All Dogs Go to Heaven is extra sad when you realize that Burt Reynolds said Goodbye to the little girl knowing that the actress that played the little girl had been murdered before he filmed those lines.
The saddest part about All Dogs Go To Heaven, is when Charlie has to say bye to Ann Marie because he's leaving and won't see her again really, but its extra extra sad because the voice actor for Ann Marie was "unalived" by her own father. They had prerecorded the audio for the little girls part so when Bert Reynolds went to record with the audio of Ann Marie telling him bye, the emotion in "Charlies" voice is 100% genuine and he's actually saying goodbye to the little girl.
@@djmocha7according to some behind the scenes info, Burt Reynolds actually requested that only he and the guy recording his lines did this alone because he couldn’t hold back his tears.
Thank you for not exposing them to “Watership Down” because NONE of them would survive it. Fun fact about “The Last Unicorn”: it was originally PG rated because of a couple of swear words. Those were edited out and the movie got a G rating. The PG version can be found on the 30 anniversary Bluray.
Yeah watership down was a huge wtf moment since I heard the book wasn't that screwed up and sold well but the movie oof it was even aired on daytime television in the UK same with the Animals of Farthing Wood and yeah they were pretty screwed up pieces of animation I'd say
The donkey scene from Pinocchio always freaked me out as a kid. I never could tell if they were still themselves once they lost the ability to speak, or if their minds would go full donkey too.
You mentioned bambi but not land before time? Watching littlefoot's mother fight off a T-rex to save her baby(you literally see a piece of her flesh missing) only to then die in an earthquake right in front of her baby is still one of the emotional horrors of my childhood
All dogs go to heaven makes me upset more because the little girl is voiced by the same girl who played ducky in the land before time. Who if you didn't know was m******d by her father. And I believe the last line Charlie says to her before he goes to heaven was added as a special goodbye to her.😢
Very surprised that The Land Before Time wasn't even an honorable mention, with Littlefoot's mother's death plus just how terrifying and sadistic the Sharptooth was.
Fun fact: that one part of All dogs go to heaven when Charlie is saying goodbye to Ann-Marie was the voice actor actually saying goodbye to Judith Barsi. 😢 Also i love The Last Unicorn
The most morbid thing about "All Dogs Go To Heaven" is the little girl who voiced Ann Marie in the movie, Judith Barsi. She also voiced Ducky in The Land Before Time. Before both movies were released, Judith's father murdered her and her mother by shooting them, and then after 2 days, he set his house on fire and shot himself. Don Bluth, who made these movies, even had a song made just for Judith at the end of All Dogs Go To Heaven, called "Love Survives".
The girl who voiced the little girl in all dogs go to heaven was shot and killed by her father during production but she had already finished her voice lines so the guy who voiced the dog had to voice the emotional scenes without the girl who voiced her.
A lot of Don Bluth animations had scary and/or scarring pieces in them. Love his animated movies! (Nimh and American tail were mentioned or included in the video, but Land before time was not in here, neighter Rock-a-doodle or Thumbelina)
Can we acknowledge the fact that Constance/The Spirit of the Monster House and Jessica Rabbit are voiced by the SAME ACTRESS!? And can we acknowledge the fact that the voice of the old lady in "The Last Unicorn" would go on to be the voice of Mrs. Potts in "Beauty and the Beast"?!
One that was missed. When oggie boogie from the nightmare before christmas gets ripped open in the end and its just bugs falling outta him. It scared me as a kid, but i love the movie regardless
If they only knew that the part where Charlie was going to heaven; Burt Reynolds had a hard time recording it because the actress who played the little girl passed away and that part where Charlie was saying good bye, was actually Burt saying goodbye to her (the actress). The poor girl was murdered by her father. I swear I never cried harder when I learned that tidbit of history. it Makes All Dogs to heaven even more sadder.
No mention of Judith Barsi in All Dogs Go To Heaven? It was literally her last roll before her dad murdered her. Her last line in the movie was saying, "goodbye, Charlie. I love you." Charlie's actor, Burt Reynolds, cried when saying goodbye back because he recorded the line after her passing.
My grandson will be 14 in September. We watched all these movies when he was little. Monster House is still his favorite. It's so simple, watch a cartoon laugh, cry whatever. When you're finished turn it off and go do something else. It's a cartoon it's doesn't need to be analyzed and discussed about traumatizing children.
What makes all dogs go to heaven even more gut wrenching is that this was Judith Barsi’s last role as her father murdered her and her mother, her last lines were already recorded but Burt Reynolds hadn’t recorded his lines, he asked for a closed set and took him a heap of takes cause he kept breaking down and even the take they used you could tell his starting to breakdown. So the end scene instead of Anne Marie saying a sad goodbye to Charlie it’s Burt saying goodbye to Judith 😢😢😢
As one person said, Mor'du was definitely the one thing that scared me as a kid. I love Brave so much. Black Couldran was one I watched recently and that one was definitely genuinely disturbing as well. Also LOVE Secret of Nimh!!! And so many that made it on this list!
