I really like how joy actually glows slightly blue and has blue hair, hinting at the whole "you can't be happy without sadness thing" that the movie ends with.
It may be a stretch but when thinking about sadness touching all those memory orbs and turning them into "sad" memories, I couldn't help but think of memories you have that later become saddening because you know you'll never experience them again. Again, it might be a stretch, but that's where my mind went.
That's how it Feels Sometimes, a Happy Memory is Always tied to Sorrow and Sadness, but that doesn't mean it's bad. Moving forward in life is important for us to grow into our True Selfs, so you have to Let go of that Feeling of Joy for a Memory you Once had in order to grow.
looking back on what was a happy memory and sad cause it's over is nostalgia. the theme of nostalgia and growing up and getting past that part of your life is also a huge theme in this movie I think.
whenever i look back at my memories it just feels like i cant go back in time to when i was happier n shit like that, i dont think its this way for everyone as i was diagnosed as bipolar with an anxiety disorder but it would make sense sinse this is sort of the theme of the movie. sorry english is not my first langauge and my english is kind of bad.
I like the idea that the 5 emotions don’t necessarily represent a one note emotion. Obviously, sadness can represent... sadness, but it can also represent empathy and or sympathy. Anger can drive not only how mad you get but also your determination and hard-headedness. The emotion that sits at the center of the control panel is what decides how we act. Say, if Disgust was the emotion at the center, the person being controlled could have a prideful personality. Fear can represent a timid and shy nature but Fear can also represent calm and logical thinking, the personality that would be more inclined to suggest a “tactical retreat” rather than a “full on assault”, for example.
@@Icybubba And they are. In fact, there’s only really one missing emotion: surprise. Scientists (source: TomSka’s video on the best asdfmovie joke) have determined 6 core emotions: the five in this movie, and surprise
@@aionicthunder - Wouldn't surprise be a combination of fear and joy? (with maybe a splash of anger if you didn't like the surprise) "AH! You JERK! ... Sneaking up on me like that." *proceeds to hug best friend anyways / or bro-fist, if that's your preferred interaction*
I prefer to think that her mom’s emotion of sadness has matured to empathy and her dad’s anger is determinism. We even see in Riley’s head, that Sadness is empathetic (when she talks to BingBong) and Anger gets stuff done. This could result from growing up, but it could also be because they’re parents.
It's also that Joy is Riley's dominant emotion and probably will be for all her life, she just needs to learn how to be a leader, just like other people's dominant emotions did.
yes! All emotions are healthy in some levels. It's only when it becomes too overbearing, such as riley trying to stay happy and pushing away sadness, is when it's unhealthy and ruins lives.
On the same wavelength of Sadness providing empathy and Anger providing determination, Joy also provides optimism as we see her constantly looking on the brighter side of things even as the situation keeps spiraling downhill and only breaking down when she literally hits rock bottom. Fear also brings careful planning and Disgust helps develop our personal taste and organization skills.
I love the color theory in this movie, they show you what emotions are in charge with what riley wears. But also notice the colors the emotions wear. Joy has blue hair which I feel sort of foreshadows the ending. Disgust has a purple ascot which could mean about how sometimes disgust and fear can be indistinguishable/related. Fear has a red bow tie which may be that things we hate we're just scared of. When Riley runs away she's dressed in pure black and it shows the emotional hole she's in. I just find it a really neat detail.
Given that the emotions seem to be light-based entities. I feel this is wrong. Sure. If you put all the colors together using crayons or paint, it goes black. But if you do it with light, it'd be a white. Black is devoid of all emotion (hence why none of them were able to control her until Sadness got back) White would be all of them at once.
Also in some of the other scenes, such as during the hockey tryouts, wearing a yellow and red kit, yellow for the Joy she did and *should* be feeling for her favourite sport, red for the Anger that is in control of her emotions.
So does that mean Sadness wearing a white sweater symbolizes how it's a combination of all emotions, like when all the other lights combined become white light?
Here's a CinemaWins fan word of the week for you: Pluviophile; A person who prefers the rain to sun, finding solace during rainfall. Might not be as extreme for you, but, y'know... always a cool thing to know
I love the rain too! I love the idea of cozying up inside with a good book. Well, it's usually my video games and computer instead, lol. But I'm still doing a lot of reading online on things i care about...like this movie! Point is, I really enjoy spending my time inside. Also, I HATE the heat and I LOVE the cold! Neither is great in extreme, but I'm actually really sensitive to heat so I associate sun and sunny days with feeling hot and uncomfortable, and cloudy days with feeling comfortable and not burning up, so they're don't really make me unhappy.
@@randomnessproductions4212 Cloudy days, especially in summer and especially if there's no wind, are absolutely horrible. I always feel like the air gets heavy and I have a hard time breathing. Whenever it's cloudy, all I do is pray for rain and/or wind. They're both extremely nice.
I'll always prefer gray clouds, wind, and rain to summer days that are hot and still. But better than all that, are storms. High winds, torrential downpour, thunder and lightning. I'll just stand out in them and let the rain pour down over me. The air just feels charged with raw, chaotic energy. The small taste of the unbridled fury of nature.
Can I mention how accurately this describes the symptoms of clinical depression disorder? I’m not entirely sure, and definitely not a professional, but the main basis of depression is that chemical imbalances prevents people from enjoying what commonly makes them happy. Hobbies and the like seem to neutralize in them, and people find themselves feeling a bit empty. Not sad, just devoid of happiness. Notice how Joy and Sadness are the two emotions that get lost? Rylee isn’t feeling happy right now, but she isn’t specifically sad- Just like depression. This is a great message to kids about mental health, and I’ve heard that therapists for children use the characters in Inside Out to get a description of how their patients are feeling, meaning they can be diagnosed correctly even if they may lack a lot of vocabulary to describe experience. Okay, thanks.
Well joy did have a right not want sadness in charge too much. People who are actually sad too long become depressed. Of course the stories I heard were of people affected by CPS being tyrants who expect everyone to be perfect. The families just wanted to go back and weren't allowed to and were miserable because of this and that became depression.
@@theresahall8206 there is a difference in being sad and being depressed Sadness is temporary, if you are feeling long prolonged "sadness" it actually depression, absence of joy not presence of sadness Also this movie did a great job, most of the times our urge to feel happy ALL THE TIME makes us to hide our sadness, and this backfires with the abscence to feel both of joy and sadness
Actually it's more in line with Situational Depression (officially called "Adjustment Disorder With Depressed Mood") because Riley's depression has a distinct cause (the move from Minnesota to California) and was dealt with without professional treatment.
The detail with Riley wearing clothes that match her emotional state is something I never noticed, it's amazing how much attention to detail Pixar puts into their films
Actually, fun fact! It can be a subconcious thing too in real life. Not always to this extent, but in that you wear bright colour when you feel happy and confident and stuff and darker shades on your quieter, moodier days.
Growing up isn't about giving up your goofball island. It's about knowing when it is appropriate to use that part of your personality and when it isn't. and as always remember Growing old is mandatory, growing up is optional.
and going along with the comment of "emotions on autopilot=depression" being accurate Each island of personality crumbling as riley falls deeper and deeper INTO depression (i.e. losing interest in the things that once mattered a lot to you) is just...too damned real
Yeah she got hit with the start of depression when she was suppressing her sadness. This meant she wasn't able to truly feel happy either so both Joy and Sadness got yeeted out. Like you pointed out, she slipped deeper into depression as each island crumbled, the depression started after her experience crying in the classroom in which she did everything in her power to suppress Sadness which ofc caused a mental break and something was going to give thus depression. I like how they showed how the depression started by her not being able to feel Joy, but since it was still early stages she could still feel Anger, Fear, and Disgust which caused certain warning signs of depression like irritability from Anger. Like you said as each island crumbled it showed Riley losing interest in things that mattered to her, all coming to ahead when the final island crumbled and she could no longer feel any of her emotions. Riley wasn't experiencing clinical depression so she could still overcome the depression by just letting her sadness out, which ofc isn't the solution to clinical depression which is not caused by the lack of emotional honesty but rather by a chemical imbalance in your brain but either way they did depression super well in this movie
@@AlyxAesthetics that's normal too. Growing up or having a sudden shift in interest is part of life, sometimes you'll see one small thing and all of a sudden you're moving in a direction you weren't before.
I think one of my favorite and underrated scenes in this movie is when Joy is looking at the now blue and black memories and being so overwhelmed by feelings that she doesnt understand. She tries to hold these memories that were once so happy to her, but now they aren't really hers to hold; she is trying to hold onto the past with such strength that the pressure and need to cling to them pushes all of them out of her arms, and the only thing she can do is cling to herself. Joy, feeling g something that she isn't supposed to or understands at all, has to hold onto herself, which is exactly what Riely is trying so hard to do. It is such a fantastic and overlooked moment that kills me every time!
This movie represents hockey brilliantly! The way that when her hockey island is intact and thriving she has a fantastic time playing hockey with her dad, even with no puck, but after her hockey island collapses, she struggles to do something as simple as dangling the puck and falls flat on her face when she goes for a slapshot she would usually make. Your mindset is a huge part of your skill in hockey, and this movie understands that.
Inside Out is a masterpiece. Every time I watch it sends me into tears. Even this video succeeded. I got tingles knowing Bing Bong was about to be forgotten. How, how does Pixar do it?! Can you imagine a screenwriter attempting to pitch this story to Dreamworks or, dare I say it, Illumination? Hey, I've got this cool idea for a kid's film about psychology, existentialism and emotional upheaval. What do you guys think?
I think part of what makes Pixar so good at stuff like this is they strip out everything unnecessary and keep the most simple of threads. Fleshed out beautifully, but kept so simple. It's like the moment in the UP intro montage where they can't have kids... no words at all, and the shot is over in seconds, but those 3 seconds, and the shot of her alone in her chair in the yard after it just wrecked audiences everywhere.
I just realized. Joy's hair is the only one that doesnt follow her emotion's palette, and its actually Sad's blue. As in, there is always some Sadness on top of every Joy. *Mind Blown*
I know everyone says they cry at Bing Bong, but the part that always gets me is Riley's shuddering breath when Joy and Sadness work together at the end. It's just so heart wrenching and beautiful all at the same time and just-- tears.
