great of height with that vine on his neck.
@@whyme3772 Well I believe that's why Tarzan was freaking out as well as why they didn't exactly explain or show what happened afterwards (my full Disney knowledge is a bit rusty since now I have to keep track of 500 series, but I believe there have only been a few instances of Disney very clearly showing a death on-screen, most of them recent, such as Coco's poisoning scene. And this makes sense since when they do include a death in the story-writing, they tend to be traumatic: this one was an accidental hanging, obviously, but there also have been shootings, drownings, blunt injury such as being ran over or being thrown/dropped at high speeds, explosions, burnt alive in fires, and other issues.)
I'm fucking dead that conty was mint to
@@whyme3772 more than snapped, his head should’ve come clean off after that fall. Actually a common problem with hangings
The old NYC cars depicted ride significantly higher than a car. The roof of the sedan probably came up to the operators knees. Probably walked out of it a little shook up.
Like a villain from Venom once said. “I don’t believe in karma.” Then immediately gets killed by him.
Edit: Holy damn, in just 8 days. I’m famous. Hey ma! Get the camera!
Like I always say, just because you don't believe in something, doesn't mean it doesn't exist.
Who was that? Riot or Carnage?
@@sakellarioudimitris7439 a guy that worked for Carlton Drake AKA Riot as well.
@@T-Trux
Yup, the bald guy! Saw the scene....
I don't remember him saying that.
I love how Sykes was willing to ruin his extremely expensive car just to collect on some ransom money.
Even if he's got more money to easily pay off the damage, guess he's got some pride to him, and an example to make.
@@Sassaparilla half of all mobster deaths were about pride
@@giovannicervantes2053 that's mostly what I was referring to. Although, Sykes isn't explicitly a Mobster, just a Loan Shark. Loan Sharks can be independent, which iirc, Sykes was.
@@Sassaparilla ever hear of mad Sam DeStefano he was fucking nuts
Pretty sure the man had completely lost it by that point and wanted them dead. Having your well-hidden hostage rescued by a pack of dogs, a cat, and a homeless man(the same homeless man you thought you had under your thumb no less!) would probably drive any lone shark into a villainous breakdown.
Epic that you transition each movie with their own problems.
Meanwhile in Tarzan…
Meanwhile in the Great Mouse Detective…
Meanwhile in Atlantis…
Meanwhile in Oliver and Company…
It’s like watching the fights happen ALL at once. Except with different timelines. 😆
Glad you liked that aspect. I also tried to match the situations as close as I could as I cut in and out and it was convenient that disney like to do chase scenes and deaths from a great height. Helped me to show some of the thread that runs through them all.
It also reminded me how the tropes are borrowed from cinema itself, not just animation.
@@NonsensicalReality That’s impressive! 😄👍🏽
Agreed!!! It’s epic !!
@@DavidSilva-jm4hb thank you friends of the internet
It's the DACU.
Disney: literally kills villains in kids movies in the most brutal way possible
Also Disney when gravity falls exists: NooOoOo YoU cAn'T sAy "bottles will be spinned" It'S iNnApPrOpRiAtE 😭😭
If you know you know
The "Not S&P approved" thing was really funny though, so it may have been bad censorship, but at least there is now a funny story and detail.
Disney movies during and post gravity falls have lost all intensity. Instead of being cool kids movies, they’ve been dumb downed to get as much action as staring at paint drying.
@@del5206 It was more like that they realized that any excuse they gave against "Not S&P Approved) would have sounded like childish whining and so they had no choice but to accept it.
Something must have happened to Disney after 2011 because things seem a bit different after that. Their movies, while still good (mostly), feel more watered down than it used to be. I guess they really wanted to have that "kids friendly" look, forgetting that their golden age and renaisssence movies have some of the most brutal villain deaths in animated films.
@@doomslayer2937 The shows on the other hand... TOH Spoilers
Phillip Wittebane/Emperor Belos was planning a literal genocide over the course of multiple centuries, first gaining trust from the local population by organizing false flag operations (attacking something under the "banner" of another group to turn others against the framed group) attacking his rallies, then creating a sigil that can be remotely activated to murder anyone with it on, then when he takes control of the government HE MANDATES THE APPLICATION OF SIGILS AND ANYONE WHO REFUSES WILL BE HUNTED BY THE GOVERNMENT AND EXECUTED. And the kicker? PHILLIP, A HUMAN WHO CANNOT NATURALLY USE MAGIC AND WHO DIDN'T KNOW ABOUT GLYPHS (basically a little magic circle that executes a magic "script" when activated, such as making a ball of light, or fireballs) WAS INTRODUCED TO THEM BY THE MAIN PROTAG WHEN SHE WAS TIME TRAVELLING.
