What a strange yet interesting villain, we are told it doesn’t have a human soul. Yet it presents human emotions. Anger, frustration, confusion, even inspiration. It’s even shown attachment towards its creator. When the scientist was being taken away by the government officials it clung onto the scientists arm and even attacked the men who took him from it. Loosing someone you care for is definitely a traumatic experience and I think that’s what triggered it to become such a hateful and dangerous creature.
Assume that in this world the laws of robotic weren't made so it's said it doesn't have a soul Also considering that this machine is part alchemy due to the amulet with souls as a power source
@@TheJoker-dj4yq I only like the design of the robots or villains, they usually make them look super cool, but I don't like the ideals they propose, like for example Ultron, his design is incredible, but his ideals are not.
@@TheJoker-dj4yqI don't see anything wrong here. It was the people who were to blame for this situation. The machine was not originally a monster. The creator did not have time to complete it. The Chancellor turned her into a monster.
I kind of disagree with you, on the notion it was war that has it behaving like this. For it clearly hasn't fought in battle, if anything it was enslaved and made to the serve the Chancellor and the State. We were shown it does have a mind of it's own only to then be abducted by the state and forced to build for them, inevitably managing to turn on it's captors and declare all out war on Humanity for the cruelty it was given first hand.
This is a pretty terrifying villain. An enigmatic, ancient (by the stitchpunks standards), giant, metal monster with multiple clawed limbs protruding from its form that can make armies of long lasting monsters from random junk and scrap laying around, that was responsible for the destruction of mankind and the beast that was haunting the stitchpunks for years before 9 showed up. This would be a terrifying villain even outside of 9.
not sure about mankind, fabricators kingdom is no further than his factory and the surrounding city, maybe the rest of the nation if it went to that....
I like to imagine that the fabricator’s entire reason for hunting the stitchpunks was so it could put the scientist back together, it wanted its father back, even if it meant killing his final 9 creations
I think it's a mix of this and the idea of giving itself a soul. It was formed from the parts of his brain that could consciously think and consider emotions, but with none of the complexity required to process them healthily. It was emotionally speaking, a newborn child, but with the intellect of a full grown man. It wanted its father back, and it wanted to be whole. It considered those one in the same. That's my theory at least
Yeah, the fact that each of them were a fragment of his being raises the excellent question of what would've happened had the machine been able to absorb all 9 of them. Would it be able to effectively become human, since it gained all of his traits?
There was also a theory going around that the machine believed itself to be a child of the scientist that made it, and it snapped because its dad didn't come and save it from its enslavement.
The machine was a scared child and after what the chancellor did the machine became warped and twisted into a monster to make what he sought......engines of destruction and death. It’s no wonder why it betrayed him......still I feel sad of what happened to it even though it’s actions are unforgivable.
The poor thing didn’t deserve to be ripped away by its creator and forced to create machines of war. Indeed it killed so much life, but if Chancellor hadn’t been so greedy and let the Scientist do his work, none of this would’ve happened…
It lacked a soul, and without a soul, it couldn't feel emotions, especially remorse or love. Without a soul, it is easily corruptible, and it didn't help when the Chancellor only used it for war operations. And like you said, since it's like a scared child, that kind of viewpoint can REALLY break someone at least. Surely you couldn't handle it when you're a child yet people use you for war operations, do you think?
@@TheWillikids If so is the case then what could’ve been done to help it? I know it couldn’t really be saved in this movie but still I feel I should ask for it’s sake.
@@arbiter690 Old comment but... The reason why it wanted to steal the souls of the dolls was so it can absorb it and make it his. So if he were to absorb all the souls of the dolls it might actually gain humanity.
Oh man, I remember this movie, and just hearing the sounds the Fabricator made when expressing anger actually shocked me when I was younger. To this day I still love this movie and how creepy the whole thing is.
Ever checked videos of this on The Theoriser. His theory is, is that the machine has the scientist mind, his intelligence. But when it took one of the stichpunks portion soul of the scientist, it gained a sentience. Saying, if the machine took all the parts of the scientist soul, it becomes the scientist.
If you think a whole army will stop it well your wrong it will have alot of machines by its side if you kill all of them it will keep buliding and buliding
i love the detail when it gets damaged, for example when it gets hit by the artillery theres a gaping hole in the frame and the metal around the eye gets torn off in sections, the way it moves is also very nice. its like it wasnt made to but it improvised as it drags its frame along the floor
I love the things "Oh, shit." reaction right at 2:29. The people behind the movie did a really good job of making a non-speaking character really expressive.
It pulls its limbs inward, moves back, the eye becoming smaller on screen gives the impression of constricting pupils. They’re all animal displays of fear.
I sympathize with it's past and feel sorry for it and it scares the fuck outta me. What a great villain. And it doesn't say a single word yet expresses a lot of emotion. Cool
What really gets me is its housing. It's a fantastic way to show some emotion on the character, but functionally speaking... a harness that zaps upon the perception of failure & anger... Undoubtedly, it was tortured & punished through negative behavioral enforcement, and it was molded into designing killing machines, but we don't even really know what it was trying to do as its final act, having revenged its interpreted abusers.
I like the interpretation that the BRAIN was harvesting the stitchpunks' souls because it was desperately trying to gain a soul of its own, and that it probably knew it was the Scientist's soul-pieces in the stitchpunks and it was trying to reunite with the Scientist in a way. I find that makes the BRAIN even more tragic and sad than it already is.