I got the impression that the emotions can mature as well. Mom has sadness in charge but not "obsessively" sad. Dad is always happy but anger is in charge. Even when anger is going to exercise "anger", its fear who presses the button. In Riley's head only joy can spark joy, disgust=disgust etc. The mind matures, emotions get more complex (memory orbs get to be multicoloured) the mind matures (the console gets bigger with more complex possibilities) so the emotions become more complex and less single minded too. I don't think that's too much of a stretch.
What, no win for the bus driver who's all Anger? That was the best part of the credits! And really, the moments where you just went meta with earworms, deja vu and losing your train of thought was just...yes.
i think the reason why sadness was so compelled to touch the memories is because when you recall a memory you start feeling a bit sad or homesick when you realize you can't relive that time again , and that's called nostalgia
I always didn't understand the boys emotions freaking out until a year ago when my boyfriend told me he loves me. He was so scared to tell me and seemed like he was freaking out. So yeah inside out got the boys emotions freaking out when they like a girl pretty accurately. Now I laugh everytime I see it because I picture my boyfriend's emotions doing the same when he was telling me that he loves me.
I didn't understand until a year ago when I started liking a girl who's my friend and I started freaking out inside everytime she asked me something about herself, lol
Me and my parents watched this movie together and I was really feeling it and I guess I let something slip, my parents yelled at me for not telling them what was wrong. I’m thinking....this....this is exactly why I won’t talk to you and why I feel like this, thanks😂
@@abbyrobles2400 unfortunately it's a common problem, my mom wants me to talk about my depression to her yet when I do I with get the impression she isn't listening out worse she compares what she's feeling to me and that just makes me shut up because it's not helpful
I didn’t realize Riley’s mom wears yellow after the move and Riley wears black when entering depression. (And your other examples) Or the fact that boyfriend generator looks new and imagination land looks old!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Again any of you other examples along those lines.
12:29 in the background looking at the memory orbs, you can see there's no longer primarily yellow with the occasional other color in there, which means joy did learn her lesson about how she's not the most important emotion and isn't taking primary control
So, I gotta be honest. I didn't want to see Inside Out when it first released. I thought it was going to be really dumb. Then I get to the theater and Pixar gets me to feel sorry for a frikkin VOLCANO. (Thanks a lot, Lava. lol) Anyway, the movie starts and seeing Riley go from literal newborn infant to a 2-3 year old to 11 was one of the best character introductions ever. For both her and her emotions. And then the bombshell. When she found out she had to make a cross country move and leave her entire life behind. That's when the movie truly hooked me. Because I, being a Navy Brat, have had to make that move 7 times in my life. 6 of those were before I turned 18. And the emotions Riley was feeling, the need to "be happy" and "keep smiling" despite having to leave my entire life behind, it just hit me in the soul. The thoughts of wanting to go back home, of my friends living their lives without me, Pixar nailed it. And then the catharsis when Sadness and Joy manage to make her fully embrace the sadness of one part of your life being over, but still having the joy that comes with a loving, caring, supporting family. Just...the entire scene where Riley comes home and hugs her parents...it made me cry real tears of all the feels in the theater, and every time I watch the movie afterwords. And I don't feel bad about it. Not a bit. I can't speak for others, but the direction Pixar went with the story, and how they portrayed what a cross country PCS (Permanent Change of Station) on an 11 year old, is what makes Inside Out my second favorite movie of all time. Literally less than a fraction of an iota under Toy Story. So yeah, love the movie, and I love your analysis as to why its so great. Keep it up, Cinemawins!!
The part that destroyed me was her getting on the bus after all of the "lands" had crashed. The only thing I thought was, "Of course she's doing this, All of her worlds are gone, all of her emotional ties are destroyed. She's on autopilot." I also laughed loud enough to bother other moviegoers at the PUBERTY alarm.
Okay, +3 wins: Joy's skin is yellow (Joy), her dress is green (Disgust), & her eyes & hair are blue (Sadness). Hinted right from the beginning that Joy herself doesn't just experience joy, we also see her express disgust in regards to Sadness & sadness. Also, +1 win for Mindy Kaling as Disgust, I honestly can't think of a better casting.
Ponderer Of Pointless Dreams that's the point of growing up, it has to happen, a kid has to let go of their imaginary friend(s). I'm not even sure if I ever had one or not.
@@amehak1922 Well I'm 23, and I never left my imaginary friends behind, I just 'talk' to them inside my mind, not outloud (because I'd look crazy) and I always knew they were fake.
@@MatthewJones-jg4eu Not really, I'm also an only child. It too choir choral performances in middle school to overcome shyness. It wasn't anxiety I don't get stage freight, I just don't like being public.
Missed Win: one of my favorite little things about the movie is the framing of Sadness’ introduction scene. The movie takes a quiet, atmospheric moment to put the audience in Joy’s head, with a lot of long unbroken shots to let us appreciate the beauty of Happy Baby Riley. Then she starts crying and BAM hard cut to Sadness having appeared out of literally nowhere. It’s a nice subtle way to show just how jarring Sadness’s presence is for Joy, and on a first viewing helps you empathize more with Joy in the situation because Sadness feels like an invader to a nice heartwarming moment.
Yeah, they REALLY had to work hard with the portrayal of Joy and Sadness. Characters that are always happy can be annoying, and characters that are sad usually make you feel sorry for this. They worked around this near the beginning of the movie by making Joy use her optimism as a defense mechanism and try to have Sadness be as annoying as possible.
It’s also interesting how her introduction makes Sadness seem so unnecessary, just like how she must seem to Joy. Like, when a baby cries it’s for a reason. It’s a way of communication and necessary for a baby to express that something is wrong or they need something. But Joy doesn’t know, or is unwillingly to admit, that Sadness has a purpose like that and so the reason Sadness shows up and is pressing that button is never explained.
Joy clutching all the memories to her chest in the memory dump, Bing Bong’s last line, and Riley’s reunion with her parents always smack me in the Feels Button
I remember when this movie came out at the worst point of my life (at that time anyway) it definitely felt like a hug from Pixar. Something about the story characters. Everything about this movie is just so special to me.
It should have a sequel like riley hits puberty and all the five core emotions split into alot of other emotions . Disgust into envy and jealousy and joy into delight . Sadness into insecuritiy and all the others into other emotions .And as she gets older they all come together again
I’m so glad I’m a writer, because I will eventually remember them all and then write them down. For example, I had a character that was just me in a mewtwo body, and now I’ve developed the son of a gun into something so much better.
something i loved seeing was the way that joy was the only emotion who glowed, quite literally. the rest seem fuzzy and that gave them an odd effect, but joy actually glowed
12:04 the thing I liked most was the representation that maturity comes when you stop having one dimensional emotions (you don't just feel happy, sad, angry, scared or disgusted) and start having complex emotions that are harder to explain because they mix with what the movie tries to describe as the basic emotions
Man I frigging love those movie... I was seriously depressed when I first saw it, and I have never seen a film more accurately convey what depression actually is... not just Very Sad, but the total absense of both joy AND sadness.
Whats also accurate about it is that Riley cant process her emotions, She does not express her sadness so she gets lost. For me a part of depression can be being so lost that processing emotions doesnt happen, What makes me feel tired, makes my brain foggy, And i dont feel like myself. Everybody who has trouble with this dont give up! Support and expressing is important. There will be a way again and light
Aaand I'm crying over this movie again. Every time I watch a video on this movie I cry. Although I have to disagree with the "joy leading the mind is only for children" interpretation. I saw it as "everyone has a different main emotion leading their mind, but over time you learn to balance your emotions and they work together as a unit."
@@datfisheboi6519 Yeah exactly! All the emotions are different, and have their own purpose. Being led by an emotion isn't inheritly bad and can be good (Riley's mom isn't depressed, she's empathetic and caring etc, and her Dad isn't always raging, he's determined and gets things done etc) but can be bad (Riley's Joy shutting out Sadness). Children are more likely to be led by Joy but Adults can too like you said. The Idea that adults simply can't be led by joy is a bit depressing but I can see why he would've thought it.
Please give us some Ratatouille. It's a great Pixar film overlooked because it's not really considered a Pixar classic but it still hits you with excitement and wonder. Honestly, Ratatouille is my personal favorite movie of all time. Brad Bird is remarkable for making us feel all the feels for a common street rat, who's on aspiration in life is to cook. Please please please do Ratatouille. I'm begging you.
I think the first emotion when we are born would probably have to do with the circumstances in which we are born into. Imagine if you came into the world and didn't get the loving touch of your mother, if you were taken from her right at the start and then you were alone. I think a situation like that would probably bring up a different emotion as the first one, like fear. Riley was born into the ideal situation surrounded by love. Also yes there are only 5 core emotions in the movie, but I think that's because pretty much all other emotions stem from the others or are combinations of them. That's why they are the core emotions, you get other emotions from them. Also when people just hate on Joy, often they don't seem to think about that her not being nice is a huge part of the story. She is flawed, but she does become more mature by the end, she learns and becomes better. It's called character development, and it's precisely because of this that the story goes anywhere to begin with.
Yes. Like when your mother dies and all you can feel is fear. Same for any other circumstance. There are newborns being left on the streets thanks to anti-abortion laws (in some states or countries) and the fact that if the mother can't afford to take care of the baby, she probably couldn't afford to put him up for adoption, either.
According to my parents, when I was born, the first thing I did was look around with surprised, confused eyes lol. They laugh about that whenever they remember it. Speaking of which, what would confusion be associated to? It's not exactly an emotion, but it feels like one. Based on the brain's inability to process new information, but it happens involuntarily and doesn't go away for a while.
@@masterblaster2678 that is so frigging adorable 😄 I'd guess that confusion could be the temporary lack of emotions until one of them has decided what it feels about the situation. In your case, it would be like your joy stood behind the button a bit longer, inquisition the situation, not exactly sure what to do and feel and wanted to first get a better look at what the heck is going on 😁
Okay, I have to say this. I'm only 3:35 into this video and I'm already getting misty-eyed. lol My husband and I made the "mistake" of watching Inside Out in theaters when I was pregnant with our first child. Needless to say, there were tears. She's now 4 years old and has a 6 month old little sister. I have not been able to watch Inside Out without crying ever since. The beginning is just far too real for anyone who's had the joy (lol) of watching a baby grow into a crazy but wonderful little person. The entire movie just pulls at the heartstrings and does not let go!