Also, HUNTER. THE CLONE OF PHILLIP'S DEAD BROTHER (WHO PHILLIP KILLED), WHO IS JUST ONE OF AN UNKNOWN NUMBER OF CLONES OVER THE YEARS, WITH IT BEING SHOWN THE ULTIMATE FATE OF NEARLY EVERY HUNTER IS DEATH AT PHILLIP'S HANDS.
I think the thing that impresses me the most was the CG that was used in Great Mouse Detective. I think it was rotoscoped to make it seamless with the rest of the art style
Something similar to how they blended 3d and 2d in Treasure Planet?
Ratigan's run through the clockwork always did seem terrifyingly fluid. I never realized it was rotoscoping! Good eye!
GMD was the first Disney movie to try this 3D style that was a success (the black cauldron did so a year before, but it was an office bomb).
I was hoping Gaston would make the list. He’s the biggest brute.
And he's the biggest idiot.
Read the description.
@@TourmalineFilms I did.
@@katiebonser9712 It was like a deleted scene. It would have messed with the flow of the whole video but I agree, he's one of the best examples of a brute so shame the scene didn't fit.
@@NonsensicalReality Dude it totally coulda fit. Don’t worry too much when you’re creating something. If you feel like something’s right then go for it. 😄
i will say, the editing on this between the different scenes is really good. at first i wasn't sure about not getting each scene in full on its own, but this actually works really well cuz all the tension rises together.
Yeah, exactly. I wanted it to have a story arc as a whole. Setup, struggle, resolve.
I imagine that's a stylistic choice aaaand trying to not get a copyright hit for too long a clip.
I released a new video today that includes Disney scenes around the theme of friendship but the algorithms aren't helping out this time it seems... probably because I mixed the disney scenes with some adult themes so it doesn't end up in the you know what section. ruclips.net/video/ExOdvDmXG6Q/видео.html&ab_channel=NonsensicalReality
I always thought the dude getting crystallized in Atlantis was the most metal shit. Wish he lived a minute longer.
True, it would've been more gruesome for us to get an entire sequence of him screaming and struggling with the crystallization taking over. Too bad disney was still disney back then and they couldn't go that fa- *looks back at Clayton* Actually... why didn't they do that?
@@AveryTomfoolerySpecialist3682 I was more referring to the badass monster he turned into, but yeah that too.
Was there any explanation on why that cut from the piece of glass from Kida’s pod turned him into that monster, or did Disney just toss it in last minute? Sorry it’s a bit long, if I had just asked why he was turned into a monster people might say “because he was cut with that glass”
I agree, it’s never once explained why the cut turned him into whatever that was
Replying to the last two, it's implied that, as she carries the legacy of Atlantis' lost power, which is why she was being taken in the first place, the energy venting out of her active body effectively frosted over the glass. The energy took a physical form, and when Rourke was sliced, he basically had just a fragment of that energy enter his body. It had a bad reaction, took over his body, and showed just how dangerous Kida would've been if misused by the surface, which we know would've happened, because humans find new innovative thing, and the first two things that come to mind are usually "how do I make it a weapon" and "how can I use it for sexual purposes".
Honestly, Atlantis: The Lost Empire has one of the best atmospheres ever. World War One technology versus the Atlantian technology. It’s a crazily unique movie that is so beautiful.
Yes
Isn’t it WW2 tech considering they have planes ?
@@ovs4744 planes were in use during ww1
@@ovs4744 the movie takes place before ww2
@@ovs4744 they had planes in WW1, I just don’t think they were as widely used. Planes were only about ten years old by that point.
I feel, to me Realistically claytons death was the worst if you think about it, trying to get out of a conflict of vines tangling you when your trying to cut and slash it out to just fall all to the point of the vine snaps there to let you.. “hang” around and not in a good way.