So heres the thing about the last unicorn scene they showed. Mommy Fortuna (the witch) she tells the unicorn in a scene (or it might be to her minion im not sure) says she knows and accepts that the harpy will get her someday. This is because as she says, the harpy will forever know that she - mommy fortuna - held her for a long time.
Its so funny to me how most of them misremembered All Dogs go to Heaven. Charlie wasnt a good dog. He was never a good dog. He was completely selfish and arogant. Its his biggest flaw in the movie. He disnt really want to go to Heaven. He wanted to keep living and take revenge on Carface. He was, however, afraid of going to Hell since he tricked Heaven and returned when he wasnt supose to. Hence his nightmare. He was only let back into Heaven because of an act of pure selflessness. Giving his life for Anne-Marie, knowing hes going to end up in Hell.
Should’ve started the video for Who Framed Roger Rabbit a little sooner. “Remember me, Eddy? When I killed your brother I talked just like this.” Also, nothing from Fern Gully.
The scariest scene in any animated movie I ever saw was in the original Pinocchio, the scene on Pleasure Island, in the bar, where Pinocchio and the other boy were playing pool and the boy started turning into a donkey. That scene traumatized me as a small child. I’m 43 now and I still can’t watch Pinocchio because of that scene.
The arms and faces coming out of the walls always scared me more than mombie did, but she was pretty scary too. That whole movie actually: the hospital in the beginning, the random stuff room, being chased by the wheelers. That movie was nightmare fuel!
i LOVE that the first 2 thought it was the mom rampage scene because THAT was what i thought when i saw dumbo listed. that scene is WAY scaries guys! as a kid my mom had to fast forward past it cause it lose it every time!
The scene from Pinocchio when they are turned into donkeys would have been good. Also the ending of the Hans Christian Andersen Little Mermaid cartoon. You have Coraline but not 9?
The scary part is when the judge turns onto a toon after getting squished by the steam roller. And then inflating himself back up to reveal he is a toon and screams in a disturbing voice. That is the dark disturbing part you should have made them watch...
My god that Dumbo scene lives on in my head as one of the scariest and most uncomfortable scenes I've ever watched, I hated that part of the movie 😭😭 The last unicorn was scary too, but somehow Dumbo was worse for me-
A family movie that always scared me as a child with multiple different scenes was the never ending story. The wolf, the oracles blowing up, the horse in the quicksand, everything being destroyed and disappearing towards the end. It was hard to watch all of it in one sitting as a kid.
@@chacragirl How is it more sad than scary??? What makes the scene disturbing is how Sykes never sees Fagin as a human being, but instead a tool he can treat like an ashtrey!
The scene that messed me up was from Neverending Story where the horse Artax sinks in quicksand while Atreyu screams and begs for the Artax to keep trying to eacape only for the horse to perish and Atreyu left defeated and traumatized. It's really intense.
In "Who Framed Roger Rabbit", the scene where its revealed that he is an Toon himself, was always the darkest/scariest moment for me oO And there are sooo many scary scenes in "The secret of Nimh" the whole truth about Nimh oO
I was always big time into mythic fantasy, so The Last Unicorn, A Flight Of Dragons, The Hobbit, and others like them were high on my list of favorite movies as a kid.
Also, though the owl was scary in The Secret of Nimh, they should've showed the scene where the bad guy cuts the rope, and Nicodemus is crushed. Or when he goes after the stone. Better scary stuff!
Ok not a lot of people will get this but Ferngully I liked watching that movie until Hexxus became that giant tar lava skeleton monster. I remember I would hide my face whenever he turned into that. Good thing he only stayed like that for like 2 minutes and I was able to enjoy the rest of the movie just fine. Anastasia. The glowing green goblin things and the fight with the stone horse and Rasputin turning into dust at the end scared the heck out of me. I think what scared me most though was night at bald mountain in Fantasia. I don’t think I was able to watch that at all when I was younger because I was too scared to watch it.
I disagree with the brave little toaster. The darkest scene, would be when they are at the junkyard. When the cars are all singing as to how they got there, only to be crushed.
all dogs go to heaven is truly sad the voice actor for the little girl dies in real life and the voice actor for the dog last lines where what he really felt for the little girl
We need a part two! American Tail: Fival Goes To America...Either when the cats attack or the Secwet Weopon! Little Nemo The Great Mouse Detective...Ratigan was terrifying!! Land Before Time Princess Mononoke...Though, you could probably make an entire episode around Ghibli terrifying moments...lol. The Prince Of Egypt The Iron Giant There's a lot more, but these are some I thought of. Seriously, there are so many animated films made for children that would definitely traumatize some kids...lol.