Wow. You pointed out so many things that I missed, and they all make me appreciate this movie even more. Thank you! On a side note, when my niblings were in elementary school, they used this movie a lot to express their feelings, by saying "Sadness is driving right now" or "Anger was driving a lot today". I love how this movie gave them the visual language to identify their emotions and some understanding of such an abstract concept.
I am a PERSON the ding itself was because it’s always a great day when CinemaWins uploads a video! Not for the comment I was just adding the ding because JediGuyKeleb forgot the ding
I think one of the best thing this film talks about is something kids media rarely shows: sometimes positivity is a bad thing. You’re SUPPOSED to feel all your emotions, not just happiness. Toxic positivity does nothing more that hurt you by suppressing your other emotions, eventually making them stronger. I love how it’s also emphasized even in joys design: she notices everyone’s flaws but her own, even though she is the only character to have what could be considered a physical flaw; a cowlick
CinemaWins: *10 sins for making me remember those dumb commercials CinemaSins: Haha, f*cking asshole CinemaWins: WHAT DID YOU FREAKING CALL ME CinemaSins: Sor-(gets beat up by CW)
For me, it's different. Emotional autopilot doesn't equal depression but an emotional barrier to keep myself stable. When I was in Hanawalt elementary, everything was great. But then I moved, went to Monroe, and things quickly turned south. But instead of being depressed, I was determined, tougher, stronger, faster, more agile. It was as if me as a person was being protected by something that has always been there at the back of my mind and waiting for a chance to help. I can now control this feeling and selectively use it when I need it. I call it my Monroe side. It's the part of me that wants to do what's right at any cost, and takes no crap from anyone.
I love this movie. Really, the movie itself makes me tear up and this review also teared me up. But what I love the most about the movie is how the different emotions are actually more than just one and they all cover at least one good and bad personality trait/emotion. Anger is also determination and passion. Disgust is also self-confidence. Fear is also rationality (as part of the fight-or-flight mechanism), because he still second-guessed Anger's idea of making Riley go back to Minnesota. Sadness is also empathy. Joy is also mania, which is bad. Had Joy taken control and pushed Sadness away, Riley would never have felt another moment of sadness in her life. That would essentially have made her mind be strained due to the lack of appropriate sadness, it would have turned her into a Stepford girl. Emotionally dead. Kinda reminds me of the wives from Fahrenheit 451.
I like to think that Riley's parents emotions have evolved and are more complex than just what they used to be at their core. I believe we may all have these 5 base emotions at some point but they eventually transition into more complex emotions later on
Like how Dad's Anger is mildly perturbed at the worst of times, never actually LOSING his temper and staying in control of the situation, whereas Mom's Sadness is actually less "Life is misery" and more "Yes, life isn't sparkly rainbows but we can deal with it."
A small detail that stood out to me was how after Disgust had finished making that hole in the glass, she went for Joy, focusing on helping her up first because she was the priority, the emotion that would help Riley the most. All of the emotions thought it was Joy who was the necessary emotion for the situation, since she's always been the lead emotion, especially after moving to San Fransisco.
I thought it was the end credits Scene. Car crashed into Lamppost after the driver faded away, Nick Furys and Maria Hills Car with the open doors and nobody around as they're gone as well. Though I don't know what that blue-ish glow in the center of the screen is supposed to be
Roger Dräyer It’s not the end credits scene. But I see where you’re coming from. I went and checked and it’s right after Spider-Man says, “Mr. Stark, I’m being beamed up!”
5:32 If you're wondering why Joy didn't send the core memories up the tube, it's because she doesn't trust anyone but herself to bring them back to Headquarters.
1:07 I want to point out some highlights from the newspaper anger is reading: - NO DESSERT! Experts agree dessert good - Kiley continues to be "good girl" - Why isn't candy the best dinner?
I love the subtlety with the parents’ emotions. The emotions themselves are level headed and aren’t bouncing off the walls like Riley’s. They work together as teams instead of fighting for control. Some people pointed out that it’s a bummer the mom is guided by Sadness, but it feels like more than that. Her Sadness behaves a little differently from Riley’s. She’s guided more by concern than pure sadness. She cares about her family and it shows. She’s not a sad sack, she’s a problem solver. And the dad’s Anger acts differently too. He’s level headed and focused on keeping the family running smoothly. So to be guided by Anger doesn’t mean he’s blindly angry, it just means he’s on the look out for things that are unfair.
Wyatt The Nerd Yeah like I feel a lot of people in real life would be “piloted” by sadness. Some of them would be depressed but for some it just means they’re probably more resting or don’t feel happy all the time until something makes them sad but they feel melancholic until something makes them happy. You’re just functioning with a different range of emotion being your go to.
@@eadlynjune I recon that with someone who has depression, their control board would kind of work like those shitty mobile games where you can only play a couple of levels everyday instead of playing indefinitely.
the whole time I was waiting for you to mantion one thing, but I will do it now myself: A lot of peoples critic involves that there are only 4 head emotions and only 1 of them is postitive. Though its a psyschological fact that all emotions other then joy, disgust, fear and anger is just a different form or mix between those 4 core emotions. For example love is a mix between fear and joy, jealousy is a mix between fear and anger, envy is a mix between anger and disgust and so on.
Even years later, just watching to have something playing in the background, I hear that breath of relief and still feel the pang of needing to cry. That scene will never not get me!
Originally Pixar wanted to have around 27 emotions in Riley's head and the script was way different. However they thought that would lead to an overcrowded feeling so they thought it would be better to focus on the more forefront emotions of a young person. Also Mom and Dad were meant to have male and female emotions both, but the animation team copped out and made them all same gender because it was easier to animate that way for them.
@@launabanauna8958 Somehow it's just become even more emotional for me. I'm volunteering at Give Kids the World village, the place Wish families stay when their wish is to visit Disney and other Florida parks, and they play the Inside Out theme inside their new star observatory (a new room where each child hangs up their own star to be immortalized, after the entire castle has been filled with over 100,000 children's stars from over the years). This movie and its music gives me the chills just thinking about it
Laura B What an incredible story, thank you for sharing it, and thank you for the work you do. I work as a clown, and I have entertained at all sorts of different children’s functions. They all are amazing human beings, they both amaze, and inspire me in life.
@@launabanauna8958 Clown is such noble job! I also feel a lot in this movie. When I watch it I leave Japan my home country. And I feel lost. Itfirst movie I see in France with first friend I make here and I try hold back tears because I feel like girl in the movie :( Catapulted in a new environment :( except my parent cannot hug me, only talk me in phone. I use to hate this movie because I think it is cause for my depression. But true is it is only catalyst of my depression. And in end it only tell me that it is normal when you depress after changing life. :)
I called it. Now for my prize, I request that someday you review Treasure Planet. P.S. Why the hell did you Rick Roll me. Is this my punishment for asking for you to review Treasure Planet, I don't think that you Rick Rolled the Megamind guy.
Think about how the mom’s primary emotion is sadness, which looks very similar to Riley’s sadness emotion, which she clearly inherited from her mother. Riley doesn’t know how to deal with that emotion probably because her mother only wants her to be happy, not realizing sadness is a necessary emotion. Sadness in Riley’s friend would’ve given her empathy so she didn’t steamroll Riley’s emotions. It’s actually kinda beautiful that your mom can see the depths of this. My mom just got annoyed with sadness character cause she’s clearly ruled by Joy, but as a result she has a hard time empathizing.
A movie i WASN'T expecting to be good!!! What a movie!! Definitely one of Pixar's best!! It's up there with The Incredibles, Finding Nemo, Toy Story, UP, WALL-E, and Coco!! The animation is amazing!! The writing is just insane and the actors/actresses who voiced the characters really did each one justice!! SOOOO many heart-warming and heart-wrenching moments thoughout!!! Pixar def KNOWS how to play with your emotions!!
Y'know, I find it fascinating how with the other characters, their emotions match their presenting gender. But Riley's got two male-presenting emotions (Anger and Fear), and three female-presenting emotions (Disgust, Sadness, and Joy). It's probably more for the sake of variety, and probably not as deep as it could be interpreted as, but it's still an interesting thing to notice.
I love how they nod to joy needing other emotions to function, specifically sadness, with her blue hair and eyes, and I think Riley's blonde hair and blue eyes also represents that sadness and joy are her two primary emotions. I think they also do this with Disgust. It's true that most disgust comes from fear, so Disgust's little purple hints help convey that. It's a great movie, seriously!
*NEXT WEEK IS INFINITY WAR!!!* I just checked it, the frame is from the scene where Spidey and Dr. Strange are being beamed up to Ebony Maw's ship. *YAAYY*
I love the particle look they all have. Like when Anger is chill, they're really close together, but when he's screaming, the particles are coming out more spread and aggressive.
7:51 GODDAMN IT LEE 😂😂😂😂 solid Rick Roll. In all seriousness though... I just watched this movie for the first time today. And i.... really fucking needed it. I recently ended the only long term relationship I've had so far in my life. Its... it's been hard. I havent been suppressing my emotions, per se, but I have been more numb than anything. I've started making progress the last couple days, but this movie... this movie had the *exact* message I needed. Sometimes, you have to feel the sadness and work through it before you can start to feel happy again. I am so grateful that this movie exists right now. And I really, truly am grateful for you expertly putting it into words. Keep up the great work man. You always amaze
The thing I absolutely LOVE about this movie is how when we look into different people's minds, different people are in the middle and "in control". The Mom has Sadness in control, while the Dad has Anger ruling his entire brain, showing an insight into the family dynamic when the kid is not around.
How the hell could you rickroll me. I trusted you. Look I’ll still like the video and share it and comment. But you’re on thin ice optimist. Thin. Ice.