Not to mention I only JUST now noticed the *literal shadow of him hung by his neck* on the tree behind Tarzan. God older Disney was dark but those stories I felt were way more compelling than some of the modern ones. Not to say modern doesn't have decent storytelling or writing but it feels less visceral.
@@voidtalongaming4637 yeah when your younger you don’t get the context until you get older and spot some stuff you missed, especially from that scene alone.
@@voidtalongaming4637 Tarzan was a dark movie in general. Actually, look his alternative opening ruclips.net/video/c5KnDU45Tkc/видео.html
And if you think about it he was in free fall from the top of a jungle canopy and stopped feet away from the ground so the force probably separated the part of the spine in the neck from the rest
Wish we got some more golden hearted brutes like Wreck it Ralph, its just nice to see how that trope plays out nicely when the character truly has the passion to give their friends the best chance at what they need
The Dr in Atlantis is like that.
@@NonsensicalReality thanks for the suggestion
Ramsley from the Haunted Mansion is a good example of being blinded by your ideals and having it bite back. If you don’t know what happened in the movie, Gracie(Ramsley’s master) was in love with a black woman named Elizabeth and Ramsley couldn’t accept their union because he was racist. To prevent her from being in a relationship with Gracie he poisoned a glass of wine, forged a letter and killed Elizabeth making it look like she committed suicide. This caused Gracie to hang himself and a curse to be placed on the mansion and all who resided within, which prevented any of their spirits to pass on. Ramsley still blamed their purgatory on Gracie’s love for Elizabeth, even after he became a lingering ghost and when he summoned a demon to drag them to Hell, the only one who was taken was him.
@@spenserfarman3045 that is awesome
U forgot the most important one, kronk
9:34 As a kid, I never noticed Clayton's shadow
Neither have I. In fact, I thought the falling machete was what killed him.
Me neither. I only noticed it when editing this lol
I didnt notice it till I read ur comment!
@@NonsensicalReality Really??
@@Orion_Otaku yeah, was surprised coz thats dark for a disney film. I thought it just implied he got hung but when I noticed the shadow I was like "Wooooah! That's cold" 😂
I still think Clayton's death is extra brutal because it's one of the more graphic and it's entirely his fault.
Bill Sykes is pretty up there too, just not as memorable, as many people don't even know where he's from. He may have died almost instantly, but I guarantee you that the stare between him and that train lasted an eternity in his head. And all of it brought on by his pride and greed literally driving him to death.
Clayton is the Tarzan one right?
Dude literally hung himself. That was the most horrifying death even for early Disney.
The part that gets me the most about Clayton's death is the sheer terror on his face as he's falling.
@@coolsceegaming6178 I don’t know. I feel like tripping and falling to your death (a Disney classic) is pretty damn terrifying. You have a good long while to think about what you did while you fall helplessly. Considering how quickly Clayton fell, he probably snapped his neck and died instantly.
@@Broomer52 ok think of it this way...imagine falling while being strangled to death....seem more terrifing now...especily since its been scientificly prooven. That breaking your neck doest always kill instantly some times you die from aphixation due to a broken wind pipe...yeah being hung is alot more brutal than youd assume
No matter what anyone says, Claton's death was and always will be, one of Disney's most graphic. You don't actually see it happen, but the vine going taught shows the how and than the haunting shadow of a lifeless body projected on the tree by the lighting is enough to send a shiver down my spine even to this day. While some come close, none strike the same level of haunting imagery than how that.
Graphic though I'd rather take that death because the adrenaline rushing through him probably numbed most if not all the pain he would've felt with his neck instantly snapping like that. Like... he didn't suffer and died he fell probably 30 feet and had his neck instantly snapped to kill him especially with the speed of falling to have all that force slam you to a instant halt pretty much his brain probably got mulched or hemmoraged too... his was probably the second least painful and quickest....
Of course, there's an unspoken truth about the untold villains who don't face karma for their actions. The ones that the Disney films don't feature in their conflicts.
Really, which ones, I'm genuinely curious.
@@sarahsims6164 mainly referring to the villians that just "get away with it alive"
The fox and the cat from pinocchio (yeah in the book they faced karma, but not in the disney movie)
@@klamacz47 You forgot the worst one from Pinocchio, the guy who literally turned children to donkeys and gets away with it
@@raiyanfarhan7502 That's the Coachman for you
when the clock chimed, i realized the truth of the ratigan battle. It was never about escaping the mad professor, it was about lasting long enough for the clock to do the job for them.