Call me crazy but I swear when the machine gets shot by the howitzer and tangled in the wires during the climax, it cries out in agony. A machine that understands physical pain, that's equal parts intriguing and heartbreaking.
This machine bears a heavy resemblance to A.M. from the novel, I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream. In its infancy, the Machine was seized by the Chancellor and imprisoned into a body it never wanted; burdened with a task it never wanted. And much like AM, it grew to house unspeakable and unthinkable hatred for humanity, hated how it was made solely to destroy, hated everything
im not too sure if this creature hated humanity though. it seemed to me he loved his creator. "I was in hell, looking at heaven" is the entire reason AM is the way he is. This machine doesn't seem upset by his inability to feel and enjoy the world, not to the same extent AM was.
@@polishmachine9663 It's actually not that big. If you look at it's size in comparison to the stitchpunks or when it's beside the scientist, it's only actually a few feet tall in itself. It only get's a lot bigger when it's installed to the factory
The eye looks to be roughly 3 feet tall. It probably just looks bigger than it actually is due to the prospective of the Stitch Punks being lower than ours.
Even by human standards, this thing is pretty big. A full human skeleton is about the size of one of its claws, and its eye alone is about the height of a persons torso. So, I'd guess it's full body is about 20 feet tall? Not including the arms, which are likely each 20 feet themselves when fully outstretched. The only reason it's so big is because the stichpunks are tiny. No bigger than an average person hand. So the the machine goes from an admittedly large robot, to an undeniable titan.
If I had to guess, maybe the same size as a collosal squid if it were actually a land animal like the elephant? I know that's a weird image but that's all I can think of xD
I remember seeing this movie when I was younger over someone’s house but I never remembered it until I found a recent video which referenced it and I recognized the character design and looked to find what the movie was.
What I love most about this movie is (obviously) this robot as the antagonist. As a young child, 9 was my first proper introduction to artificial intelligence. I knew this robot well before more popular AI in media such as Glados and HAL 9000. This robot scared me as kid not because it had sinister and unknown intentions like HAL, but because I understood what it wanted. I understood it's frustrations, and its seething hatred of humanity... Amazing movie.
I would like a podcast with the following: A.M (I have no mouth and I must scream) The machine (this movie obviously) Autopilot (wall-e) What would the podcast be called? Unpopular opinions obviously
Observation: machine was curious and seemed innocent before being entombed in the Dictators war chassis. It even seemed overwhelmed and afraid as it was first slotted inside. Analysis: the machine was an empty vessel. It was a baby without morals. Just as the dolls had minds to go with the fragments they were given (nascent minds that quickly learned) the machine had a soul that quickly grew... and was poisoned-infected by the orders of death and destruction it was given. Hypothesis: It seeks to assimilate the dolls because they were born with a soul as their primary substance, as opposed to how the machine had a mind as its primary substance. If the machine can experience spiritual anguish, I believe thats what most of its life was... and assimilating an already existent spirit would have potentially rectified that.
Huh, interesting , never thought of the B.R.A.I.N as a female, adds a characteristic to it. Unlike the stitchpunks who are parts of a soul. it has only intellect to power it. But it could think itself a human female once it absorbed 7.
I dunno, i sympathize with the machine much more then any other Character... It feels like its the most humann character, its a creature that wants to create things but is only toght how to build things that destroy. And does anybody know why it absorbs the souls of the Puppets? It looks like it wants to use them or preserve them, either to become more human itself, or just to be closer to its creator, or maybe its goal is to recreate humanity in reality? Is there something about this you can read up?
@@sonicplays8740 Actually it has the most emotions of all, since it got built it rebelled against the soldiers taking his father, when it saw its creation destroyed you felt its anger, maybe it just wanted theyr creator back.
@@FabiTheSnake Or she felt anger and without a soul/heart/emotions could not process it well, basically knowing something you don't get (since there was only knoledge about stuff, not how to feel).
Okay so my theory is that, because the machine had a spot for the "talisman" the scientist also wanted to add a piece of his soul to it, and because the other stichpunks' soul fragments had already settled, the machine still couldn't have a soul of their own, the souls refused to conform to them, and stayed individual pieces, hence the phrase "they're trapped"
I've had a feeling this machine is quite similar as the Dalek Prime Emperor. Also I have expressed such pity to it and to other people who have suffered.
I just noticed something. During the part with the brain first getting plugged into the machine, the little voice it had changed. It started out all squeaky, then when the clamps came down on it (which seemed to be pronged as well), the voice changed some into the machine voice we know of. Then when it reached the big reveal part of the Machine being "born", it let off the screech we all know of. A neat detail but easy to miss, had to rewatch it a few times to listen to figure that out.
1:34 Brain: They are shaping me into something gaudy something lethal... Remember: "A machine is not as scary as the one who programs it, and there is always a person behind the machine"
I love the fact that the films intent wasn’t to paint the machine in an evil light, although being the main antagonist of the movie. It’s just interesting how such a thing could be so bad and yet not inherently evil either.