🎶Never gonna give you up Never gonna let you down Never gonna run around and desert you Never gonna make you cry Never gonna say goodbye Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you🎶
Lol it's funny how rickrolling ended up becoming a thing... I still really like the song unironically. If anything the meme just makes it funnier and therefore even more enjoyable to me. XD
It’s weird. I love this movie and every time my depression decides to kick it up a notch, I watch this movie. In a weird way, I watch this movie so that I cry. I saw in the comments that sadness can also be the part that is empathetic. Weirdly enough when I’m in a depressed episode, I feel more and can relate more. Seeing Reilly manage to tell her family her feelings is weirdly cathartic on the viewers too. Like what you said, we grow up learning to not show emotions other than happiness, but the truth is that we NEED to feel all the emotions in order to truly be mentally healthy. This is definitely one of my favourite movies, a definite go to for when I’m feeling low
Something that I noticed while watching this video again. That when you try to push an emotion forward to suppress another then it ruins both. It was the very thing that caused by both joy and sadness to be sent away from the controls.
I’m so glad to have discovered CinemaWins! Over the years, I found myself laughing at a lot of CinemaSins parodies, but I’m blessed to know there’s an alternate source of humor that provides educational and well-written analyses that focuses on the positive side of things.
7:51 HA jokes on you CinemaWins (or Lee which I think might be your name) I love being Rick Rolled and I'm never gonna run around and desert THIS! Also this has to be my favorite one you have done Thank you so much!!!
Hey, cool! This is one of those situations when "queue" and "cue" would both make sense to use. ...Because that's important to know. Anyway, I actually was crying a little bit. And that's ok.
Ooo I love the detail that Joy is the only one who is wearing more colors than her main one (blue hair, greenish dress) showing that you can’t feel joy without your other emotions because it just becomes worthless to feel it
I love the symbolism this film shows as well as the story 1. Joy isn’t purely yellow, unlike the rest of the emotions who are just one colour. It symbolises that we need to feel other emotions in order to have true happiness 2. Sadness is the only one who can effect the emotion of a memory. There’s a few ideas and speculations of what this could symbolise, but I think it’s because sadness is a very strong emotion and it symbolises how you can’t go back into the past and relive the memory again, especially if it was a happy memory. 3. When Riley started crying on the first day of school and the rest of the emotions (besides sadness) tried to take the memory down, they couldn’t because it was pretty much stuck in Riley’s mind the fact that she moved away and is already getting sad, so it’s only all she can think about 4. The train of thought crashing when honesty island went down could symbolising the fact that Riley wasn’t thinking clearly about the idea of running away, so her thoughts basically “disappeared” 5. Bing bong disappearing. I know a lot of people might disagree with me but I’m glad bing bong was eventually forgotten. Don’t get me wrong, I love bing bong it’s just its realistic as bing bong said himself there was no call for him recently. Plus, Riley is now 11-12 and is becoming more mature, so it would make sense she isn’t focusing on childish things anymore and moving on. 6. Sadness being the one to change Riley’s mind about running away, sadness made her think clearly and made her realise how things really are, something we as humans can become emotional to. 7. Riley’s clothes. At the start when she had joy she was wearing lots of different colours. But as the film progresses, she starts wearing more darker colours, because she doesn’t feel like herself anymore 8. Each island being “forgotten” as Riley simply looses herself and doesn’t know who she is. 9. The way the emotions just don’t focus on their emotion. We’ve seen sadness being sympathetic and empathetic before, anger was controlling when joy was gone, and fear still tries to look for a solution to prevent things from escalating 10. This whole film is symbolism for “you don’t have to be happy all the time, you can feel other emotions” There’s probably way more things I missed but this is what I noticed
I really like how joy actually glows slightly blue and has blue hair, hinting at the whole "you can't be happy without sadness thing" that the movie ends with.
Conunndrum Y.
...Bruh
And her dress is green, the colour you obtain by mixing blue and yellow
Never noticed that, very astute observation.
@@deathbat5532 yep...Colors of Light or art color cliche
Notice how that’s the same in the father, but not the mother; probably because sadness is the primary in the mom, but not the dad
It may be a stretch but when thinking about sadness touching all those memory orbs and turning them into "sad" memories, I couldn't help but think of memories you have that later become saddening because you know you'll never experience them again. Again, it might be a stretch, but that's where my mind went.
Not a stretch at all. That’s exactly what Riley says. That’s the opposite of a stretch, it’s practically a compression.
That's how it Feels Sometimes, a Happy Memory is Always tied to Sorrow and Sadness, but that doesn't mean it's bad. Moving forward in life is important for us to grow into our True Selfs, so you have to Let go of that Feeling of Joy for a Memory you Once had in order to grow.
looking back on what was a happy memory and sad cause it's over is nostalgia. the theme of nostalgia and growing up and getting past that part of your life is also a huge theme in this movie I think.
I mean, its true. I'm sad about the stuff I can never see or experience ever again cause I'm an adult now.
whenever i look back at my memories it just feels like i cant go back in time to when i was happier n shit like that, i dont think its this way for everyone as i was diagnosed as bipolar with an anxiety disorder but it would make sense sinse this is sort of the theme of the movie.
sorry english is not my first langauge and my english is kind of bad.
"Take her to the moon for me."
That line totally made me fall apart. Holy crap, I was crying like a little baby who just dropped his ice cream.
'Crying like a little baby who just dropped his ice cream.'
So you were screaming and kicking your parents?
@@emmalyke Ehm, just crying. That scene really got me in the feels.
They should make a Inside Out 2 where Joy pushes a certain button that makes Riley remember Bing Bong
In my head-cannon, She DID go to the moon. As a Astronaut.
That thought and mindset always makes me emotional....
@@ScourgeIsBestVillain Thanks for now puting that image in my head
I like the idea that the 5 emotions don’t necessarily represent a one note emotion. Obviously, sadness can represent... sadness, but it can also represent empathy and or sympathy. Anger can drive not only how mad you get but also your determination and hard-headedness. The emotion that sits at the center of the control panel is what decides how we act. Say, if Disgust was the emotion at the center, the person being controlled could have a prideful personality. Fear can represent a timid and shy nature but Fear can also represent calm and logical thinking, the personality that would be more inclined to suggest a “tactical retreat” rather than a “full on assault”, for example.
Yeah, the movie suggests that the other emotions you feel are variations or combinations of these core emotions
@@Icybubba And they are. In fact, there’s only really one missing emotion: surprise. Scientists (source: TomSka’s video on the best asdfmovie joke) have determined 6 core emotions: the five in this movie, and surprise
@@aionicthunder - Wouldn't surprise be a combination of fear and joy?
(with maybe a splash of anger if you didn't like the surprise)
"AH! You JERK! ... Sneaking up on me like that." *proceeds to hug best friend anyways / or bro-fist, if that's your preferred interaction*
@@1WolfFan Yeah, the directors didn't put in a "Surprise" character bc they felt it was too similar in concept to fear
Riley’s little breath and smile as she’s hugging her parents always kills me…
Every dang time
It just gets you in the feels honestly
I love the whole scene. But waters break out when she just starts crying still trying to explain herself.
It’s what made this my favourite movie of all time❤️💛💚💙💜
That whole scene kills me
I prefer to think that her mom’s emotion of sadness has matured to empathy and her dad’s anger is determinism. We even see in Riley’s head, that Sadness is empathetic (when she talks to BingBong) and Anger gets stuff done. This could result from growing up, but it could also be because they’re parents.
It's also that Joy is Riley's dominant emotion and probably will be for all her life, she just needs to learn how to be a leader, just like other people's dominant emotions did.
Yes, thank you! Both of you pretty much nailed it I think.
yes! All emotions are healthy in some levels. It's only when it becomes too overbearing, such as riley trying to stay happy and pushing away sadness, is when it's unhealthy and ruins lives.
Angry is good! Angry get things done!
On the same wavelength of Sadness providing empathy and Anger providing determination, Joy also provides optimism as we see her constantly looking on the brighter side of things even as the situation keeps spiraling downhill and only breaking down when she literally hits rock bottom. Fear also brings careful planning and Disgust helps develop our personal taste and organization skills.
I love the color theory in this movie, they show you what emotions are in charge with what riley wears. But also notice the colors the emotions wear. Joy has blue hair which I feel sort of foreshadows the ending. Disgust has a purple ascot which could mean about how sometimes disgust and fear can be indistinguishable/related. Fear has a red bow tie which may be that things we hate we're just scared of. When Riley runs away she's dressed in pure black and it shows the emotional hole she's in. I just find it a really neat detail.
Given that the emotions seem to be light-based entities. I feel this is wrong. Sure. If you put all the colors together using crayons or paint, it goes black. But if you do it with light, it'd be a white.
Black is devoid of all emotion (hence why none of them were able to control her until Sadness got back)
White would be all of them at once.
Especially since in the beginning she is wearing a rainbow sweater.
Also in some of the other scenes, such as during the hockey tryouts, wearing a yellow and red kit, yellow for the Joy she did and *should* be feeling for her favourite sport, red for the Anger that is in control of her emotions.
So does that mean Sadness wearing a white sweater symbolizes how it's a combination of all emotions, like when all the other lights combined become white light?
And anger is just red, since we don't really think straight when we're angry, we're JUST angry
"Do you think they cam see through us?"
"Of course not we're wearing eyeshadow!" Favorite Disney quote
True
*Pixar… 😅 sorry…
@@levi_ackerman_119 Pixar is owned by Disney
@@tsiffpyc7882 Still, Pixar deserves to be credited
@@hazeltree7738 True
Here's a CinemaWins fan word of the week for you: Pluviophile; A person who prefers the rain to sun, finding solace during rainfall. Might not be as extreme for you, but, y'know... always a cool thing to know
I love the rain too! I love the idea of cozying up inside with a good book. Well, it's usually my video games and computer instead, lol. But I'm still doing a lot of reading online on things i care about...like this movie! Point is, I really enjoy spending my time inside. Also, I HATE the heat and I LOVE the cold! Neither is great in extreme, but I'm actually really sensitive to heat so I associate sun and sunny days with feeling hot and uncomfortable, and cloudy days with feeling comfortable and not burning up, so they're don't really make me unhappy.
I really love rain, but only in the summer and spring. It gives me a break from the sun, and pollen allergies.
Rain is always a source of calm and comfort for me as well.
@@randomnessproductions4212 Cloudy days, especially in summer and especially if there's no wind, are absolutely horrible. I always feel like the air gets heavy and I have a hard time breathing. Whenever it's cloudy, all I do is pray for rain and/or wind. They're both extremely nice.