In the end, time comes for us all
@@EvanMe in this case, literally.
Professor Ratigan, Sykes and Clayton are some of my favorite Disney villains of all time. I say this because they're ruthless, cold-hearted and won't stop at nothing to get what they want which they have in common. They kill, want money and power. Disney has done an excellent job when it came to portraying these characters we know and love. Minus Clayton wanting power, because he's a hunter wanting to sell the gorillas on the black market
Well Rourke fits this aswell. He was literally willing to murder an entire civilization, his collegues and everyone in his path (propably his employer too) just to sell a powerfull energy source, that could propably destroy the entire world in the wrong hands, to the highest bidder.
If one rewatches the fight between Tarzan and Clayton, for a few brief moments Clayton can be seen slowly swinging via shadow from when he accidentally hung himself.
duh
If you watch Wall-e carefully, you can see a robot
I never noticed it when I was kid, my eyes was fixated on the machete. Maybe that's the intention lol
yeah, when I saw that today, I went like "Woah, old Disney movies were cool!" cause you gotta have some balls to do that.
Mine were mainly onnTarzan's reaction but yes the machete too when it first lands.
@@NonsensicalReality Yeah, since Tarzan tried to stop Clayton so he wouldn't die. So him seeing that, it must have really gotten to him BUG TIME.
“Alright Milo, this is it, any last words? Yeah, I really wish I had a better idea than this.” Probably my favorite line in this video just for the execution alone.
9:34
I just realized the irony here.
Clayton tried to steal Tarzan's family from him, as his own way to fortune and fame.
Instead, he was hanged like the common thief and murderer that he really was.
Maybe its obvious but then again the last time I watched this movie was like in fifth grade
There's... No irony in that
It's just the fact that he dug his own grave
He did nothing wrong lmao he wanted to take some animals
@@HealingVoice39 you fool, he killed Harambe and plunged us into this hellscape we call "post-2016"
There’s another bit of poetic irony to it: he sees himself as the only civilized man in a jungle of beasts, yet is consumed by base greed.
Tarzan is seemingly primitive, but his entire motivations and actions in this fight are as human as possible: to protect his family, and if at all possible, to do so without killing anyone. Tarzan actually tries to SAVE Clayton, and is genuinely distraut to see the hunter die.
Tarzan grew with the laws of the wild, yet chose to treat his enemy with the dignity of man, so fate showed him the same compassion. Clayton grew in a world of man’s supreme dominance yet reverted to greed and hunger, and died like a common beast in a snare
I saw tarzan so many times as a kid and it took me years to see Clayton's shadow swinging
Kinda like a cool, little easter egg because most people's eyes are drawn towards facial expressions, in this case being Tarzan's.
Jafar would've fit as a perfect example for this video. Dude attained ultimate power just to overlook the constraints that come with being a Genie.
Yeah, I might put him in a separate one
@@NonsensicalReality will it be called "villains that won ish" since he kind of got what he wanted, but not the way he hoped for?
Put it in a video titled "be careful what you WISH for".
Insert rimshot here.
Genie said so himself "PHENOMENAL COSMIC POWERS, itty bitty living space" and Jafar bit down on that bait
5:27 gotta love Tarzan's sound effects😂
Yeah, it confused me as a child and only watching this back as I was editing, I realised he was making the sound with his voice. Thats some bullshit! No way you could make a sound that convincing and also Clayton would have surely seen his mouth moving and not flinched 😂
Clayton's death in Tarzan and Saluk's death in Aladdin King of Thieves awoken the sadistic side inside me as a child, and from that moment I believe that all movies must have their own great villains that deserve a cool *death* at the end of the story.
5:20 I love that Tarzan chose to not use the gun. But Clayton doesn't know that, and Tarzan's really good at sound impressions, hehe....
I just realized that for the lifting array to tilt like that Crystal Rourke would have to be lighter than Milo. Which (Magic crystals maybe works that way?) seems unlikely.
I feel he would be heavier but I think it was more momentum that allowed this. That and because the craft was falling it makes what would seem like small adjustments normally more impactful. Thats just my theory on the physics of it. In the end its a disney movie after all XD
Most of his mass was transferred into pure energy, leaving mostly only a crystal shell behind.