Rock a doodle, if you have ever seen it, was around this time. Definitely had some scary parts There was alot of movies from that time period that were for kids, but didnt shy from scary parts We back! another one about dinosaurs Honestly, growing up with all these movies, its not scary for me any more, but it would have given me nightmares back then when VHS was a thing Cats dont dance Fern Gully
Was anyone else waiting for any of: Ferngully (probably the machine chasing them but there were a few good choices) The hunchback of notredom (either hellfire or the final gargoyle scene)(might be too mainstream for this tho) The great mouse detective (take your pick, this movie was far darker and creepier than one would expect, and going back as an adult, the evils portrayed actually get worse) The rescuers (mainly the water in the cave scene) The black cauldron (yeah… you have a lot of choices here…) The pebble and the penguin (either the final fight or the leopard seal… probably… there are a lot of good choices) Or We’re back (when they go feral)
Personally I liked growing up with some of this stuff as a kid in the 80's. The dark content is awesome. Don Bluth is still my favorite director. I always liked his movies more than Disney's growing up since they're darker and I still prefer those movies over Disney's. I still like Disney's but Don Bluth won me over as a kid.
As someone gew up watching Roger Rabbit when he was kid, the fact that Jeannie wasn't allowed to watch it when she was growing up, just goes to show how some parents nowadays feel they have to shelter their kids from "taboo" things in movies/TV shows. One way or another they're going to find out eventually. Or maybe this is just one person's viewpoint of an older generation in me talking. After all, I discovered R-rated horror movies when I was 10, but was not sheltered from them.
There were other movies with scary gem scenes: The Pagemaster, Thumbelina, Alice in Wonderland, Fern Gully, Fievel Goes West and The Nutcracker Prince 😬
A part that scared the daylights out of me as a kid was the part in Sleeping Beauty where Aurora is sitting at her vanity table crying with her head down. A fire is burning in the fireplace across from her, but some creepy background music starts playing, the fire goes out, and the room goes dark. Suddenly, Maleficent’s silhouette (horns, yellow eyes, and crystal ball) appears in the fireplace looking over at her. Nightmare fodder for years right there
9:40 My scary childhood movie was Coraline and Brave. I had just gotten over my fear of the dark, then I saw that scene with Mordu in the ruins, and became afraid of the dark again
This unlocked so many literal nightmares I had as a child. My mom banned brave little toaster in my house because I would have the most insane night terrors every single night. Same with who framed Roger Rabbit.
Impressed that Secret of Nimh was on the list, several scene from that movie could have worked. Probably should have mentioned that was the same director as All Dogs go to Heaven. And An American Tail which is the movie that girl was trying to mention
The scene y'all picked for Who Framed Roger Rabbit, it wasn't even the scariest. It was the red shoe and the dip scene. THAT scared me as a kid or when it's first revealed the Judge was a toon, due to that initial scene. His death scene was more funny than scary. Also am I the only one who never found the Pink Elephants scene scary and I am someone who scares easily. After all of the trauma and sad scenes, this was a welcome relief for me! Okay the Hell scene in All Dogs Go to Heaven is not that bad for me personally, considering I've already gone through Secret of NIMH, American Tale, and The Land Before Time lol. And yes I was a kid when I saw these movies. As far as the movie's plot goes, these teens who try to describe the movie, they do okay, but that's not the point of the movie. Charlie was NOT a good dog to begin with, despite being very charismatic and having a few pros to him. Heck he even broke Heaven's rules by 'going back' heck why he's destined for Hell (hence the nightmare). He also goes back for the wrong reason- Revenge, using his friend and Ann-Marie, who ultimately teaches him how to be a good dog and he earns his right to go back to Heaven by sacrificing his life just for her. In other words, this is a story about redemption. There's Secret of NIMH, even though this movie did scare me as a kid, it was balanced out nicely by the charm and humor of the story. For me the scariest scene, was when the box with Brisby's kids in it, started sinking and for a moment you think they did die. Yeah that freaked me out for sure. I was like 11 or 12 when I saw the Brave Little Toaster, so the nightmare scene didn't get me like another scene in the movie- part when this one guy dismantles an object. THAT freaked me out, even though you only see the shadows play it out. OMG I love the Last Unicorn, but for some reason, the Harpy scene never scared me as a kid. Heck the Red Bull was scarier, but even it didn't scare me as much as I would think. I can see why this scene would scare people. This movie did make me cry though, but it's not the scene you may think (Lir's death), no the scene that made me cry was when the Unicorn first became a human, her reaction made me cry. Mia Farrow KILLED it with that char. I am legit surprised, y'all didn't do the Animated Transformers Movie from the 80s, that had scary scenes too.