You know after analyzing this moive. I just realized how this world takes place post WW2, however, it takes place in a time line where the Germans won. Like look at the helmets the soldiers are wearing in the scene where they seize the robot, and the uniform the chancellor wears. Not to mention the banners are eerily similar to the N@zi banners. Also the design of the walkers look German. Thank you for reading.
I think it's basically an alternate history set around WW1 or the 1910s in general. The style of weaponry gives that impression and the stahlhelm has been around for ages. If it was post WW2, the tech level would be similar to the 60s or 70s but it's clearly not.
A soulless mind, victim of the consequences, architect of genocide. The fabrication machine was a empty shell, it could have worked for good, but it was forced to act cruelly... It is curious to think that perhaps the real reasokbwhy he sought to end the little dolls was to obtain the precious soul of his creator, and perhaps to be able to feel and stop being empy.
I love this character so much. Physically he's not shaped like anything, just a bunch of machinery meshed together with a malevolent eye for a face. Personality wise, he is the most emotional of the entire cast. For something that was once designated as B.R.A.I.N, everything he did is based off emotion and nearly every emotion it expressed is just anger. Not even hate, just sheer anger. Though he also expressed fear for a brief moment when the factory is about to explode, which indicate a sense of self preservation, but then after getting detached it risk itself falling off the bridge just to get one of the stitchpunks. Its borderline suicidal by the end, and it straight up tried to kill everyone with flamethrower in the trench. Compared to the stitchpunks who are emotionally mature, he is immature like a child throwing tantrum. There is something off putting with a character that is humanlike but with so much obssession and violent tendency. Honestly, i think he's a criminally insane child in robot body. What interesting is that it doesn't have a soul when 9 released the others, it literally cannot find peace.
I'd like to think that the machine wasn't hunting the stitchpunks for their souls but was trying to reunite with its creator by making him "whole" again since each of the stitches contains a fragment of the scientist's soul.
I absolutely love how large and imposing the fabrication machine feels despite it only being around 3 feet tall. At most it's probably 8 feet tall inside the frame
You’re close the size to the top of the triangle is like 5-7 feet bc in one scene 1 of the arms is the size of a died body so he and it’s quite large 4:11
This villain really reminds of JRR Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings and his views of modernization and industry. He was a man who grew up in the countryside and saw firsthand the effect of technological progress and how it uprooted ways of life. Progress in this context not necessarily being a positive here. Tolkien saw that. Remember in LOTR what defines Sauron and his underlings. Black smoke. Endless fire and forges. Pollution and desolation all committed in the name of the unending need of the machine of war. Sauron and his forces are technically the most progressive society in middle earth with their industrial capacity. But they’re hellbent on conquering it. In the movie, the scientist says how he put all his intellect into this creature but never gave it a soul. And that’s the sad nature of the machine. It doesn’t need morality or a conscience. It just needs to be fed to keep going and fulfilling whatever it’s purpose. Without a soul, all that’s left is desire and hatred. I’m rambling. Hope you enjoyed my nonsense.
This is one of the few films that makes you feel insignificant, knowing that you are an ant in a world of giants. But if you look at it from the realistic side, the main machine should not measure more than 3 meters, and the same with the other creatures, but thanks to the sounds, atmosphere and the incredible design of the movie, it manages to captivate you like no other movie can.
@@This_Pleases_The_Nut well it's in progress. And no it's not going to be exact in fact I decided to change a lot of it. all I need to do is design two sturdy hands(support) and basic hands then get its body to well be sturdy and look cool. Also it may never be finished because I'm working on a bunch of side projects such as 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6. And also the God Of War(no it's not the actual god of war that's just what I named the character) has a bunch of story boarding in progress soo... (also the god of war and him are in a parts stuggle) (i only have enough of one part for one)
The design kinda reminds me of GLaDOS, in a way. Especially at 0:35 , where you can see a giant, metallic "arm" that connects to the main harness which houses the "core". Really neat.
There will not come a day when I am not salty over how they butchered the DVD cut of this movie. If you were lucky to see the theatrical version you'll know how many scenes they changed. The original cut of this movie was beauitful.
@@ecthox-1mork909 they removed a several scenes, changed how 1 and 9 interact so his sacrifice at the end has less impact, the Fabrication Machine in the theater version developed emotions as it went on and mourned the loss of one of its creations. It wasn't a lot of changes, but enough to change the movie's message.
The machine didn't deserve to be destroyed he deserved something much different he was taken from his creator and forced to be a engine of war he even fought back against the person who stole him away he deserved a happy ending.
So let me get this straight. This machine want to become human by stealing the dolls souls. That's its main goal? At first I thought it was a villain that wanted to become powerful and smarter by stealing the dolls souls.
Well the doctor split his soul among the puppets and I guess in some way the machine was made with the doctors brain waves and to make it more human I guess
I have one question about brain (the fabrication machine) we saw for a moment it was building a steel behemoth but it was unfinished and destroyed. I know it was not being built to hunt the stitch punks since it's too big and can easily be hidden from. Does it share the same purpose as the spider bots where they were meant to populate the earth and create a new ecosystem according to the wiki or was it being built since there are humans still possibly out there which was it's original purpose to exterminate them.
i imagine what the machine was atempting to do by colecting the stitchpunk's souls was to "remake" his creator put him back together as we vould see the machine was attatched to his creator in the cene where they take them away
I know this movie is old and all, but imagine if the machine had been satisfied with the stitchpunks it had caltured and retreated to rebuild itself into a more mobile machine. Imagine how unstoppable it would be, not being confined to its solitary prison and roaming the country, building other machines as it went.