The Freaking giant glowy cryatal ball that was like a mini star could hover and fly any which way it pleased, even dragged rocks that likely weighed a ton into its orbit. I am not surprised it would make a colonizing asshole lighter than the multilinguist lightweight.
@@futuza that was always my assumption. For some reason he just looks weightless in his crystallized form.
The Tarzan one was especially brutal. He tried to warn him, but he didn't listen.
Oliver and Company and Atlantis are the two biggest movies I grew up with, to the point that watching this video actually brought tears to my eyes.
OaC was even such a big part we named our first dog after the movie's titular cat.
Atlantis was criminally under rated as Disney film.
Clayton is the most unsettling of these. In his final moments he's so consumed by rage that he's just mindlessly slashing around, grunting and growling like, ironically, a wild animal. Even when he's grabbing at the vine as he falls, knowing what's coming, his scream is less one of fear and more of just pure fury, like he's less scared of his demise and more enraged that Tarzan prevailed. (Which is doubly effed up when you factor in that Tarzan was trying to WARN him)
1:20 STANDING HERE I REALISE
Okay visually the most terrifying one was no question Clayton. The one most terrifying if you think about it though is thatch's because of the fact that he was stripped of what little humanity he had left he could been "killed" there but I don't think so he was morphed into the creature he was and the killed by a blade spinning fast enough to help achieve lift
You mixed up Milo and Rourke i think, but yeah Rourke propably was the most painfull one aswell. Imagine your whole body burning away and becoming a crystal shell.
@@lukeskywalker5392oh yeah I think I was thinking of Milo's last name
5:03 always messed me up. Those dogs were only "bad" because of their owner.
These transitions are great btw.
Thanks, I had a lot of fun with them.
Sykes really does go inexplicably psycho at the end.
He's obviously evil as, but he's completely calm and in control for the entire movie, but then at the end he just goes so crazy that he drives his car down a subway and effectively kills himself.
They outplayed him iirc, so it became personal. For a narcissist like Sykes that can not happen.
The death scene in Tarzan will forever be the most brutal.
Good old Disney, always reliably delivering the wholesome message of "bad people die violently" to families everywhere
Thank goodness rourke was crystalized before he died otherwise the movie wouldve taken a very dark gory turn
Good point! Could have got Tarantino-esque lol
@@NonsensicalReality lel
True, but even then, it would have been a bit cooler to drag out the time it takes for him to fully crystalize, Like the guy instead jabbing Rourke in the stomach, so he could get an extra few moments of agony before the full crystalization.
I said it before and I'll say it again, The Great Mouse detective is a underrated classic.
Yes, one of my favourites. The Rescuers is also underated!
Clayton's death was a weird one for me - I remember my parents being shocked by it as I watched Tarzan when I was really young. I was confused however, I didn't understand how someone would die from having vines wrap around their neck. I wasn't bothered by the death or loss of the character, I was just confused by the method.
I obviously had no idea back then, but now that I understand the actual mechanics of how he died, it makes me wince. One of the more actually brutal Disney deaths. With how far and fast he fell, Clayton's body would be lucky to still have his head attached...
What a coincidence, I didn't know what happened either when I was little. Can't watch that movie again, that's for sure
What was interesting for me is I first watched this movie on an iPad but I somehow messed up the screen settings so the part of the screen that shows Clayton's silhouette was *cropped* so it took me years to realize he'd died from being hanged.
@@wind_scratch8387 see I first watched it on a CRT TV through a VHS. You got to see everything on those big mfers
You're kind of lucky. I learned all throughout my school life of brutal deaths humanity comes up with, even worse as a morbid sense of entertainment! I'll always appreciate how far Disney was willing to go before all this crap about traumatizing kids with movies. It's up to the parents to teach their kids about death and how it's a part of life as well. Kids are more understanding about these things that is let on, and if you explain it to them through their particular age, they'll have a better understanding growing up.
Oh gosh, the thought of getting cut, and turning into a crystal monster is terrifying as heck!
This feels like one suspenful scene that you always forgot how long it was
After I edited it, I for some reason expected it to be like 5 minutes which doesn't really make any sense but then was surprised when it was over 10 mins long 😂
late 1990 to early 2000th movies are the best you can't write villain death like 9:35 anymore on pg movies nowadays.