People so often miss the point of Jessica Rabbit. The light "I'm not bad, I'm only drawn that way." carries so much weight. She is straight up saying she does not like how she looks and has no choice because it's how she was made as a toon. All through the movie she rejects every man who comes on to her except 2, Marvin Acme: who was using her for illicit stuff, and Roger Rabbit, who just loved her because she loved him for making her laugh. In the behind the scenes of WFRR, they actually want to make Jessica even more extremely overly sexualized but the studio had them tone her down because it was too much. While they wanted to use her to satire all these over sexualized women that were seen only for their looks in Hollywood and in cartoons. Rather than being seen as people or develop as character.
a couple of movies i think should have been mentioned are: the black cauldron, the hunch back of Notre dame, corpse bride, Watership down, and fantasia.
The Black Cauldron, hands down the scariest movie Disney ever produced. It was deemed too dark from them, bombed in the box office because of its dark nature, but also caused the Disney Renaissance. Hit'em with a Horned King scene from that one.
This subject reminds me of Courage the cowardly dog..It is one of the memorable animations that decorated my childhood 😂 Thanks for interesting and valuable video as always
The Spindle sequence in Disney's Sleeping Beauty is by far one of the scariest moments in Disney history. The whole sequence really brings out that childhood fear which is the fear of the dark. The scariest part of the whole sequence is when we see Maleficent in the fireplace but the only thing we see is her yellow eyes piercing out of the darkness.
RIP Allyson, you were gone to soon. My prayers and condolences to your family, friends and, relatives, and React colleagues who are like your second family. 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
All Dogs Go to Heaven is extra sad when you realize that Burt Reynolds said Goodbye to the little girl knowing that the actress that played the little girl had been murdered before he filmed those lines.
The saddest part about All Dogs Go To Heaven, is when Charlie has to say bye to Ann Marie because he's leaving and won't see her again really, but its extra extra sad because the voice actor for Ann Marie was "unalived" by her own father. They had prerecorded the audio for the little girls part so when Bert Reynolds went to record with the audio of Ann Marie telling him bye, the emotion in "Charlies" voice is 100% genuine and he's actually saying goodbye to the little girl.
That, and her telling him “I love you..”. If I had been in Burt Reynold’s shoes, I wouldn’t have been okay for *years* 😭
@@djmocha7according to some behind the scenes info, Burt Reynolds actually requested that only he and the guy recording his lines did this alone because he couldn’t hold back his tears.
Thank you for not exposing them to “Watership Down” because NONE of them would survive it. Fun fact about “The Last Unicorn”: it was originally PG rated because of a couple of swear words. Those were edited out and the movie got a G rating. The PG version can be found on the 30 anniversary Bluray.
Yeah watership down was a huge wtf moment since I heard the book wasn't that screwed up and sold well but the movie oof it was even aired on daytime television in the UK same with the Animals of Farthing Wood and yeah they were pretty screwed up pieces of animation I'd say
It's a good movie though, very messed up, but it was good.
Beautiful animation but yes I think it would blow their minds
Watership down was rated a G until 2 years ago when it got changed to PG.
@@ArchchuIsGaming it was always a PG here in the USA.
The donkey scene from Pinocchio always freaked me out as a kid. I never could tell if they were still themselves once they lost the ability to speak, or if their minds would go full donkey too.
I'm surprised that wasn't included here
@@samfeldstein4498Same!
That scene still freaks me out!
that scene fucked me up
Apparently one of those kids is donkey from Shrek
All Dogs go to heaven is even sadder when you find out the little girl was murdered by her father in real life
You mentioned bambi but not land before time?
Watching littlefoot's mother fight off a T-rex to save her baby(you literally see a piece of her flesh missing) only to then die in an earthquake right in front of her baby is still one of the emotional horrors of my childhood
All dogs go to heaven makes me upset more because the little girl is voiced by the same girl who played ducky in the land before time. Who if you didn't know was m******d by her father. And I believe the last line Charlie says to her before he goes to heaven was added as a special goodbye to her.😢
Very surprised that The Land Before Time wasn't even an honorable mention, with Littlefoot's mother's death plus just how terrifying and sadistic the Sharptooth was.
I will forever be traumatized by The Fox and The Hound when the old lady leaves Todd (the fox) in the woods and drives away 😭😭😭😭😭
Bro, Chief's NEAR DEATH experience was traumatizing! Imagine that being your pet! I don't blame Amos for trying to hunt that dang fox.
Fun fact: that one part of All dogs go to heaven when Charlie is saying goodbye to Ann-Marie was the voice actor actually saying goodbye to Judith Barsi. 😢
Also i love The Last Unicorn
And he had to do multiple takes because he kept breaking down I think :(((
Please. Shush. This ain't a fun fact, this is just depressing.
"Maybe kids back in the day were built different "
My dear... we were built different!!!
The most morbid thing about "All Dogs Go To Heaven" is the little girl who voiced Ann Marie in the movie, Judith Barsi. She also voiced Ducky in The Land Before Time. Before both movies were released, Judith's father murdered her and her mother by shooting them, and then after 2 days, he set his house on fire and shot himself.
Don Bluth, who made these movies, even had a song made just for Judith at the end of All Dogs Go To Heaven, called "Love Survives".