I'll always prefer gray clouds, wind, and rain to summer days that are hot and still. But better than all that, are storms. High winds, torrential downpour, thunder and lightning. I'll just stand out in them and let the rain pour down over me. The air just feels charged with raw, chaotic energy. The small taste of the unbridled fury of nature.
Can I mention how accurately this describes the symptoms of clinical depression disorder? I’m not entirely sure, and definitely not a professional, but the main basis of depression is that chemical imbalances prevents people from enjoying what commonly makes them happy. Hobbies and the like seem to neutralize in them, and people find themselves feeling a bit empty. Not sad, just devoid of happiness.
Notice how Joy and Sadness are the two emotions that get lost? Rylee isn’t feeling happy right now, but she isn’t specifically sad- Just like depression. This is a great message to kids about mental health, and I’ve heard that therapists for children use the characters in Inside Out to get a description of how their patients are feeling, meaning they can be diagnosed correctly even if they may lack a lot of vocabulary to describe experience.
Okay, thanks.
Well joy did have a right not want sadness in charge too much. People who are actually sad too long become depressed. Of course the stories I heard were of people affected by CPS being tyrants who expect everyone to be perfect. The families just wanted to go back and weren't allowed to and were miserable because of this and that became depression.
@@theresahall8206 there is a difference in being sad and being depressed
Sadness is temporary, if you are feeling long prolonged "sadness" it actually depression, absence of joy not presence of sadness
Also this movie did a great job, most of the times our urge to feel happy ALL THE TIME makes us to hide our sadness, and this backfires with the abscence to feel both of joy and sadness
Actually it's more in line with Situational Depression (officially called "Adjustment Disorder With Depressed Mood") because Riley's depression has a distinct cause (the move from Minnesota to California) and was dealt with without professional treatment.
i remember my last therapist mentioning inside out to me and using it as an example of how my depression works, so you’re pretty much spot on
I have a feeling your an expert!
One of the cutest movies ever!!
The teen boy's chaotic "girl!" Always makes me laugh.
It is so accurate
@@redmonday1412 ikr!
@@redmonday1412 Nah, I only enter that mental state if the girl is really worthy
@@Hugo-yz1vb well riley is a cute girl tho from a 13 years old boy perspective.
The detail with Riley wearing clothes that match her emotional state is something I never noticed, it's amazing how much attention to detail Pixar puts into their films
Actually, fun fact! It can be a subconcious thing too in real life. Not always to this extent, but in that you wear bright colour when you feel happy and confident and stuff and darker shades on your quieter, moodier days.
Growing up isn't about giving up your goofball island. It's about knowing when it is appropriate to use that part of your personality and when it isn't. and as always remember Growing old is mandatory, growing up is optional.
Matt Conklin agreed.
..... I like you... 🤔
@@goldjustgold5942 why thank you
I needed this
@@anothercovers7627 glad I could help
and going along with the comment of "emotions on autopilot=depression" being accurate
Each island of personality crumbling as riley falls deeper and deeper INTO depression (i.e. losing interest in the things that once mattered a lot to you) is just...too damned real
but thats basically whats happening to me and im not depressed
Yeah she got hit with the start of depression when she was suppressing her sadness. This meant she wasn't able to truly feel happy either so both Joy and Sadness got yeeted out.
Like you pointed out, she slipped deeper into depression as each island crumbled, the depression started after her experience crying in the classroom in which she did everything in her power to suppress Sadness which ofc caused a mental break and something was going to give thus depression.
I like how they showed how the depression started by her not being able to feel Joy, but since it was still early stages she could still feel Anger, Fear, and Disgust which caused certain warning signs of depression like irritability from Anger.
Like you said as each island crumbled it showed Riley losing interest in things that mattered to her, all coming to ahead when the final island crumbled and she could no longer feel any of her emotions.
Riley wasn't experiencing clinical depression so she could still overcome the depression by just letting her sadness out, which ofc isn't the solution to clinical depression which is not caused by the lack of emotional honesty but rather by a chemical imbalance in your brain but either way they did depression super well in this movie
Yeah, that line “emotions on autopilot=depression” hit a little too hard. Actually started crying.
@@AlyxAesthetics that's normal too. Growing up or having a sudden shift in interest is part of life, sometimes you'll see one small thing and all of a sudden you're moving in a direction you weren't before.
It started when Goofball Island (My personal favorite, just like Joy) fell.
I think one of my favorite and underrated scenes in this movie is when Joy is looking at the now blue and black memories and being so overwhelmed by feelings that she doesnt understand. She tries to hold these memories that were once so happy to her, but now they aren't really hers to hold; she is trying to hold onto the past with such strength that the pressure and need to cling to them pushes all of them out of her arms, and the only thing she can do is cling to herself. Joy, feeling g something that she isn't supposed to or understands at all, has to hold onto herself, which is exactly what Riely is trying so hard to do. It is such a fantastic and overlooked moment that kills me every time!
This movie represents hockey brilliantly! The way that when her hockey island is intact and thriving she has a fantastic time playing hockey with her dad, even with no puck, but after her hockey island collapses, she struggles to do something as simple as dangling the puck and falls flat on her face when she goes for a slapshot she would usually make. Your mindset is a huge part of your skill in hockey, and this movie understands that.
*looks at your name*
Well, we know why you mentioned hockey.
Inside Out is a masterpiece. Every time I watch it sends me into tears. Even this video succeeded. I got tingles knowing Bing Bong was about to be forgotten. How, how does Pixar do it?! Can you imagine a screenwriter attempting to pitch this story to Dreamworks or, dare I say it, Illumination? Hey, I've got this cool idea for a kid's film about psychology, existentialism and emotional upheaval. What do you guys think?
Kung Fu Panda and HTTYD is pretty complex and handled extremely well (on par with Pixar imo). Pixar does reign undoubtedly supreme overall tho.
Semantic Samuel Ikr this video and movie makes me cry 😭
As far as I know, Pixar worked together with psychologists to get this movie as accurate as possible.
I think part of what makes Pixar so good at stuff like this is they strip out everything unnecessary and keep the most simple of threads. Fleshed out beautifully, but kept so simple. It's like the moment in the UP intro montage where they can't have kids... no words at all, and the shot is over in seconds, but those 3 seconds, and the shot of her alone in her chair in the yard after it just wrecked audiences everywhere.
Hey, that can be a sequel (if they ever do it)!
I just realized. Joy's hair is the only one that doesnt follow her emotion's palette, and its actually Sad's blue.
As in, there is always some Sadness on top of every Joy.
*Mind Blown*
I know everyone says they cry at Bing Bong, but the part that always gets me is Riley's shuddering breath when Joy and Sadness work together at the end. It's just so heart wrenching and beautiful all at the same time and just-- tears.
I got the impression that the emotions can mature as well. Mom has sadness in charge but not "obsessively" sad. Dad is always happy but anger is in charge. Even when anger is going to exercise "anger", its fear who presses the button. In Riley's head only joy can spark joy, disgust=disgust etc.
The mind matures, emotions get more complex (memory orbs get to be multicoloured) the mind matures (the console gets bigger with more complex possibilities) so the emotions become more complex and less single minded too. I don't think that's too much of a stretch.
What, no win for the bus driver who's all Anger? That was the best part of the credits!
And really, the moments where you just went meta with earworms, deja vu and losing your train of thought was just...yes.
Thank the bus driver
Thank the bus driver
i think the reason why sadness was so compelled to touch the memories is because when you recall a memory you start feeling a bit sad or homesick when you realize you can't relive that time again , and that's called nostalgia
I always didn't understand the boys emotions freaking out until a year ago when my boyfriend told me he loves me. He was so scared to tell me and seemed like he was freaking out. So yeah inside out got the boys emotions freaking out when they like a girl pretty accurately. Now I laugh everytime I see it because I picture my boyfriend's emotions doing the same when he was telling me that he loves me.
What did you say back?
@@MeesdeFilmliefhebber I had told him I loved him back
I didn't understand until a year ago when I started liking a girl who's my friend and I started freaking out inside everytime she asked me something about herself, lol
@@katgamer1727 holsum
Kinda makes no sense at all but thanks for sharing and telling everyone your bf said he loved you lol
“Please don’t be mad”
Her parents: calmly hug her
My parents: _Mad takes over_ YOU ARE A DISGRACE OF A SON!
Me and my parents watched this movie together and I was really feeling it and I guess I let something slip, my parents yelled at me for not telling them what was wrong. I’m thinking....this....this is exactly why I won’t talk to you and why I feel like this, thanks😂
@@abbyrobles2400 unfortunately it's a common problem, my mom wants me to talk about my depression to her yet when I do I with get the impression she isn't listening out worse she compares what she's feeling to me and that just makes me shut up because it's not helpful
Isdrakon I’m so sorry that that happens to you, but it is at least comforting to know it’s not just me dealing with this, I’ll be praying for you
@@abbyrobles2400 don't waste the prayer, save it for yourself
@@isdrakon9802 sorry kid, prayers will come for you. Never try telling a Christain to not pray for you, they will somehow get their entire church to
I didn’t realize Riley’s mom wears yellow after the move and Riley wears black when entering depression. (And your other examples) Or the fact that boyfriend generator looks new and imagination land looks old!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Again any of you other examples along those lines.
Blossom Swirl same thing but in my opinion the depression starts when sadness and joy disappear and fully takes hold of everything at that scene
+ding
The detail overall is outstanding.
12:29
in the background looking at the memory orbs, you can see there's no longer primarily yellow with the occasional other color in there, which means joy did learn her lesson about how she's not the most important emotion and isn't taking primary control
So, I gotta be honest. I didn't want to see Inside Out when it first released. I thought it was going to be really dumb. Then I get to the theater and Pixar gets me to feel sorry for a frikkin VOLCANO. (Thanks a lot, Lava. lol) Anyway, the movie starts and seeing Riley go from literal newborn infant to a 2-3 year old to 11 was one of the best character introductions ever. For both her and her emotions. And then the bombshell. When she found out she had to make a cross country move and leave her entire life behind.