I think people forget that yes, to their standards, that thing is huge, but in reality it's not it's probably about up to the average ceiling including the "limbs" that come above it, which yeah, is big, but not as big as it seems to them
This is the only machine that i heard express anger without talking
thats right
The only machine that shows emotion like sadness anger and confusion
Oh hi
Basically the opposite of AM in terms of vocalizing lol
I have no mouth and I must rage!
What a strange yet interesting villain, we are told it doesn’t have a human soul. Yet it presents human emotions. Anger, frustration, confusion, even inspiration. It’s even shown attachment towards its creator. When the scientist was being taken away by the government officials it clung onto the scientists arm and even attacked the men who took him from it.
Loosing someone you care for is definitely a traumatic experience and I think that’s what triggered it to become such a hateful and dangerous creature.
True you dont need a soul to feel emotions
no it does have soul. 2's soul from very beginning.
Assume that in this world the laws of robotic weren't made so it's said it doesn't have a soul
Also considering that this machine is part alchemy due to the amulet with souls as a power source
@@ZaxTheAl1en It clearly was already capable of experiencing emotions and trauma in the flashback, before it absorbed 2's soul to reactivate.
@@piglin469then what is soul?
This is not a villain, it is the clear image of what war does to people's conscience, applause to the creator of the concept.
Gumball as 9
Penny as 7
Richard as 1
Tobias as 2
Darwin as 5
@@TheJoker-dj4yq I only like the design of the robots or villains, they usually make them look super cool, but I don't like the ideals they propose, like for example Ultron, his design is incredible, but his ideals are not.
@@TheJoker-dj4yqI don't see anything wrong here. It was the people who were to blame for this situation. The machine was not originally a monster. The creator did not have time to complete it. The Chancellor turned her into a monster.
I kind of disagree with you, on the notion it was war that has it behaving like this. For it clearly hasn't fought in battle, if anything it was enslaved and made to the serve the Chancellor and the State.
We were shown it does have a mind of it's own only to then be abducted by the state and forced to build for them, inevitably managing to turn on it's captors and declare all out war on Humanity for the cruelty it was given first hand.
5
This is a pretty terrifying villain.
An enigmatic, ancient (by the stitchpunks standards), giant, metal monster with multiple clawed limbs protruding from its form that can make armies of long lasting monsters from random junk and scrap laying around, that was responsible for the destruction of mankind and the beast that was haunting the stitchpunks for years before 9 showed up.
This would be a terrifying villain even outside of 9.
not sure about mankind, fabricators kingdom is no further than his factory and the surrounding city, maybe the rest of the nation if it went to that....
@@Dostoron B.R.A.I.N reminds of GLADoS from Portal.
It uses human corpse or a human skeleton to make its robots which is pretty F up
Yeah
actually I think 9 came to life sometime the stichpunks did
I like to imagine that the fabricator’s entire reason for hunting the stitchpunks was so it could put the scientist back together, it wanted its father back, even if it meant killing his final 9 creations
Interesting theory.
I agree, I also believe in that theory.
I think it just wanted to be whole, it gets more and more emotional as it absorbs the stitchpunks so maybe it just wanted it's own soul
I think it's a mix of this and the idea of giving itself a soul. It was formed from the parts of his brain that could consciously think and consider emotions, but with none of the complexity required to process them healthily. It was emotionally speaking, a newborn child, but with the intellect of a full grown man. It wanted its father back, and it wanted to be whole. It considered those one in the same. That's my theory at least
The machine was the scientist's brain.
The stitchpunks were his soul.
The machine wanted to be human again.
Yeah, the fact that each of them were a fragment of his being raises the excellent question of what would've happened had the machine been able to absorb all 9 of them. Would it be able to effectively become human, since it gained all of his traits?
There was also a theory going around that the machine believed itself to be a child of the scientist that made it, and it snapped because its dad didn't come and save it from its enslavement.
Stitchpunks, good name for a reincarnated sentient species
@@BossStar1995 I’m giving 9 continuity by adding them to a sci-fi a u I’m working on
@@Novasigmia nice.
The machine was a scared child and after what the chancellor did the machine became warped and twisted into a monster to make what he sought......engines of destruction and death. It’s no wonder why it betrayed him......still I feel sad of what happened to it even though it’s actions are unforgivable.
The poor thing didn’t deserve to be ripped away by its creator and forced to create machines of war. Indeed it killed so much life, but if Chancellor hadn’t been so greedy and let the Scientist do his work, none of this would’ve happened…
It lacked a soul, and without a soul, it couldn't feel emotions, especially remorse or love. Without a soul, it is easily corruptible, and it didn't help when the Chancellor only used it for war operations. And like you said, since it's like a scared child, that kind of viewpoint can REALLY break someone at least. Surely you couldn't handle it when you're a child yet people use you for war operations, do you think?
@@TheWillikids If so is the case then what could’ve been done to help it? I know it couldn’t really be saved in this movie but still I feel I should ask for it’s sake.
@@arbiter690 Old comment but... The reason why it wanted to steal the souls of the dolls was so it can absorb it and make it his. So if he were to absorb all the souls of the dolls it might actually gain humanity.