I'm surprised no one mentioned the Pleasure Island donkey scene. I personally didn't have a problem with it, but I know it scared a lot of kids.
Fox and The Hound when the widow has to leave Tod behind in the woods.
That was rough.
yeah that broke me right up there with the happy dog being lead to the death chamber in lady and the tramp.
No one ever talks about the death of Tadashi from Big Hero 6!!! That one had me in big baby snotty booger tears 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
The girl who voiced the little girl in all dogs go to heaven was shot and killed by her father during production but she had already finished her voice lines so the guy who voiced the dog had to voice the emotional scenes without the girl who voiced her.
A lot of Don Bluth animations had scary and/or scarring pieces in them. Love his animated movies! (Nimh and American tail were mentioned or included in the video, but Land before time was not in here, neighter Rock-a-doodle or Thumbelina)
Can we acknowledge the fact that Constance/The Spirit of the Monster House and Jessica Rabbit are voiced by the SAME ACTRESS!? And can we acknowledge the fact that the voice of the old lady in "The Last Unicorn" would go on to be the voice of Mrs. Potts in "Beauty and the Beast"?!
One that was missed. When oggie boogie from the nightmare before christmas gets ripped open in the end and its just bugs falling outta him. It scared me as a kid, but i love the movie regardless
If they only knew that the part where Charlie was going to heaven; Burt Reynolds had a hard time recording it because the actress who played the little girl passed away and that part where Charlie was saying good bye, was actually Burt saying goodbye to her (the actress). The poor girl was murdered by her father. I swear I never cried harder when I learned that tidbit of history. it Makes All Dogs to heaven even more sadder.
@yingfaa Was that the same one who voiced ducky or whatever her name was in the first land before time?
@@iso-didact789yes
messed up a bit with Judge Doom, should've stated with the steamroller reveal into the "starring daggers" shot then to the buzz saw hand.
No mention of Judith Barsi in All Dogs Go To Heaven? It was literally her last roll before her dad murdered her. Her last line in the movie was saying, "goodbye, Charlie. I love you."
Charlie's actor, Burt Reynolds, cried when saying goodbye back because he recorded the line after her passing.
"Maybe kids back in the day were just.....built different"
Oh trust me! We were! 😂
My grandson will be 14 in September. We watched all these movies when he was little. Monster House is still his favorite.
It's so simple, watch a cartoon laugh, cry whatever. When you're finished turn it off and go do something else.
It's a cartoon it's doesn't need to be analyzed and discussed about traumatizing children.
What makes all dogs go to heaven even more gut wrenching is that this was Judith Barsi’s last role as her father murdered her and her mother, her last lines were already recorded but Burt Reynolds hadn’t recorded his lines, he asked for a closed set and took him a heap of takes cause he kept breaking down and even the take they used you could tell his starting to breakdown. So the end scene instead of Anne Marie saying a sad goodbye to Charlie it’s Burt saying goodbye to Judith 😢😢😢
Horrid story, alcohol mixed with a bad person.
Alice in Wonderland, particularly the one where they eat the oyster babies or whatever. I HATED that as a kid. Made me cry.
Jungle Book when the snake is singing to the kid, trying to hypnotize him... used to terrify me as a kid!
As one person said, Mor'du was definitely the one thing that scared me as a kid. I love Brave so much. Black Couldran was one I watched recently and that one was definitely genuinely disturbing as well. Also LOVE Secret of Nimh!!! And so many that made it on this list!
So heres the thing about the last unicorn scene they showed. Mommy Fortuna (the witch) she tells the unicorn in a scene (or it might be to her minion im not sure) says she knows and accepts that the harpy will get her someday. This is because as she says, the harpy will forever know that she - mommy fortuna - held her for a long time.
How could you not include Pinocchio in this list, that dang movie is terrifying and traumatic through and through 😅
Secret of NIMH is a Don Bluth film. His direction and animation is just chefs kiss. And the phantom tollbooth is just as odd in the book.
And his video games "Dragon's Lair" (1983) and "Space Ace" (1984) are as much fun to watch as they are to play. =)
Its so funny to me how most of them misremembered All Dogs go to Heaven.
Charlie wasnt a good dog. He was never a good dog. He was completely selfish and arogant. Its his biggest flaw in the movie. He disnt really want to go to Heaven. He wanted to keep living and take revenge on Carface. He was, however, afraid of going to Hell since he tricked Heaven and returned when he wasnt supose to. Hence his nightmare.
He was only let back into Heaven because of an act of pure selflessness. Giving his life for Anne-Marie, knowing hes going to end up in Hell.
Oh you talking about Ann Marie just reminded me of the sad and horrific story of the voice actress. That poor girl deserved so much better and more😢.
My dad was a HS English teacher. He had his students read Watership Down before showing the movie in class. Naturally, I grew up on it
yikes
Should’ve started the video for Who Framed Roger Rabbit a little sooner. “Remember me, Eddy? When I killed your brother I talked just like this.”