That's when the movie truly hooked me. Because I, being a Navy Brat, have had to make that move 7 times in my life. 6 of those were before I turned 18. And the emotions Riley was feeling, the need to "be happy" and "keep smiling" despite having to leave my entire life behind, it just hit me in the soul. The thoughts of wanting to go back home, of my friends living their lives without me, Pixar nailed it. And then the catharsis when Sadness and Joy manage to make her fully embrace the sadness of one part of your life being over, but still having the joy that comes with a loving, caring, supporting family. Just...the entire scene where Riley comes home and hugs her parents...it made me cry real tears of all the feels in the theater, and every time I watch the movie afterwords. And I don't feel bad about it. Not a bit.
I can't speak for others, but the direction Pixar went with the story, and how they portrayed what a cross country PCS (Permanent Change of Station) on an 11 year old, is what makes Inside Out my second favorite movie of all time. Literally less than a fraction of an iota under Toy Story. So yeah, love the movie, and I love your analysis as to why its so great. Keep it up, Cinemawins!!
The part that destroyed me was her getting on the bus after all of the "lands" had crashed. The only thing I thought was, "Of course she's doing this, All of her worlds are gone, all of her emotional ties are destroyed. She's on autopilot."
I also laughed loud enough to bother other moviegoers at the PUBERTY alarm.
Cool...
Okay, +3 wins: Joy's skin is yellow (Joy), her dress is green (Disgust), & her eyes & hair are blue (Sadness). Hinted right from the beginning that Joy herself doesn't just experience joy, we also see her express disgust in regards to Sadness & sadness.
Also, +1 win for Mindy Kaling as Disgust, I honestly can't think of a better casting.
Bing Bong's death screwed me up for a few weeks... _he didn't deserve to die_
Ponderer Of Pointless Dreams that's the point of growing up, it has to happen, a kid has to let go of their imaginary friend(s). I'm not even sure if I ever had one or not.
@@amehak1922 Well I'm 23, and I never left my imaginary friends behind, I just 'talk' to them inside my mind, not outloud (because I'd look crazy) and I always knew they were fake.
@@brizydizi I never had an imaginary friend, not even as a young kid. That kind of puzzles me.
@@Neojhun maybe u were confident enough of a kid not to need one
@@MatthewJones-jg4eu Not really, I'm also an only child.
It too choir choral performances in middle school to overcome shyness. It wasn't anxiety I don't get stage freight, I just don't like being public.
Missed Win: one of my favorite little things about the movie is the framing of Sadness’ introduction scene. The movie takes a quiet, atmospheric moment to put the audience in Joy’s head, with a lot of long unbroken shots to let us appreciate the beauty of Happy Baby Riley. Then she starts crying and BAM hard cut to Sadness having appeared out of literally nowhere. It’s a nice subtle way to show just how jarring Sadness’s presence is for Joy, and on a first viewing helps you empathize more with Joy in the situation because Sadness feels like an invader to a nice heartwarming moment.
Yeah, they REALLY had to work hard with the portrayal of Joy and Sadness. Characters that are always happy can be annoying, and characters that are sad usually make you feel sorry for this. They worked around this near the beginning of the movie by making Joy use her optimism as a defense mechanism and try to have Sadness be as annoying as possible.
It’s also interesting how her introduction makes Sadness seem so unnecessary, just like how she must seem to Joy. Like, when a baby cries it’s for a reason. It’s a way of communication and necessary for a baby to express that something is wrong or they need something. But Joy doesn’t know, or is unwillingly to admit, that Sadness has a purpose like that and so the reason Sadness shows up and is pressing that button is never explained.
There’s deja vu
Nah. Just a glitch in the matrix.
There’s deja vu
Nah. Just a glitch in the matrix.
Vu
Omg in this comment I feel deja Vu XD
Neo, i am agent smith
i loved it when he included it in the video
Yes.
Yes.
Joy clutching all the memories to her chest in the memory dump, Bing Bong’s last line, and Riley’s reunion with her parents always smack me in the Feels Button
I remember when this movie came out at the worst point of my life (at that time anyway) it definitely felt like a hug from Pixar. Something about the story characters. Everything about this movie is just so special to me.
It should have a sequel like riley hits puberty and all the five core emotions split into alot of other emotions . Disgust into envy and jealousy and joy into delight . Sadness into insecuritiy and all the others into other emotions .And as she gets older they all come together again
God bless.
It now has a sequel… only downside is that some of the VAs got replaced.
The Bing Bong scene figuratively killed me. I IMMEDIATELY called my parents and asked if I ever had an imaginary friend.
Apparently I didn’t.
I’m so glad I’m a writer, because I will eventually remember them all and then write them down.
For example, I had a character that was just me in a mewtwo body, and now I’ve developed the son of a gun into something so much better.
I still have imaginary friends (:
Maybe you had one they didn't know about.
i still have mine... my legos :)
Aww, that's so sad...
something i loved seeing was the way that joy was the only emotion who glowed, quite literally. the rest seem fuzzy and that gave them an odd effect, but joy actually glowed
They are fuzzy because emotions are....felt.
Oh my frigging gosh 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
God I love pun's 😅😂
12:04 the thing I liked most was the representation that maturity comes when you stop having one dimensional emotions (you don't just feel happy, sad, angry, scared or disgusted) and start having complex emotions that are harder to explain because they mix with what the movie tries to describe as the basic emotions
Man I frigging love those movie... I was seriously depressed when I first saw it, and I have never seen a film more accurately convey what depression actually is... not just Very Sad, but the total absense of both joy AND sadness.
Yes that's what I love about this movie. I dont think I could explain depression better than the way it is depicted in Riley's mind.
Total emptiness. It's a painfully accurate representation of how some people experience it.
Whats also accurate about it is that Riley cant process her emotions, She does not express her sadness so she gets lost. For me a part of depression can be being so lost that processing emotions doesnt happen, What makes me feel tired, makes my brain foggy, And i dont feel like myself. Everybody who has trouble with this dont give up! Support and expressing is important. There will be a way again and light
Aaand I'm crying over this movie again. Every time I watch a video on this movie I cry.
Although I have to disagree with the "joy leading the mind is only for children" interpretation. I saw it as "everyone has a different main emotion leading their mind, but over time you learn to balance your emotions and they work together as a unit."
Yeah, I saw those differences in central emotion to be not a function of age or sex but rather of personality.
Well you could argue that small children may be more likely to be lead by joy, but I do agree that adults can be led by joy too
@@datfisheboi6519 Yeah exactly! All the emotions are different, and have their own purpose. Being led by an emotion isn't inheritly bad and can be good (Riley's mom isn't depressed, she's empathetic and caring etc, and her Dad isn't always raging, he's determined and gets things done etc) but can be bad (Riley's Joy shutting out Sadness). Children are more likely to be led by Joy but Adults can too like you said. The Idea that adults simply can't be led by joy is a bit depressing but I can see why he would've thought it.
Please give us some Ratatouille. It's a great Pixar film overlooked because it's not really considered a Pixar classic but it still hits you with excitement and wonder. Honestly, Ratatouille is my personal favorite movie of all time. Brad Bird is remarkable for making us feel all the feels for a common street rat, who's on aspiration in life is to cook. Please please please do Ratatouille. I'm begging you.
I'm gonna post a lot on the this one so please Ratatouille.
Ratouille
In the words of Gusteau, "Anyone can Cook." Rapatoody plz
Again another amazing thing about the movie is the Linguini's physical comedy its gold for someone with a noodle name to be so noodle like.
Please cinemawins guy, do ratatouille. It's the one movie I'm asking for please.
I like how Joy was the only villain in this movie. She is literally the antagonist, for lack of a better choice.
Right?? And Sadness is like the dark horse protagonist. Such a masterpiece 👏👏
DID YOU REALLY RICK-ROLL ME?!
Yes, yes he did
I was just thinking of Rick Astley
For a second I forgot that wasn’t in the actual movie
Damn he got us good
Earworms ARE your brain rickrolling you, aren't they? This is a brilliant analogy.
I think the first emotion when we are born would probably have to do with the circumstances in which we are born into. Imagine if you came into the world and didn't get the loving touch of your mother, if you were taken from her right at the start and then you were alone. I think a situation like that would probably bring up a different emotion as the first one, like fear. Riley was born into the ideal situation surrounded by love.
Also yes there are only 5 core emotions in the movie, but I think that's because pretty much all other emotions stem from the others or are combinations of them. That's why they are the core emotions, you get other emotions from them.
Also when people just hate on Joy, often they don't seem to think about that her not being nice is a huge part of the story. She is flawed, but she does become more mature by the end, she learns and becomes better. It's called character development, and it's precisely because of this that the story goes anywhere to begin with.
Yes. Like when your mother dies and all you can feel is fear. Same for any other circumstance. There are newborns being left on the streets thanks to anti-abortion laws (in some states or countries) and the fact that if the mother can't afford to take care of the baby, she probably couldn't afford to put him up for adoption, either.
@@DoctorWhoKage It's a very sad thing. We should be helping desperate mothers.
According to my parents, when I was born, the first thing I did was look around with surprised, confused eyes lol. They laugh about that whenever they remember it. Speaking of which, what would confusion be associated to? It's not exactly an emotion, but it feels like one. Based on the brain's inability to process new information, but it happens involuntarily and doesn't go away for a while.
@@masterblaster2678 that is so frigging adorable 😄 I'd guess that confusion could be the temporary lack of emotions until one of them has decided what it feels about the situation. In your case, it would be like your joy stood behind the button a bit longer, inquisition the situation, not exactly sure what to do and feel and wanted to first get a better look at what the heck is going on 😁
Okay, I have to say this. I'm only 3:35 into this video and I'm already getting misty-eyed. lol My husband and I made the "mistake" of watching Inside Out in theaters when I was pregnant with our first child. Needless to say, there were tears. She's now 4 years old and has a 6 month old little sister. I have not been able to watch Inside Out without crying ever since. The beginning is just far too real for anyone who's had the joy (lol) of watching a baby grow into a crazy but wonderful little person. The entire movie just pulls at the heartstrings and does not let go!
6:11 when Bing Bong just yells “DIVERSION” and yeets something random thats me.
Wow. You pointed out so many things that I missed, and they all make me appreciate this movie even more. Thank you!