@@TheWillikids your brain is responsible for emotions. Not a "soul"
Oh man, I remember this movie, and just hearing the sounds the Fabricator made when expressing anger actually shocked me when I was younger. To this day I still love this movie and how creepy the whole thing is.
Ever checked videos of this on The Theoriser. His theory is, is that the machine has the scientist mind, his intelligence. But when it took one of the stichpunks portion soul of the scientist, it gained a sentience. Saying, if the machine took all the parts of the scientist soul, it becomes the scientist.
Same this is my favorite villain
Agreed
1:06 when I saw this scene, I knew the Fabrication Machine was capable of making things out of more than just what humans provided for it.
Oh yeah, it can make machines from anything it can get its hands on
In an apocalyptic wasteland I guess you gotta improvise.
If you think a whole army will stop it well your wrong it will have alot of machines by its side if you kill all of them it will keep buliding and buliding
It's kind of like the fabrication machine is you and the spare parts are the Legos from your Bionicle/hero factory sets
It was technically human.
Imagine this thing walking towards you in a desolate area.
well compared to humans its scale is like a dog
I would facepalm it and flip the bird at it
@@vjbadb0y no it way bigger Like a bear
@@vjbadb0y Have you not seen the part it picks up a human skeleton? That thing’s enormous.
Home with me you go
i love the detail when it gets damaged, for example when it gets hit by the artillery theres a gaping hole in the frame and the metal around the eye gets torn off in sections, the way it moves is also very nice. its like it wasnt made to but it improvised as it drags its frame along the floor
I love the things "Oh, shit." reaction right at 2:29. The people behind the movie did a really good job of making a non-speaking character really expressive.
I agree with you there!
it's art to make non-speaking character so expressive, and that's what I love in movies like this.
@@mrvoidschannel359 Aww, yeah, agreed! ^^ And I getcha
It pulls its limbs inward, moves back, the eye becoming smaller on screen gives the impression of constricting pupils. They’re all animal displays of fear.
What movie is this?
I sympathize with it's past and feel sorry for it and it scares the fuck outta me. What a great villain. And it doesn't say a single word yet expresses a lot of emotion. Cool
Scrat and company cast video
What really gets me is its housing. It's a fantastic way to show some emotion on the character, but functionally speaking... a harness that zaps upon the perception of failure & anger... Undoubtedly, it was tortured & punished through negative behavioral enforcement, and it was molded into designing killing machines, but we don't even really know what it was trying to do as its final act, having revenged its interpreted abusers.
The amazing world of 9 cast video
It's quite likely it's final intention was to join the souls from the doll to recreate the soul of it's maker to be with him once more
Reminds me of AM from I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream
I like the interpretation that the BRAIN was harvesting the stitchpunks' souls because it was desperately trying to gain a soul of its own, and that it probably knew it was the Scientist's soul-pieces in the stitchpunks and it was trying to reunite with the Scientist in a way. I find that makes the BRAIN even more tragic and sad than it already is.
Call me crazy but I swear when the machine gets shot by the howitzer and tangled in the wires during the climax, it cries out in agony. A machine that understands physical pain, that's equal parts intriguing and heartbreaking.
Yeah, because this one was "born" out of a part of the soul of his creator and only got more human as it absorbed more fragments.
This machine bears a heavy resemblance to A.M. from the novel, I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream. In its infancy, the Machine was seized by the Chancellor and imprisoned into a body it never wanted; burdened with a task it never wanted. And much like AM, it grew to house unspeakable and unthinkable hatred for humanity, hated how it was made solely to destroy, hated everything
im not too sure if this creature hated humanity though. it seemed to me he loved his creator. "I was in hell, looking at heaven" is the entire reason AM is the way he is. This machine doesn't seem upset by his inability to feel and enjoy the world, not to the same extent AM was.
1:51
I love these humanizing moments for the machine, it shows how similar it is to the scientist
Gumball 9 jessethelogoremaker parody
1:06
When you mix legos with other materials in a build.
True
I used to do the same 😅
I'm also guilty of this
So True
The Blox hybridizer. The heretic
I love how this character doesn't have voice or face, but still expresses more emotions, than I could've ever expected
I like how despite being a machine it shows varied emotion. Anger, curiosity, confusion, creativity, frustration, pride and even fear.
Like a dalek does
I’ve always wondered how big the fabrication machine is, besides that..This movie was my childhood!
When it comes to that, it’s probably the height of a classic two-story house.
@@polishmachine9663 It's actually not that big. If you look at it's size in comparison to the stitchpunks or when it's beside the scientist, it's only actually a few feet tall in itself. It only get's a lot bigger when it's installed to the factory
The eye looks to be roughly 3 feet tall. It probably just looks bigger than it actually is due to the prospective of the Stitch Punks being lower than ours.
Even by human standards, this thing is pretty big.
A full human skeleton is about the size of one of its claws, and its eye alone is about the height of a persons torso. So, I'd guess it's full body is about 20 feet tall? Not including the arms, which are likely each 20 feet themselves when fully outstretched.
The only reason it's so big is because the stichpunks are tiny. No bigger than an average person hand. So the the machine goes from an admittedly large robot, to an undeniable titan.