In watch mojo fashion... an honourable mention goes out to mah boy Gaston! He's quite the brute but the scene would have messed with the flow of the video as a whole.
Okay, but WHAT flow? All you did was just swap and jump between each movie's scenes repeatedly instead of just, you know... playing them out normally. There is no "flow" here whatsoever. It's all just vaguely, loosely arranged clips that if you cut apart and rearranged them to play next to their respective, following scene in each movie, you'd still get the exact same thing here. You also didn't bother including any other examples of Disney movies' villains (they can hardly only be called brutes when you have the cruelty of figures like Cruella De Vil of 101 Dalmations, the Evil Queen of Snow White, Fantasia's Chernobog, and more. Lady Tremaine of Cinderella, Captain Hook of Peter Pan, Shere Khan of Jungle Book, Governor John Ratcliffe of Pocahontas, friggin' HADES of Hercules...
There is no flow here, you just threw four damn things together and didn't even bother trying to go the extra mile for checking any other instances of when something really, TRULY terrible happens on account of a villain's actions, and they REALLY get a vicious comeuppance a la *cosmic karma* in response to their actions. Shan Yu, Mulan? Long John Silver, Treasure Planet? Or even something more recent like Doctor Facilier in The Princess and the Frog? Percival McLeach from The Rescuers Down Under? Fucking *Judge Claude Frollo* from The Hunchback of Notre Dame? Like come ON man. You put more effort into separating and segmenting the clips and trying to arrange them in the order they're in, instead of actually throwing in more examples of fitting "deaths" or "defeats", or making genuine compare-and-contrast points or mentions between these villains.
The only karma these "brutes" get is that their respective movies end, and not even simply *how* the end up meeting their ends.
@@Keric22 Well thanks for sharing your perspective. Can't say I agree though. I also didn't feel the need to show every brute although I've already made a part 2 with some of the villains you mentioned which will be live shortly.
@@Keric22 there was a flow smh
@@Keric22 i find your lack of taste disturbing
I feel like no one has watched The Black Cauldron. Villian had a much more graphic death than most
Thank god this hasn't been claimed by the wretched "yOUtUbE kIDS" filter
Ahh yes murder...definitly for kids 😂
@@princeOpalite3650 Believe me, I've seen death complications labeled as for kids
Honestly, whomever came up with that drivel, drives me nuts!
Still crazy to this day, when all is said and done, Tarzan didn't want Clayton to die like that, even after everything he did, even after trying to kill him, and killing the only father figure he ever had, he tried to save Clayton in the end.
I’m 25 and only until a few years ago did I realize Clayton’s shadow. Disney or not, that is DARK
Not believing in karma may be the biggest mistake of your life - and the last mistake of your life.
Say that to the leader of China
The good old days when the villains got straight up bodied.
An elegant days for more elegant age. Before the Dark times. Before the times of Netflix villain loving, post modern bullshittery
So much nostalgia. We'll never get this kind of quality in Disney movies ever again.
6:07 Smooth transition there
It's crazy how the background score sometimes sound like it's the same across all 4 clips. Disney loves their trumpets & horns.
Yeah, made it convenient for me when editing 😂
this is a masterpiece, the flow between the scenes is remarkable! im glad i found this. thank you :)
Thank you so much. That means a lot. Editing is my favourite part of the filmmaking proccess so had a lot of fun putting it together.
@@NonsensicalReality i see the passion in this. that why i especially love it. it brings back childhood. it honestly what goes in my mind most of the day. it feels so amazing. your truly amazing artist. i hope you have a good paying job for your wonderful skills. many dont realize that having fun with what you be you. it like showing who you are with the fun in skill is a way of being free. im glad you had fun. and dont go crazy trying to impress everyone. ik it hard but being yourself is the most powerful gift of life.
@@mewtwowolf-armus8960 Good advice and I sadly don't have any video clients at the moment but being in the situation I'm in has lead me to help out at a charity shop and meet some great people. I'm also gonna be helping them out with social media content and what not so should be a fun journey and soon should get some paid work.
07:31 Even more creepy
Joker 🃏
👁👄👁
👁️👁️
People may not believe in karma, but it does exist.
I am pretty sure it is just based on how people perceive happiness. When you take a loss you feel more sad than you would feel happy if it was a win. It is due to a high set of standards society has created making people expect being good at stuff in general to be the norm. So when you think something is karma, it is really just your perception of loss fooling with you.