On a side note, when my niblings were in elementary school, they used this movie a lot to express their feelings, by saying "Sadness is driving right now" or "Anger was driving a lot today". I love how this movie gave them the visual language to identify their emotions and some understanding of such an abstract concept.
Very nice
I'm almost 18 and I have a lot of fun imagining what the inside of my head and my emotions look like and what they're doing :D
What about a win for joy crying???
And Joy refusing to be forgotten!!
@Meie Locrt Well I'm a person and yet I can still feel you who is another person ;)
@Meie Locrt the did that to humanize the characters I guess lol
@@weshouldhavenukedjapanathi8369 um... Alright.
It's always a great day when CinemaWins uploads a video!
JediGuyKaleb ding!
Same
@@prophet1390 you forgot to say positivity. "Helpfulness." *Ding*
I am a PERSON the ding itself was because it’s always a great day when CinemaWins uploads a video! Not for the comment I was just adding the ding because JediGuyKeleb forgot the ding
The fact that he didn’t win Riley’s nightmare scene with the Haunted Mansion theme playing in the background disappoints me just a little bit...
"The pain I now feel is the happiness i had before, that's the deal" -CS Lewis
“Do The Last Jedi”- Me
Mr. Lewis wrote some good shit
One of my favorite authors! Thank You!
Literally, the whole theme of the movie reminded me of the tragedian scene from The Great Divorce.
The positivity of this channel makes me want to ugly cry.
I HATE the term “ugly cry” HATE. IT.
Take a look through the channel: "Like Stories Of Old" CinemaWins is very enjoyable....Like Stories Of Old is simply transcendent.
Adam Ferry
I'm afraid you are alone on that opinion.
Eh, cute cry suits you better
8:49-9:08 He actually made me think that I went back. Well played Cinema wins. Well played.
I think one of the best thing this film talks about is something kids media rarely shows: sometimes positivity is a bad thing. You’re SUPPOSED to feel all your emotions, not just happiness. Toxic positivity does nothing more that hurt you by suppressing your other emotions, eventually making them stronger. I love how it’s also emphasized even in joys design: she notices everyone’s flaws but her own, even though she is the only character to have what could be considered a physical flaw; a cowlick
*10 sins for making me remember those dumb commercials*
**five dolla, five dolla, five dolla foot loooooong**
Thnx for the heart!
Eyyy, you were smart by not editing the post itself because that would remove the heart. Nice one.
CinemaWins: *10 sins for making me remember those dumb commercials
CinemaSins: Haha, f*cking asshole
CinemaWins: WHAT DID YOU FREAKING CALL ME
CinemaSins: Sor-(gets beat up by CW)
*who says no to mentos gum*
ME. I SAY NO. FRICK YOU, MENTOS.
You just HAD to write down the lyrics, when I was perfectly happy not having that commercial playing on loop in my head.
Emotional autopilot=depression
Me:that’s me 100%, most of the time
For me, it's different. Emotional autopilot doesn't equal depression but an emotional barrier to keep myself stable. When I was in Hanawalt elementary, everything was great. But then I moved, went to Monroe, and things quickly turned south. But instead of being depressed, I was determined, tougher, stronger, faster, more agile. It was as if me as a person was being protected by something that has always been there at the back of my mind and waiting for a chance to help. I can now control this feeling and selectively use it when I need it. I call it my Monroe side. It's the part of me that wants to do what's right at any cost, and takes no crap from anyone.
When he said that, I legit thought “omg yes!!” It’s 100% accurate and I believe that it relates to anxiety as well
There’s deja vu
Nah. Just a glitch in the matrix.
There’s deja vu
Nah. Just a glitch in the matrix.
lol, same
I thought you meant autopilot from wall-e xD
Bing-Bong’s happiness after letting Joy escape without him... maximum feels
That moment when you realize Riley had an imaginary boyfriend who said "I'd die for Riley!" but her real imaginary friend did die for her :(
Aww man, I never connected that before :(((
To be fair, her imaginary boyfriends also died for her.
He died achieving his purpose... making Riley happy. Riley thought him up because she wanted a fun friend.
7:50 Did I just get Rick Rolled? In 2019?
Ehh don’t worry you get rickrolled plenty of times in 2020.
@@Will-pl4tp it’s expected. It happens so much that I made a video about how many times it appears th-cam.com/video/ub82Xb1C8os/w-d-xo.html
@@Whatsabird did u just-
This honestly got me😅😂😂😂 I sooo didn't expect that😅
@@Whatsabird no, but I assume it's a rickroll
*you click it*
9:07 genius genuinely got me because I have déjà vu almost daily
I love this movie. Really, the movie itself makes me tear up and this review also teared me up.
But what I love the most about the movie is how the different emotions are actually more than just one and they all cover at least one good and bad personality trait/emotion.
Anger is also determination and passion.
Disgust is also self-confidence.
Fear is also rationality (as part of the fight-or-flight mechanism), because he still second-guessed Anger's idea of making Riley go back to Minnesota.
Sadness is also empathy.
Joy is also mania, which is bad.
Had Joy taken control and pushed Sadness away, Riley would never have felt another moment of sadness in her life. That would essentially have made her mind be strained due to the lack of appropriate sadness, it would have turned her into a Stepford girl. Emotionally dead.
Kinda reminds me of the wives from Fahrenheit 451.
I like to think that Riley's parents emotions have evolved and are more complex than just what they used to be at their core. I believe we may all have these 5 base emotions at some point but they eventually transition into more complex emotions later on
Like how Dad's Anger is mildly perturbed at the worst of times, never actually LOSING his temper and staying in control of the situation, whereas Mom's Sadness is actually less "Life is misery" and more "Yes, life isn't sparkly rainbows but we can deal with it."
A small detail that stood out to me was how after Disgust had finished making that hole in the glass, she went for Joy, focusing on helping her up first because she was the priority, the emotion that would help Riley the most. All of the emotions thought it was Joy who was the necessary emotion for the situation, since she's always been the lead emotion, especially after moving to San Fransisco.
But sadness is the most important aswell
Next week is Infinity War! The teaser screenshot is when Spider-Man and Doctor Strange are being beamed up.
Really I don't remember this shot
Yeah I think he's right I had the same thought
Yup
I thought it was the end credits Scene. Car crashed into Lamppost after the driver faded away, Nick Furys and Maria Hills Car with the open doors and nobody around as they're gone as well. Though I don't know what that blue-ish glow in the center of the screen is supposed to be
Roger Dräyer It’s not the end credits scene. But I see where you’re coming from. I went and checked and it’s right after Spider-Man says, “Mr. Stark, I’m being beamed up!”
I like how her imaginary boy friend is Canadian, cause hockey is mainly a Canadian thing
i thought is a nod to justin beiber
Or how people say they are dating a person in Canada but they are really just trying to sound cool
@@bangasou12 hahaha true! Didn’t even think of that but it’s plausible 😆
@@bangasou12 I mean, Justin Bieber is Canadian so maybe both?
5:32 If you're wondering why Joy didn't send the core memories up the tube, it's because she doesn't trust anyone but herself to bring them back to Headquarters.
1:07 I want to point out some highlights from the newspaper anger is reading:
- NO DESSERT!
Experts agree dessert good
- Kiley continues to be "good girl"
- Why isn't candy the best dinner?
Kiley what
There’s also:
“The Future is shaky”
“Replaced! No need for Riley”
“1st day of school”
“Riley quits hockey”
(….pls reply if there’s more…)
I love the subtlety with the parents’ emotions. The emotions themselves are level headed and aren’t bouncing off the walls like Riley’s. They work together as teams instead of fighting for control. Some people pointed out that it’s a bummer the mom is guided by Sadness, but it feels like more than that. Her Sadness behaves a little differently from Riley’s. She’s guided more by concern than pure sadness. She cares about her family and it shows. She’s not a sad sack, she’s a problem solver. And the dad’s Anger acts differently too. He’s level headed and focused on keeping the family running smoothly. So to be guided by Anger doesn’t mean he’s blindly angry, it just means he’s on the look out for things that are unfair.
Wyatt The Nerd Yeah like I feel a lot of people in real life would be “piloted” by sadness. Some of them would be depressed but for some it just means they’re probably more resting or don’t feel happy all the time until something makes them sad but they feel melancholic until something makes them happy. You’re just functioning with a different range of emotion being your go to.
@@eadlynjune I recon that with someone who has depression, their control board would kind of work like those shitty mobile games where you can only play a couple of levels everyday instead of playing indefinitely.
Yaaaas Infinity War!!!!!! But please to How to Train Your Dragon 2. I want this one so bad it's just so good.
Please do Last Jedi. So good.
Yassssssssssssss
Legend of the guardians! That movie NEEDS this treatment!
the whole time I was waiting for you to mantion one thing, but I will do it now myself: A lot of peoples critic involves that there are only 4 head emotions and only 1 of them is postitive. Though its a psyschological fact that all emotions other then joy, disgust, fear and anger is just a different form or mix between those 4 core emotions. For example love is a mix between fear and joy, jealousy is a mix between fear and anger, envy is a mix between anger and disgust and so on.
Even years later, just watching to have something playing in the background, I hear that breath of relief and still feel the pang of needing to cry. That scene will never not get me!
Originally Pixar wanted to have around 27 emotions in Riley's head and the script was way different. However they thought that would lead to an overcrowded feeling so they thought it would be better to focus on the more forefront emotions of a young person. Also Mom and Dad were meant to have male and female emotions both, but the animation team copped out and made them all same gender because it was easier to animate that way for them.
Jakushka What a bunch of malarkey!
I can never watch this movie, or any videos about it, without crying. I don't know why, but tears are running down my face.
Laura B Glad I’m not the only one.
@@launabanauna8958 Somehow it's just become even more emotional for me. I'm volunteering at Give Kids the World village, the place Wish families stay when their wish is to visit Disney and other Florida parks, and they play the Inside Out theme inside their new star observatory (a new room where each child hangs up their own star to be immortalized, after the entire castle has been filled with over 100,000 children's stars from over the years). This movie and its music gives me the chills just thinking about it
Laura B What an incredible story, thank you for sharing it, and thank you for the work you do. I work as a clown, and I have entertained at all sorts of different children’s functions. They all are amazing human beings, they both amaze, and inspire me in life.