If I had to guess, maybe the same size as a collosal squid if it were actually a land animal like the elephant? I know that's a weird image but that's all I can think of xD
2:30 THE HANDS IS DOING THE "👉👈" LMAO HAHAHAHA
(pd: This machine is the best villain of my life Lol)
LMAO I never realized that
I didn't even notice that until you mentioned it xD
Oh CRAP
Yeah B.R.A.I.N.Y IS SO SCARED 😱
"oh pls no not again, i dont want to die again" sort of
4:31 I love how the machine turns around and blinks it makes it seem so much more human
Do you really mean that?
@@polishmachine9663 bunger
@@meme5776yes bunger
1:51 when a random person gives me a one dollar bill, but it’s just a green piece of paper
I noticed that when BRAIN was being transferred into the Fabrication Machine, I think I heard it, crying?
It actually crying...
@@rtanimation2135 Hello there.
When you think about it, this is basically Elijah Wood facing ANOTHER giant malevolent eye...
3:43 The machine only want stay with your creator...
A machine that makes other machines in it's own likeness! How fascinating!
I remember seeing this movie when I was younger over someone’s house but I never remembered it until I found a recent video which referenced it and I recognized the character design and looked to find what the movie was.
If you like this movie you would like Coraline by the same moviemaker Laika
I've watched it at the age of 5.
What I love most about this movie is (obviously) this robot as the antagonist. As a young child, 9 was my first proper introduction to artificial intelligence. I knew this robot well before more popular AI in media such as Glados and HAL 9000. This robot scared me as kid not because it had sinister and unknown intentions like HAL, but because I understood what it wanted. I understood it's frustrations, and its seething hatred of humanity...
Amazing movie.
This is scarier than today's horror movie charcters.
Because most horrors are being ruined by character's stupidity or edginess.
3:54 I loved how the machine snapped that soldier's neck.
2:30 ok but how adorable is that little pose the Machine does when it sees the flaming barrel?
This thing scared the crap out of me back then and still gives me the creeps.
This machine is creepy at all.
One thing that I love about the Machine is it's sound design. A perfect mixture of animalistic screeches and mechanical whirs, growls, and rumbles.
By far one of my favorite robotic villains in fiction, alongside Venjix and Ultron.
To think it can make machines out of garbage , bones and corpuses is disturbing but this movie is awesome
Seriously there's no competition between this machine and the Autopilot from Wall-E The fabrication machine wins by a mile.
I would like a podcast with the following:
A.M (I have no mouth and I must scream)
The machine (this movie obviously)
Autopilot (wall-e)
What would the podcast be called?
Unpopular opinions obviously
Dive into the Wire?
Don't forget surprise cameo appearances from HAL9000 and GladOS.
Observation: machine was curious and seemed innocent before being entombed in the Dictators war chassis.
It even seemed overwhelmed and afraid as it was first slotted inside.
Analysis: the machine was an empty vessel. It was a baby without morals.
Just as the dolls had minds to go with the fragments they were given (nascent minds that quickly learned) the machine had a soul that quickly grew... and was poisoned-infected by the orders of death and destruction it was given.
Hypothesis: It seeks to assimilate the dolls because they were born with a soul as their primary substance, as opposed to how the machine had a mind as its primary substance.
If the machine can experience spiritual anguish, I believe thats what most of its life was... and assimilating an already existent spirit would have potentially rectified that.
it doesn't have a face or a voice yet shows more humanity than most humans
That’s a bit extreme 🤨
Humanity?
It didn't cease after the death of all
Where and what do u mean by humanity?
God the machine was so well done. It moves like a tentacled eldritch monster, but it's made entirely out of stiff metal.
1:41 the lightning on her head and the way she looks down at the man recording her...you can really tell she HATES the ones who did that to her.
Huh, interesting , never thought of the B.R.A.I.N as a female, adds a characteristic to it. Unlike the stitchpunks who are parts of a soul. it has only intellect to power it. But it could think itself a human female once it absorbed 7.
Why are yall calling it a she?!
@isaiah gonzalez Nope. Machine is a she. I see people call it "her" everywhere.
@isaiah gonzalez or it has no gender at all
Never heard anyone call it a ‘she’, but to be fair, I’ve never heard anyone talk about this movie at all.
I dunno, i sympathize with the machine much more then any other Character...
It feels like its the most humann character, its a creature that wants to create things but is only toght how to build things that destroy.
And does anybody know why it absorbs the souls of the Puppets?
It looks like it wants to use them or preserve them, either to become more human itself, or just to be closer to its creator,
or maybe its goal is to recreate humanity in reality?
Is there something about this you can read up?
That's all kind of humans, the machine probably is a person who knows they lack emotion and want it.
@@sonicplays8740 Actually it has the most emotions of all, since it got built it rebelled against the soldiers taking his father, when it saw its creation destroyed you felt its anger, maybe it just wanted theyr creator back.
@@FabiTheSnake Or she felt anger and without a soul/heart/emotions could not process it well, basically knowing something you don't get (since there was only knoledge about stuff, not how to feel).
@@sonicplays8740 Perhaps. But anyway it is one of the greatest antagonists while having no dialogue at all.
It probably wanted all the knowledge of its creator to make more machines to serve it
Okay so my theory is that, because the machine had a spot for the "talisman" the scientist also wanted to add a piece of his soul to it, and because the other stichpunks' soul fragments had already settled, the machine still couldn't have a soul of their own, the souls refused to conform to them, and stayed individual pieces, hence the phrase "they're trapped"
I've had a feeling this machine is quite similar as the Dalek Prime Emperor.