Also, nothing from Fern Gully.
Seconded.
The scariest scene in any animated movie I ever saw was in the original Pinocchio, the scene on Pleasure Island, in the bar, where Pinocchio and the other boy were playing pool and the boy started turning into a donkey. That scene traumatized me as a small child. I’m 43 now and I still can’t watch Pinocchio because of that scene.
Lampwick
Yes, us kids in the 80's were definitely different. The Last Unicorn, The Secret of NIMH, and The Dark Crystal were some of my favorites growing up.
I know it's not animated, but if you want a creepy scene from a family movie... Return to Oz... When Dorothy accidentally wakes up Mombie.
The arms and faces coming out of the walls always scared me more than mombie did, but she was pretty scary too. That whole movie actually: the hospital in the beginning, the random stuff room, being chased by the wheelers. That movie was nightmare fuel!
Dorothy GAAAAAAAAALE!
Even better. The actress who was Mombi was also Queen Bavmorda in Willow and Dr. Culex from The Tomorrow People.
i LOVE that the first 2 thought it was the mom rampage scene because THAT was what i thought when i saw dumbo listed. that scene is WAY scaries guys! as a kid my mom had to fast forward past it cause it lose it every time!
y'all missed Ferngully and The Black Cauldron.
The scene from Pinocchio when they are turned into donkeys would have been good. Also the ending of the Hans Christian Andersen Little Mermaid cartoon. You have Coraline but not 9?
Don Bluth out here animating the trauma into little kids' hearts.
Kudos for showing The Book Of Nimh - check out The Black Cauldron!
The scary part is when the judge turns onto a toon after getting squished by the steam roller. And then inflating himself back up to reveal he is a toon and screams in a disturbing voice. That is the dark disturbing part you should have made them watch...
Legit shocked Watership Down wasn't on here, it ruined a lot of childhoods because of the U rating.
My god that Dumbo scene lives on in my head as one of the scariest and most uncomfortable scenes I've ever watched, I hated that part of the movie 😭😭 The last unicorn was scary too, but somehow Dumbo was worse for me-
Y’all missed a lot! Fantasia had some really scary ones sleeping beauty at the end. Y’all should do a part two.
A family movie that always scared me as a child with multiple different scenes was the never ending story. The wolf, the oracles blowing up, the horse in the quicksand, everything being destroyed and disappearing towards the end. It was hard to watch all of it in one sitting as a kid.
This absolutely needs a part 2 with some more older stuff
like charlottes web
watership down
pete's dragon...
Watership Down and Plague Dogs!
The fact that the Black Cauldron or the Princess and the Goblin weren't even mentioned. Criminal.
Eh, Black Cauldron aint dark
@@Yellowguy0619 You can't say there aren't a few good scenes that would give the young ones nightmares, though.
@@chacragirl Fair, but I think the darkest disney movie in the 80s is actually Oliver and Company.
I'll give it to the dock scene, but overall it was more sad than scary.
I'd say Land Before Time, if we're talking 80s.
@@chacragirl How is it more sad than scary??? What makes the scene disturbing is how Sykes never sees Fagin as a human being, but instead a tool he can treat like an ashtrey!
What about "Watership Down" That had a few truly gut wrenching moments.
The Horned King getting sucked into the cauldron from Black Cauldron definitely should've been top on this list.
That gave me nightmares as a kid
The scene that messed me up was from Neverending Story where the horse Artax sinks in quicksand while Atreyu screams and begs for the Artax to keep trying to eacape only for the horse to perish and Atreyu left defeated and traumatized. It's really intense.
In "Who Framed Roger Rabbit", the scene where its revealed that he is an Toon himself, was always the darkest/scariest moment for me oO
And there are sooo many scary scenes in "The secret of Nimh" the whole truth about Nimh oO
Really the “darkest scariest” animated movie moments and you DIDN’T include the donkey transformation scene in Pinocchio?!
I was always big time into mythic fantasy, so The Last Unicorn, A Flight Of Dragons, The Hobbit, and others like them were high on my list of favorite movies as a kid.
Flight of Dragons was a favourite.
Also, though the owl was scary in The Secret of Nimh, they should've showed the scene where the bad guy cuts the rope, and Nicodemus is crushed. Or when he goes after the stone. Better scary stuff!
Ok not a lot of people will get this but
Ferngully
I liked watching that movie until Hexxus became that giant tar lava skeleton monster. I remember I would hide my face whenever he turned into that. Good thing he only stayed like that for like 2 minutes and I was able to enjoy the rest of the movie just fine.
Anastasia. The glowing green goblin things and the fight with the stone horse and Rasputin turning into dust at the end scared the heck out of me.
I think what scared me most though was night at bald mountain in Fantasia. I don’t think I was able to watch that at all when I was younger because I was too scared to watch it.
the darkest animated film was watership down the whole freaking movie
.....Who Framed Roger Rabbit was NOT a children's movie. O.O And the book it was based on DEFINITELY wasn't for kids.