@@launabanauna8958 Clown is such noble job!
I also feel a lot in this movie. When I watch it I leave Japan my home country. And I feel lost. Itfirst movie I see in France with first friend I make here and I try hold back tears because I feel like girl in the movie :( Catapulted in a new environment :( except my parent cannot hug me, only talk me in phone. I use to hate this movie because I think it is cause for my depression. But true is it is only catalyst of my depression. And in end it only tell me that it is normal when you depress after changing life. :)
I called it. Now for my prize, I request that someday you review Treasure Planet.
P.S. Why the hell did you Rick Roll me. Is this my punishment for asking for you to review Treasure Planet, I don't think that you Rick Rolled the Megamind guy.
That would definitely be the move I loved Treasure Planet as a kid
@@dannyking410 it was a masterpiece of a film, and I would like to see that more people are able to properly see how beautiful it is.
A. S. Ranu Totally agree. I’d say one of the more underrated animated movies from the 2000’s
Treasure planet please
Treasure Planet was amazing, still listen to the music, "I am a question to the world, not an answer to be heard"
The fact that my mum hates watching this film because it’s too emotionally upsetting tells me a lot
Think about how the mom’s primary emotion is sadness, which looks very similar to Riley’s sadness emotion, which she clearly inherited from her mother. Riley doesn’t know how to deal with that emotion probably because her mother only wants her to be happy, not realizing sadness is a necessary emotion. Sadness in Riley’s friend would’ve given her empathy so she didn’t steamroll Riley’s emotions. It’s actually kinda beautiful that your mom can see the depths of this. My mom just got annoyed with sadness character cause she’s clearly ruled by Joy, but as a result she has a hard time empathizing.
7:51 Curse you, Cinemawins!
🤣🤣🤣
This is one of my favorite Rick rolls ever
Last Jedi
Never Gonna Give You Up by Rick is always a win :)
well played
A movie i WASN'T expecting to be good!!! What a movie!!
Definitely one of Pixar's best!! It's up there with The Incredibles, Finding Nemo, Toy Story, UP, WALL-E, and Coco!!
The animation is amazing!! The writing is just insane and the actors/actresses who voiced the characters really did each one justice!!
SOOOO many heart-warming and heart-wrenching moments thoughout!!! Pixar def KNOWS how to play with your emotions!!
I sob when I see her shakily give a smile after crying. Just powerful.
Y'know, I find it fascinating how with the other characters, their emotions match their presenting gender. But Riley's got two male-presenting emotions (Anger and Fear), and three female-presenting emotions (Disgust, Sadness, and Joy). It's probably more for the sake of variety, and probably not as deep as it could be interpreted as, but it's still an interesting thing to notice.
I always thought that since she's only 11, she hasn't figured herself out yet so there's room to change
I think it shows which traits are inherited from either parent & also how Riley is a bit of a tomboy
i think its because she is questioning her gender identity idk
I love how they nod to joy needing other emotions to function, specifically sadness, with her blue hair and eyes, and I think Riley's blonde hair and blue eyes also represents that sadness and joy are her two primary emotions. I think they also do this with Disgust. It's true that most disgust comes from fear, so Disgust's little purple hints help convey that. It's a great movie, seriously!
Yay! I love these videos so much. I need some positivity so I look forward to them all week, and watch the old ones throughout. 😂
Glad I'm not the only one. I honestly just appreciate you don't drop the f bomb every other word like the cinema sings guy.
Same. These are the most re-watchable videos out there. x
I love CinemaWins' positivity too. I want someone to open a EGA CinemaWins. He deserves it.
@@alphaphoenix4042 good idea!!
*NEXT WEEK IS INFINITY WAR!!!*
I just checked it, the frame is from the scene where Spidey and Dr. Strange are being beamed up to Ebony Maw's ship.
*YAAYY*
OH WOW!!!!
MR STARK I'M BEING BEAMED UP
You mean Squidward's ship?
mr stark i dont feel so good
Wait what frame?? I never knew he teased other movies!
I love the particle look they all have. Like when Anger is chill, they're really close together, but when he's screaming, the particles are coming out more spread and aggressive.
12:16 How have I never noticed Sadness's odd cutesy expression here??
7:51 GODDAMN IT LEE 😂😂😂😂 solid Rick Roll.
In all seriousness though... I just watched this movie for the first time today. And i.... really fucking needed it. I recently ended the only long term relationship I've had so far in my life. Its... it's been hard. I havent been suppressing my emotions, per se, but I have been more numb than anything. I've started making progress the last couple days, but this movie... this movie had the *exact* message I needed. Sometimes, you have to feel the sadness and work through it before you can start to feel happy again. I am so grateful that this movie exists right now. And I really, truly am grateful for you expertly putting it into words. Keep up the great work man. You always amaze
Inside out two but Riley goes numb after losing a loved one, and all emotions just nope out
I WANT THIS, IS THAT BAD?
0:20 I ACTUALLY STARTED CRYING AND JUST SAID "NOSTALGIA" WHEN I FIRST HEARD THE MUSIC AND THEN HE SAYS THIS
can we get an everything great about your son?
TH-cam may not allow a video that long 😂
I'd watch it!
Video starts: ding “infinity, now for cute video montage!”
That's too many years to film...
The thing I absolutely LOVE about this movie is how when we look into different people's minds, different people are in the middle and "in control".
The Mom has Sadness in control, while the Dad has Anger ruling his entire brain, showing an insight into the family dynamic when the kid is not around.
well.. that might explain why they both have brown hair and brown eyes while riley has blonde hair and blue eyes
How the hell could you rickroll me. I trusted you. Look I’ll still like the video and share it and comment. But you’re on thin ice optimist. Thin. Ice.
🎶Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you🎶
What's the timecode?
Tommy Dee 7:50
Lol it's funny how rickrolling ended up becoming a thing... I still really like the song unironically. If anything the meme just makes it funnier and therefore even more enjoyable to me. XD
7:35 Just got Rick Rolled in 2022. I am with Anger's reaction... 😤
It’s weird. I love this movie and every time my depression decides to kick it up a notch, I watch this movie. In a weird way, I watch this movie so that I cry. I saw in the comments that sadness can also be the part that is empathetic. Weirdly enough when I’m in a depressed episode, I feel more and can relate more. Seeing Reilly manage to tell her family her feelings is weirdly cathartic on the viewers too.
Like what you said, we grow up learning to not show emotions other than happiness, but the truth is that we NEED to feel all the emotions in order to truly be mentally healthy. This is definitely one of my favourite movies, a definite go to for when I’m feeling low
It’s giving yourself permission to access that catharsis. I do much the same thing.
Can you do a "Everything GREAT About Rise of the Guardians?" I love that movie so much!
Something that I noticed while watching this video again.
That when you try to push an emotion forward to suppress another then it ruins both. It was the very thing that caused by both joy and sadness to be sent away from the controls.
I’m so glad to have discovered CinemaWins!
Over the years, I found myself laughing at a lot of CinemaSins parodies, but I’m blessed to know there’s an alternate source of humor that provides educational and well-written analyses that focuses on the positive side of things.
2:37 I'm sorry, that pose and answer reminds me of Lilo so much. Especially with her line of, "Leave me alone to die."
7:51 HA jokes on you CinemaWins (or Lee which I think might be your name) I love being Rick Rolled and I'm never gonna run around and desert THIS! Also this has to be my favorite one you have done Thank you so much!!!
Queue all the “I’m not crying, you’re crying!” comments.
Hey, cool! This is one of those situations when "queue" and "cue" would both make sense to use.
...Because that's important to know.
Anyway, I actually was crying a little bit. And that's ok.
nono, i'm crying,a lot!!!!!
*Cue
Queue would be used in a sentence like, "I am stuck in a queue"
I am just watering my beard.
On behalf of most commenters here, I would like to say *WE'RE ALL CRYING.* 😭😭😭
Ooo I love the detail that Joy is the only one who is wearing more colors than her main one (blue hair, greenish dress) showing that you can’t feel joy without your other emotions because it just becomes worthless to feel it
9:42 The score of this scene is called "Tears of Joy". Yep.
I love the symbolism this film shows as well as the story
1. Joy isn’t purely yellow, unlike the rest of the emotions who are just one colour. It symbolises that we need to feel other emotions in order to have true happiness
2. Sadness is the only one who can effect the emotion of a memory. There’s a few ideas and speculations of what this could symbolise, but I think it’s because sadness is a very strong emotion and it symbolises how you can’t go back into the past and relive the memory again, especially if it was a happy memory.
3. When Riley started crying on the first day of school and the rest of the emotions (besides sadness) tried to take the memory down, they couldn’t because it was pretty much stuck in Riley’s mind the fact that she moved away and is already getting sad, so it’s only all she can think about
4. The train of thought crashing when honesty island went down could symbolising the fact that Riley wasn’t thinking clearly about the idea of running away, so her thoughts basically “disappeared”
5. Bing bong disappearing. I know a lot of people might disagree with me but I’m glad bing bong was eventually forgotten. Don’t get me wrong, I love bing bong it’s just its realistic as bing bong said himself there was no call for him recently. Plus, Riley is now 11-12 and is becoming more mature, so it would make sense she isn’t focusing on childish things anymore and moving on.
6. Sadness being the one to change Riley’s mind about running away, sadness made her think clearly and made her realise how things really are, something we as humans can become emotional to.
7. Riley’s clothes. At the start when she had joy she was wearing lots of different colours. But as the film progresses, she starts wearing more darker colours, because she doesn’t feel like herself anymore
8. Each island being “forgotten” as Riley simply looses herself and doesn’t know who she is.
9. The way the emotions just don’t focus on their emotion. We’ve seen sadness being sympathetic and empathetic before, anger was controlling when joy was gone, and fear still tries to look for a solution to prevent things from escalating
10. This whole film is symbolism for “you don’t have to be happy all the time, you can feel other emotions”
There’s probably way more things I missed but this is what I noticed
🙌🙌 Your good at reflecting 😊
10:02 "Mr. Stark, i don't feel so good"
11:06 I don't know why, but Riley's little breath always gets me, every single time, sometimes all you need is a hug.