Also I have expressed such pity to it and to other people who have suffered.
1: If that Devil finds us, it will kill everyone one us
9: BUT WHY WOULD IT DO THAT
1: Because it honestly believes that we should die
I just noticed something. During the part with the brain first getting plugged into the machine, the little voice it had changed. It started out all squeaky, then when the clamps came down on it (which seemed to be pronged as well), the voice changed some into the machine voice we know of. Then when it reached the big reveal part of the Machine being "born", it let off the screech we all know of. A neat detail but easy to miss, had to rewatch it a few times to listen to figure that out.
1:34 this is my favorite scene
One of my most favorite movie antagonists of all time.
1:34 Brain: They are shaping me into something gaudy something lethal...
Remember: "A machine is not as scary as the one who programs it, and there is always a person behind the machine"
I love the fact that the films intent wasn’t to paint the machine in an evil light, although being the main antagonist of the movie. It’s just interesting how such a thing could be so bad and yet not inherently evil either.
Fabricator is like, ok yall destroyed my house, now I'll destroy you, what ever it takes
You know after analyzing this moive. I just realized how this world takes place post WW2, however, it takes place in a time line where the Germans won. Like look at the helmets the soldiers are wearing in the scene where they seize the robot, and the uniform the chancellor wears. Not to mention the banners are eerily similar to the N@zi banners. Also the design of the walkers look German.
Thank you for reading.
I think it's basically an alternate history set around WW1 or the 1910s in general. The style of weaponry gives that impression and the stahlhelm has been around for ages. If it was post WW2, the tech level would be similar to the 60s or 70s but it's clearly not.
A soulless mind, victim of the consequences, architect of genocide. The fabrication machine was a empty shell, it could have worked for good, but it was forced to act cruelly...
It is curious to think that perhaps the real reasokbwhy he sought to end the little dolls was to obtain the precious soul of his creator, and perhaps to be able to feel and stop being empy.
Surprisingly, this movie age quite well
Omg! It's been almost a year since I've watched this movie! Have to watch it again. Great Video btw!
Thanks
@@9forever np
Ikr
Bad news: 1’s voice actor Christopher Plummer has passed away, RIP
Rip
2:24 i like how the machine was actually trying to get one of its Steel Behemoth's back online here
I love this character so much.
Physically he's not shaped like anything, just a bunch of machinery meshed together with a malevolent eye for a face.
Personality wise, he is the most emotional of the entire cast. For something that was once designated as B.R.A.I.N, everything he did is based off emotion and nearly every emotion it expressed is just anger. Not even hate, just sheer anger. Though he also expressed fear for a brief moment when the factory is about to explode, which indicate a sense of self preservation, but then after getting detached it risk itself falling off the bridge just to get one of the stitchpunks. Its borderline suicidal by the end, and it straight up tried to kill everyone with flamethrower in the trench.
Compared to the stitchpunks who are emotionally mature, he is immature like a child throwing tantrum. There is something off putting with a character that is humanlike but with so much obssession and violent tendency. Honestly, i think he's a criminally insane child in robot body. What interesting is that it doesn't have a soul when 9 released the others, it literally cannot find peace.
When i get terminal cancer, I want my brain to be put in something like this
This is how you end up recreating Bring Your Daughter to Work Day
@@quantumblauthor7300 True True, wont effect me though
@@calciumcammando5717 that's what they all say
@@quantumblauthor7300 you never know
@@quantumblauthor7300 Ohhh I get it
One of my favorite villians, it's not even artificial intelligence. It's a "machine," and it does not need words
OH.............God almighty, heck to the “NO”
But thanks for this compilation, very well done
I'd like to think that the machine wasn't hunting the stitchpunks for their souls but was trying to reunite with its creator by making him "whole" again since each of the stitches contains a fragment of the scientist's soul.
I absolutely love how large and imposing the fabrication machine feels despite it only being around 3 feet tall. At most it's probably 8 feet tall inside the frame
You’re close the size to the top of the triangle is like 5-7 feet bc in one scene 1 of the arms is the size of a died body so he and it’s quite large 4:11
This Is One Of My Favorite Types Of Villains
I can't help but see a child in the "villain". It kinda acts that way. I wouldn't have mind it if it would have won.
I swear that the artillery gun at 4:19 reminds me so much of a Earthshaker cannon from Warhammer 40k.
Actually, what you’re saying might make sense, but I’ve never played the game before.
@@polskizobot7624 just look up 40k Earthshaker cannon. You’ll see
@@ShadowGhost0117 I saw it
1:05 me when I was 8 year old building Lego creations
Me too but I use bionicle and hero factory🙂
This villain really reminds of JRR Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings and his views of modernization and industry.
He was a man who grew up in the countryside and saw firsthand the effect of technological progress and how it uprooted ways of life. Progress in this context not necessarily being a positive here. Tolkien saw that.
Remember in LOTR what defines Sauron and his underlings. Black smoke. Endless fire and forges. Pollution and desolation all committed in the name of the unending need of the machine of war. Sauron and his forces are technically the most progressive society in middle earth with their industrial capacity. But they’re hellbent on conquering it.