Not really when jeff bozos still lives a billionaire life meanwhile a 6 year old catches cancer
9:29 his death scream is funny
Clayton was like: “Yeah. I’m going to cut theses vines that are holding me from failing to my death.”
the flow of this video was really good! I only have memory of the plots one of these movies, and yet the it was easy to follow and cool to see how each segment matches with the other unfolding climaxes. usually these types of videos are pretty incoherent, but this one’s just really neat!
Oh great! Glad to know you could easily keep up with everything.
Tarzan easily has the most Brutal villain death, *killing himself via his own actions,* and the viewing of his body via lightning is just so daym brutal. 9:15
I think Bill Sykes is pretty up there, just because of that moment of clarity he has just before the train barrels over him. He may have died instantly, but that moment, staring at death he drove straight into, definitely lasted an eternity.
@@Sassaparilla yes, but seeing a body makes it that much scary, don't forget its a Child movie.
@@mikegratz4503 that doesn't make it more brutal though. Just darker for the audience. And let's be honest, just because it's supposedly for children doesn't mean it will fully adhere to that demographic. Many kids don't see his body hanging at all, and most wouldn't actually know what it implied to my knowledge. I didn't really know what a noose was till I got into Renaissance era stuff, and that was at least a few years after Tarzan came out. I was never really bothered by this scene, but then again, I've always been a bit desensitized, so, eh, I'm probably a bad example.
@@mikegratz4503 I swear I havent even seeing his shadow when I was a kid. That time, I only thought nothing about it.
The time when Disney used more Deus ex machina than nowadays.
What are they doing now?
@@marthagilbert3459 they also use it but less than before
@@ibodedu1341 I don't know, there wasn't a whole lot of Deus ex Machina here, or if there was (like Oliver and Company) there was a reason (diverting the chase onto the subway to escape Sykes, logically a train would eventually show up).
Same counts for real life. Quite often we survived because we were lucky enough. Same applies here
9:34 I still get nightmares about this death sometimes...it's Clayton, Frollo, and Scar's deaths that traumatised me.
Dude the 90’s were wild
5:06 6:38 as a dog owner the sound hurts my heart 🥺, if only they weren’t trained to attack they could have been spared😭
Back when Disney can get extremely dark
Yeah, its brilliant lol
@@NonsensicalReality Yep 👍
True. While in the present, not so much.
True. But some Disney shows can be quite dark. Example some scenes of Gravity Falls, Amphibia or The Owl House. Not as dark as these scenes here though
In Venom Eddie Brook says "Karma is a b-tch" and the villain says "I don't believe in karma".
Clayton’s death is arguably one the most disturbing and graphic in Disney.
Damn! The edition is really good. Even with the differences between the animation style and the date of every movie. I felt it like all the fights happens at the same time but in differents parts of the world
Thanks, you made me smile 😁
Just put together Part 2 so subscribe if you wanna see that too.
This was some fantastic editing work, the flow of the scenes was amazing!
Thank you very much. I never get fed up of reading these kind comments 😀
I forgot how brutal Tarzans villain death was. And how well it was directed, the lighting the shadow, just a great piece of animation and showcasing the death without dangling a literal corpse in the face of the viewers.
it took me 22 years to see that shadow behind tarzan never saw it till today cant believe they actually put that in
Love how in Tarzan it was at least a pretty fair fight, everything else was one sided but Tarzan put up an actual fight
I always loved atlantis but I think that for the death scene I would have made something like this: after milo hurts him and the guy crystallizes, milo goes back to the original position and looks for a way to release kida while the bad guy starts to slowly approach from behind but one of milo's friends notices him so he warns milo and he turns to see him about to attack him but the friend shoots the chains on the guy's side causing all of kida's weight to go to milo's and causing that the guy gets hit by the propellers and dies and after that the remaining chains sedate under the weight and fall and then the movie continues
I just love it when the bad guy gets what they deserve!
Don't we all Dr. V? 😉
I forgot how brutal some of the Villains Deaths were back than.
Modern Disney wouldnt dare to put some of these in theyre movie nowadays.