I am upset they didn't show them Water Ship Down. But I can understand. It would get too hard core.
Watership Down
Toxic Love from Ferngully
The Mysterious Stranger scene from The Adventures of Mark Twain
I disagree with the brave little toaster. The darkest scene, would be when they are at the junkyard. When the cars are all singing as to how they got there, only to be crushed.
The last unicorn is also a great book as well.
all dogs go to heaven is truly sad the voice actor for the little girl dies in real life and the voice actor for the dog last lines where what he really felt for the little girl
Yeah that little girl deserved so much better😢.
@@CandaceDreamer agreed it was very sad
We need a part two!
American Tail: Fival Goes To America...Either when the cats attack or the Secwet Weopon!
Little Nemo
The Great Mouse Detective...Ratigan was terrifying!!
Land Before Time
Princess Mononoke...Though, you could probably make an entire episode around Ghibli terrifying moments...lol.
The Prince Of Egypt
The Iron Giant
There's a lot more, but these are some I thought of. Seriously, there are so many animated films made for children that would definitely traumatize some kids...lol.
Rock a doodle, if you have ever seen it, was around this time. Definitely had some scary parts
There was alot of movies from that time period that were for kids, but didnt shy from scary parts
We back! another one about dinosaurs
Honestly, growing up with all these movies, its not scary for me any more, but it would have given me nightmares back then when VHS was a thing
Cats dont dance
Fern Gully
Was anyone else waiting for any of:
Ferngully (probably the machine chasing them but there were a few good choices)
The hunchback of notredom (either hellfire or the final gargoyle scene)(might be too mainstream for this tho)
The great mouse detective (take your pick, this movie was far darker and creepier than one would expect, and going back as an adult, the evils portrayed actually get worse)
The rescuers (mainly the water in the cave scene)
The black cauldron (yeah… you have a lot of choices here…)
The pebble and the penguin (either the final fight or the leopard seal… probably… there are a lot of good choices)
Or
We’re back (when they go feral)
That's not a vulture, that's a harpy.😂😂😂
Watership Down...by far the darkest thing in any "kids" movie ever...
Really dissapointed you didn't show that part to them.
One movie that terrified me as a kid was "The Black Cauldron" from 1985. That show was absolutely terrifying, but I also love it
The book is much better!
And this is why Gen X and elder millennials are the way they are. No body gave a s**t what we watched.
Personally I liked growing up with some of this stuff as a kid in the 80's. The dark content is awesome.
Don Bluth is still my favorite director. I always liked his movies more than Disney's growing up since they're darker
and I still prefer those movies over Disney's. I still like Disney's but Don Bluth won me over as a kid.
Should have done Watership Down!!!!!! The most scary cartoon movie out there!!!!!
As someone gew up watching Roger Rabbit when he was kid, the fact that Jeannie wasn't allowed to watch it when she was growing up, just goes to show how some parents nowadays feel they have to shelter their kids from "taboo" things in movies/TV shows. One way or another they're going to find out eventually. Or maybe this is just one person's viewpoint of an older generation in me talking. After all, I discovered R-rated horror movies when I was 10, but was not sheltered from them.
The Horned King coming out of the cauldron scared me when I was little. I didn't watch the Black Cauldron again until college.
There were other movies with scary gem scenes: The Pagemaster, Thumbelina, Alice in Wonderland, Fern Gully, Fievel Goes West and The Nutcracker Prince 😬
A part that scared the daylights out of me as a kid was the part in Sleeping Beauty where Aurora is sitting at her vanity table crying with her head down. A fire is burning in the fireplace across from her, but some creepy background music starts playing, the fire goes out, and the room goes dark. Suddenly, Maleficent’s silhouette (horns, yellow eyes, and crystal ball) appears in the fireplace looking over at her. Nightmare fodder for years right there
The scariest movie is probably the movie 9
It scared me for life
9:36 The Secret of Nihm reminded me of The last Unicorn and Once Upon a Forest, I really need to rewatch those-
Where is Pinocchio (1940)? He turns into a donkey?
And the The Queen’s Transformation from Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937).
9:40 My scary childhood movie was Coraline and Brave. I had just gotten over my fear of the dark, then I saw that scene with Mordu in the ruins, and became afraid of the dark again
Secret of Nimh is a phenomenal movie. One of my favorites.
It's definitely a good one. Real shame the sequel was so bad.
This unlocked so many literal nightmares I had as a child. My mom banned brave little toaster in my house because I would have the most insane night terrors every single night. Same with who framed Roger Rabbit.
Impressed that Secret of Nimh was on the list, several scene from that movie could have worked. Probably should have mentioned that was the same director as All Dogs go to Heaven. And An American Tail which is the movie that girl was trying to mention
The Red Bull in The Last Unicorn was so much scarier than the harpie scene
The scene y'all picked for Who Framed Roger Rabbit, it wasn't even the scariest. It was the red shoe and the dip scene. THAT scared me as a kid or when it's first revealed the Judge was a toon, due to that initial scene. His death scene was more funny than scary.
