Disney General - The saddest fandom on Earth

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Which is Better

  • Chicken Little

    Votes: 433 27.4%
  • Hunchback 2

    Votes: 57 3.6%
  • A slow death

    Votes: 1,088 68.9%

  • Total voters
    1,578
Something that I don't get with Turning Red is why is it such a big deal that they're all Canadian and it's set in Toronto? Like, who gives a shit? People don't make excessive fuss about where most movies are set, which is why it stands out so much that people keep going "they're Canadian~ it's Canada~".
If they aren't constantly saying sorry, it's not Canada.

Even with 911 and the Iraq War, there was a sense of "everyone come together" post 911 that will never happen again due to how Obama and the Democrats have pozzed society.

Also there was some good stuff music-wise, a golden age of TV shows (in particular FX and HBO's shows but also Lost, Desperate Housewives, Arrested Development, Family Guy, South Park in it's prime), and a sense of society before being utterly and completely pozzed by the SJW death cult that came about once Obama got into office.
It started with the Tea Party, actually, the Dems made it worse once Obama was in office.

There was good music in the beginning part of the decade, then rap too over and bleh. The late-Millennials and early zoomers are at that age where their childhood is truly gone, like us early Millennials had a few years back.
 
I mean, I sort of get what you're saying, but on the other hand all the Canadians I've ever encountered online have always been weirdly obsessed with being Canadian and how it makes them far better than stupid Americans. Usually followed by lol learn to take a joke, stupid American.
 
I mean, I sort of get what you're saying, but on the other hand all the Canadians I've ever encountered online have always been weirdly obsessed with being Canadian and how it makes them far better than stupid Americans. Usually followed by lol learn to take a joke, stupid American.
Replace Canadian with European and you'd literally have the same disposition.
 
Principal Mazur: If I were you Mr. Goof I'd seriously reevaluate the way you're raising your child! Before he ends up! IN THE ELECTRIC CHAIR!
 
Something that I don't get with Turning Red is why is it such a big deal that they're all Canadian and it's set in Toronto? Like, who gives a shit? People don't make excessive fuss about where most movies are set, which is why it stands out so much that people keep going "they're Canadian~ it's Canada~".
Online Canadians seem to have a stick up their collective ass about how their country is "tEh BeSt." Maybe that attitude is more common in the big cities.
 
One of my favorite lines from the movie along with "and how about SCIENCE......SLUMBER PARTIES!!!!"
Goofy: I don't need to check the map, I trust my son. You know maybe Max isn't all the things you think a son should be, but he loves me

Pete: Hey MY son respects me.

Like damn...hard to belive a line like that was writen for what is essentially a 70 minute long episode of goof troop.
 
Goofy: I don't need to check the map, I trust my son. You know maybe Max isn't all the things you think a son should be, but he loves me

Pete: Hey MY son respects me.

Like damn...hard to belive a line like that was writen for what is essentially a 70 minute long episode of goof troop.
That's why the hot tub scene is amazing, in a movie that as a whole is fantastic (and also peak 90's in all the best ways). A Goofy Movie is way better than, like, half the movies that are considered to be part of the Disney Renaissance proper.
 
A Goofy Movie is unironically animated perfection and I will fight anyone who says otherwise. It's aged miraculously well despite being a clear product of the 90's.
 
That's why the hot tub scene is amazing, in a movie that as a whole is fantastic (and also peak 90's in all the best ways). A Goofy Movie is way better than, like, half the movies that are considered to be part of the Disney Renaissance proper.
A Goofy Movie is unironically animated perfection and I will fight anyone who says otherwise. It's aged miraculously well despite being a clear product of the 90's.
Really it's amazing how much effort got put into it. Like I said it was essentially a film version of Goof troop, and the only other theatrical movie based on a Disney afternoon cartoon and they went all in on it. They could have just as easily half assed the whole thing and called it a day but they didn't.

Also it's just that genuinely funny:


Bobby: hey need fundage bro!

Max: oh right your fee right here!

*Pays Bobby with a can of cheese spray*

Bobby: Chedda! OWWWW! Chedda whizzy! mhh mhh scrumptious! alright lets do it ladies!
 
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Online Canadians seem to have a stick up their collective ass about how their country is "tEh BeSt." Maybe that attitude is more common in the big cities.
Yeah, it's mostly the bigger cities who do this, though it's inconsistant. Despite living in one of those hubs, we're extremely bitchy about our country about as much as the US, and have no qualms complaining about Cuckstin and the the clowns in the parliament as much as we do the other world leaders.
 
Goofy: I don't need to check the map, I trust my son. You know maybe Max isn't all the things you think a son should be, but he loves me

Pete: Hey MY son respects me.

Like damn...hard to belive a line like that was writen for what is essentially a 70 minute long episode of goof troop.
Everyone always quotes that scene but always leaves out Goofy’s response, with is just a simple “Yeah…” but really just says it all.
 
Funny how A Goofy Movie has come up in this article. I've watched it recently, and despite being a very obvious product of the 90s, I still found it very enjoyable in spite of that. I couldn't say the same about its antithesis, Oliver and Company, an extremely obvious product of the 80s with a mostly generic plot, barely interesting characters, largely dated musical numbers (as in the music sounding too much like 80s pop music), it was just not that enjoyable of a film for me to watch.
 
Funny how A Goofy Movie has come up in this article. I've watched it recently, and despite being a very obvious product of the 90s, I still found it very enjoyable in spite of that. I couldn't say the same about its antithesis, Oliver and Company, an extremely obvious product of the 80s with a mostly generic plot, barely interesting characters, largely dated musical numbers (as in the music sounding too much like 80s pop music), it was just not that enjoyable of a film for me to watch.
Oliver and Company was made in that weird period after they suffered a huge flop with The Black Cauldron and they went for "safer" movies with things that were more easily marketable, like cute talking animals and Billie Joel as a singing dog, and also it was the first Disney film to include real world product placement. They really needed to get something profitable while Universal and Don Bluth were eating their lunch with stuff like An American Tail and Land Before Time. Ironically, Disney bounced back in a big way while Bluth's later stuff sorta goes downhill from there.

I enjoyed Oliver and Company as a kid for those exact reasons but I dunno if I would enjoy it as much today because it really doesn't have much substance beyond the catchy music numbers and token Cheech Marin. On the other hand, I actually like A Goofy Movie a lot more these days for the father/son connection stuff but that's probably because I'm a fucking boomer.
 
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