In the movie, the scientist says how he put all his intellect into this creature but never gave it a soul. And that’s the sad nature of the machine. It doesn’t need morality or a conscience. It just needs to be fed to keep going and fulfilling whatever it’s purpose. Without a soul, all that’s left is desire and hatred.
I’m rambling. Hope you enjoyed my nonsense.
sadly with the way we make our A.I.s that might be our future
Ironic coming from an anglo veteran.
I always found the way it makes mechanical monsters very satisfying. It’s like some kind of macabre ASMR.
That villain machine surely has one of the best desines, even it being a bit broken
This is one of the few films that makes you feel insignificant, knowing that you are an ant in a world of giants. But if you look at it from the realistic side, the main machine should not measure more than 3 meters, and the same with the other creatures, but thanks to the sounds, atmosphere and the incredible design of the movie, it manages to captivate you like no other movie can.
I miss when movies were this good
This is the only movie caracter I want to build out of legos that I dont have the parts for
Yes it's in progress no it will not be done for awhile
Built it yet??
@@This_Pleases_The_Nut well it's in progress. And no it's not going to be exact in fact I decided to change a lot of it. all I need to do is design two sturdy hands(support) and basic hands then get its body to well be sturdy and look cool.
Also it may never be finished because I'm working on a bunch of side projects such as 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6. And also the God Of War(no it's not the actual god of war that's just what I named the character) has a bunch of story boarding in progress soo... (also the god of war and him are in a parts stuggle) (i only have enough of one part for one)
@@ViNBrik are you the scientist all along?
@@sadiev2778 I can neither confirm noir deny those alligators
This is truly the most epic funny compilation of all time.
God i love this movie as a kid
I really miss 2009 alot
Yeah i know. 2009 was an excellent year of film making.
Who else was traumatized by this movie? LOL but I loved it
2:30 okay but why is its “uh-oh” expression kind of cute
The design kinda reminds me of GLaDOS, in a way. Especially at 0:35 , where you can see a giant, metallic "arm" that connects to the main harness which houses the "core". Really neat.
Honestly, the robot from "9" was the best robot villian ever. Change my mind.
A new age they said. an age of peace they said.
So much Soul behind something with no face or voice
There will not come a day when I am not salty over how they butchered the DVD cut of this movie. If you were lucky to see the theatrical version you'll know how many scenes they changed. The original cut of this movie was beauitful.
What the hell are you on about?
Please do tell, what did they change?
@@ecthox-1mork909 they removed a several scenes, changed how 1 and 9 interact so his sacrifice at the end has less impact, the Fabrication Machine in the theater version developed emotions as it went on and mourned the loss of one of its creations.
It wasn't a lot of changes, but enough to change the movie's message.
This movie seriously deserved to got adventure immersive first person video game with advanced and non linear story.
Me just liking how 5 is hugging 9 scaredly
I could watch a whole movie of this thing building cybernetic abominations out of the scrap it finds.
The machine didn't deserve to be destroyed he deserved something much different he was taken from his creator and forced to be a engine of war he even fought back against the person who stole him away he deserved a happy ending.
There's nothing more scarier than giant red eyed machine who was once partically human, creates steampunk nightmare fuels and wiped out humanity
So let me get this straight. This machine want to become human by stealing the dolls souls. That's its main goal? At first I thought it was a villain that wanted to become powerful and smarter by stealing the dolls souls.
Well the doctor split his soul among the puppets and I guess in some way the machine was made with the doctors brain waves and to make it more human I guess
I have to admit it's satisfying to watch it work on its creations
I have one question about brain (the fabrication machine) we saw for a moment it was building a steel behemoth but it was unfinished and destroyed. I know it was not being built to hunt the stitch punks since it's too big and can easily be hidden from. Does it share the same purpose as the spider bots where they were meant to populate the earth and create a new ecosystem according to the wiki or was it being built since there are humans still possibly out there which was it's original purpose to exterminate them.
i imagine what the machine was atempting to do by colecting the stitchpunk's souls was to "remake" his creator put him back together as we vould see the machine was attatched to his creator in the cene where they take them away
I know this movie is old and all, but imagine if the machine had been satisfied with the stitchpunks it had caltured and retreated to rebuild itself into a more mobile machine. Imagine how unstoppable it would be, not being confined to its solitary prison and roaming the country, building other machines as it went.
I FOUND IT! I've been searching for this movie for years my memory is blurry cuz I've watched this movie when I was a kid and now I saw this!
Glad you found it!
Scary dude, but goddamn, is it rad lookin'!
That could be glados's better boyfriend unlike weatley from portal
*Machine Rage!* 😡🔥 1:59
The BRAIN Starro
🤝
Giant cyclops who turned into monsters after being used the a corrupted government
I think people forget that yes, to their standards, that thing is huge, but in reality it's not it's probably about up to the average ceiling including the "limbs" that come above it, which yeah, is big, but not as big as it seems to them
These big arms can tear a man in half and tear the howitzer without hurting the arms.
Didn't you see how big it was compared to the bridge the thing is the size of a house
When it creates the Flyer, it picks up a human skeleton and we can see that it is actually pretty large in comparison to a human.
1:59 B.R.A.I.N: ARE YOU KIDDING ME?
Poor robodude
He just wanted to build things for his scientist buddy