Also am I the only one who never found the Pink Elephants scene scary and I am someone who scares easily. After all of the trauma and sad scenes, this was a welcome relief for me!
Okay the Hell scene in All Dogs Go to Heaven is not that bad for me personally, considering I've already gone through Secret of NIMH, American Tale, and The Land Before Time lol. And yes I was a kid when I saw these movies. As far as the movie's plot goes, these teens who try to describe the movie, they do okay, but that's not the point of the movie. Charlie was NOT a good dog to begin with, despite being very charismatic and having a few pros to him. Heck he even broke Heaven's rules by 'going back' heck why he's destined for Hell (hence the nightmare). He also goes back for the wrong reason- Revenge, using his friend and Ann-Marie, who ultimately teaches him how to be a good dog and he earns his right to go back to Heaven by sacrificing his life just for her. In other words, this is a story about redemption.
There's Secret of NIMH, even though this movie did scare me as a kid, it was balanced out nicely by the charm and humor of the story. For me the scariest scene, was when the box with Brisby's kids in it, started sinking and for a moment you think they did die. Yeah that freaked me out for sure.
I was like 11 or 12 when I saw the Brave Little Toaster, so the nightmare scene didn't get me like another scene in the movie- part when this one guy dismantles an object. THAT freaked me out, even though you only see the shadows play it out.
OMG I love the Last Unicorn, but for some reason, the Harpy scene never scared me as a kid. Heck the Red Bull was scarier, but even it didn't scare me as much as I would think. I can see why this scene would scare people. This movie did make me cry though, but it's not the scene you may think (Lir's death), no the scene that made me cry was when the Unicorn first became a human, her reaction made me cry. Mia Farrow KILLED it with that char.
I am legit surprised, y'all didn't do the Animated Transformers Movie from the 80s, that had scary scenes too.
People so often miss the point of Jessica Rabbit. The light "I'm not bad, I'm only drawn that way." carries so much weight. She is straight up saying she does not like how she looks and has no choice because it's how she was made as a toon. All through the movie she rejects every man who comes on to her except 2, Marvin Acme: who was using her for illicit stuff, and Roger Rabbit, who just loved her because she loved him for making her laugh.
In the behind the scenes of WFRR, they actually want to make Jessica even more extremely overly sexualized but the studio had them tone her down because it was too much. While they wanted to use her to satire all these over sexualized women that were seen only for their looks in Hollywood and in cartoons. Rather than being seen as people or develop as character.
a couple of movies i think should have been mentioned are: the black cauldron, the hunch back of Notre dame, corpse bride, Watership down, and fantasia.
NO! Not, WD!😭
The words Watership Down strikes into the hearts of every 70s/80s kids (in the UK at least).
I came down here to say this. 😉
3:10 That's not even the scariest scene from Who Framed Roger Rabbit?. The scariest scene is The Dip
The Black Cauldron, hands down the scariest movie Disney ever produced. It was deemed too dark from them, bombed in the box office because of its dark nature, but also caused the Disney Renaissance. Hit'em with a Horned King scene from that one.
The scene where he melted the innocent toon shoe was more scary in Roger Rabbit
Nah him with crazy eyes and getting run over was WWWAAYYYY scarier
This subject reminds me of Courage the cowardly dog..It is one of the memorable animations that decorated my childhood 😂 Thanks for interesting and valuable video as always
Black Cauldron and Great Mouse Detective (the fight on Parliament Tower) are missing from this. I was TERRIFIED as a child.
The Spindle sequence in Disney's Sleeping Beauty is by far one of the scariest moments in Disney history.
The whole sequence really brings out that childhood fear which is the fear of the dark. The scariest part of the whole sequence is when we see Maleficent in the fireplace but the only thing we see is her yellow eyes piercing out of the darkness.
RIP Allyson, you were gone to soon. My prayers and condolences to your family, friends and, relatives, and React colleagues who are like your second family. 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
who’s Allyson
She was a Reactor on the React channel who just recently passed away when a car hit her while she was riding her motorcycle
@@siempreselena23was killed when a car hit her motorcycle she’s a member of react
Watership Down was missing, as was the Black Cauldron.
Don Bluth films always have a scary section in it.
Really? No Watership Down? I'm shocked, since that was the one that completely scarred my generation.
Ralph Bakshi The Hobbit when Thorin is about to get his head bitten off. Though Golem was definitely scary as well.
The 70s version or the modern one with Freeman?
The Brave Little Toaster, enough said.
Love this movie
These youngins wouldn't be able to handle Watership Down
I am from gen X. And I STILL can't handle having watched as a kid, WD.😭
Where's chernabog? That shit terrified me as a kid lol