Because the dark Age of Netflix villain loving, grimderp, post modern rubbish,and greed has came
Despite Tarzan being one of the Disney movies I watched a lot as a kid, for years I always assumed his death was him falling to ground and getting stabbed with the machete (my kid logic being the vines were covering his body to make it less gruesome). When I rewatched it as a teen, that's when I noticed the shadow, and the realization hit me like a sack of bricks, and kinda made the moment more horrific to me imo
I once had an idea for a channel/series of just showing all the gruesome disney villain deaths (with perfect 1:1 animation mimicking) uncencored with all its visceral and gore, and then each time after it would end, it just has a sudden cut/whiplash to mickey mouse and the disney logo saying "Where dreams come true".
That is a must see
I love the flow of this video, and how it's all put together, leading up to their respective death scenes. Nice work!
Thanks! Glad you enjoyed the flow.
I love how pretty much every single movie shown here except Tarzan is an underrated masterpiece (Tarzan is already famous). Atlantis, Oliver and Company, and The Great Mouse Detective are all absolutely fantastic movies in my opinion that really deserve a lot more attention than they got. All of them could make for great TV shows too!
You said it Prince!
Clayton's death feels like when you know you're about to lock your keys in the car but you can't stop yourself from doing it
Just to let you all know, the other vids have been put into "Made for kids" which I don't agree with.
Hopefully this one doesn't end up in there too. Any tips on how to best appeal? Let me know.
Noticed.
And this is for YT 🖕😘
I appreciate the saga, I made them into a playlist for my personal rewatches but if suit and ties gotta legal it up
@@DukeofGames50 Awesome! Did you see the new video? "Disney Wiseguys"
@@NonsensicalReality i will now
I've seen some people saying that some movie/series clips Animated adults (including trailers) have already disabled comments as made for kids
Its been great to see such a positive response to this video and really appreciate all your passionate and thoughtful comments which gave me the idea for part 2...
Had to get Gaston in there of course, especially after so many of your comments mentioning him being the brute of all brutes!
and now there's also part 3...
Part 2: ruclips.net/video/39AJI4x9U6I/видео.html
Part 3: ruclips.net/video/ubANf7PtfxI/видео.html&ab_channel=NonsensicalReality
People want to see villains suffer. 😅
that Rourke transformation will always be my favorite
Funny, I live my life in a Nonsensical reality!
@@secretscarlet8249 You ain't kidding, at the movie "A Bugs Life" in the theaters, when Hopper got eaten, all the little kids cheered!
@@secretscarlet8249 New video out including Disney friendships mixed with some adult themes so it doesn't end up in the you know what section. ruclips.net/video/ExOdvDmXG6Q/видео.html&ab_channel=NonsensicalReality
Man I forgot Disney used to just pull no punches with villain death
Nobody got hurt well Mabye somebody got but nobody we knew
The nostalgia!... I can't handle this level of *NOSTALGIA!!!*
This was a good watch. Aside from Gaston missing, (arguably the most brute of Disney characters), this was a fun.
Just wait for part 2 😉
I just really love how you edited these scenes so that they run on tandem with each other, the adrenaline and all 😆
Thanks! I like it too but some commenters have let me know their complete disgust in that decision 😂
Clayton's death was seriously brutal. They would've never gotten away with that nowadays
I love how like, in a second there's some dumb joke and in the next minute the bad dude suffers a very gruesome death
The transitions make it look like this is all happening simultaneously, maybe even in the same movie.
Thanks, that was my vision 😁
Well Tarzan and Atlantis take place 2 years apart so they are at least in the same time period
What I love so much about these deaths is that 3 out of the 4 of them were practically self-inflicted. If Clayton had stopped to think before slicing all of those vines he wouldn't have fallen. If Ratigan hadn't charged at Basil without thinking neither of them would have wound up on the clock's hand. And of course, if Sykes had stopped to consider that driving after Oliver and company on an ACTUAL SUBWAY RAILROAD, he wouldn't have gotten creamed by the train. Rourke was done in by physics and weird crystals.
They seem to be mostly quick deaths? Not sure if Tarzan's enemy was asphyxiated or had a broken neck though.
If it was powerful enough, he died instantly which seems to be the case. If not then well he was hindering on breathing.
Definitely a broken neck from that height. IRL Clayton would have been decapitated, so Disney was at least somewhat merciful to their young audience
the distorted wailing of the Atlantis villain used to freak me out,along with the shot of him blankly staring up at milo