@@Blue_Azure101Yeah, it seems that he has maybe had a difficult life, and it's really hardened him. He loves food, but something always seemed missing. Giving critical reviews seemed to be his way of feeling powerful, holding that pen. By letting go of it, he wasn't a critic anymore. He was back in those truly happy moments, eating the delicious food his loving mother made for on such a rough day. He releases his guard to just be vulnerable and enjoy something he'd almost forgotten. It's really beautiful how simple this scene is and how it notably changes his perspective on life. He was harsh and looking for the extraordinary in his reviews, but was looking in the wrong places.
@@TayoEXEyour reply is exactly right, especially when dude was out of the job because of the restaurant going out of business despite his positive review tarnishing his credibility. This does not matter though, because the man is still living happily and finally gaining weight from the food remi cooks in his new restaurant.
It is so fitting that Ego closes the movie with the words "Surprise me" - that is what the artist and critic need from each other: the critic needs to be surprised, and the artist needs to be challenged.
I love this scene. Every time I watch it, I cry. The same thing happened to me once. There's once a simple dish I ate often when my father was around. He wasn't the one who made it but the dish was a 'when he's alive' type of thing. After he's gone, I never ate it (just because nobody makes it anymore around me). The first bite broke me when I came across that dish years later.
The genius in this movie is that they came up with a premise - a rat that cooks - and a title that was a play on that concept - “ratatouille” - and then reverse engineered it into a classic and compelling movie.
I can’t get over how well Ego’s character is written! He reminds me of Frollo, but he’s obsessed with food, instead of gypsies. And the scene where he tastes Remy’s ratatouille is handled really well. I love how he doesn’t utter a single world once he tastes it. His expression says it all, going from shocked to ecstatic. I also really like how he handled the truth about a rat cooking his meal. Instead of taking back all his praise, thus destroying his arc, he’s initially a bit surprised, but soon realises what Gusteau truly meant: “No matter who you are or where you come from, you’re capable of achieving your dreams if you work hard enough.” And despite losing his job and credibility, he still maintains a positive persona and respects Remy for changing his perspective on food.
I get tears in my eye every time i see Ego's flashback. Mothers love is something special and with how old Ego is, you know its been awhile since hes seen her. Memories of a blissful past, of mother. Cherish yours while she is still here.
Food memory is a very real, very POWERFUL thing. Markiplier showed that in one of his video's. Mark tried food he hadn't had since he was very young, when his father was still alive. He went on to say he could remember how the walls Smelled, the house, the yard. He was taken backto that point, thanks to food memory. Beautiful thing to include :)
Never before or since have I witnessed a scene that so effectively captures the feeling of nostalgia when reintroduced to a long forgotten memory, particularly in the context of food.
Great video! Thought I'd add that the choice of Ratatouille also revisits two themes of the movie in a pretty strong way: 1. It's another angle on the idea that "greatness can come from anywhere" 2. It re-states Remi's now complete character arc, where he's come to accept and even be proud of where he comes from and what he is. He's the humblest of chefs, and chooses to apex his work with a very "humble" meal.
I'd like to add to this. When we see skinner eating it, he goes through similar emotions like ego did, but more hastily and trying to hold back his joy and disbelief on how good it is. He may of, for a split second, was taken back to his childhood for he also likely grew up poor and was made this dish as a comfort
I have my own theory, I think rattatouile was a meal Guesto cooked for skinner in their youth, just as a meal between two friends. Not something skinner would necessarily associate at first glance, but when he tastes it, it reminds him of the time when his best friend was still alive, and that's rattatouile taste exactly as Guesto used to make it. I believe that's why he said "it can't be" rather than something like it's amazing.
I think it also reminds of his mother as well as showing us that even through bad times something good can come afterwards, we see this in the shot with him standing at the back door of the house, his bike is broken, he got a nasty scrape on his leg and looks like he ready to cry. That tells us he was riding his bike fast and got into a little accident. Then we see his mom who looks at him a smile, and a face that says" You hurt yourself riding your bike fast didn't you?" giving us that this must happen from time to time, with the scene then cutting her giving him a nice warm meal and a motherly kiss on the head to tell him everything is okay. Plus just from the life he lived in the past to now it shows he, lived in the country side most likely somewhere in the middle or lower class family and had a love for food that his mother made him. I think if you take these into account and how he lives now, at some point he was a good person, but once he got into the life of a critic that love of food and good was sap out of him, the life of a food critic is no joke, the work that goes into it is a lot harder then people give credit. But for once when he finally got to eat something so good that little spark reminded him of home, an even his mother, it that moment you know when food is done right when the taste can take you back to a time when things were much simpler.
This is one of those scenes that come once in a generation. No words can describe how much I love this part of the movie and nothing comes close to The feelings it brings to me
Guys, a rat cooked my dinner. A rat was able to coordinate with other rats and humans in order to prepare one of the greatest meals of my life. These things are cognitive! They have intellect like this and we've been killing them en masse!
this scene just reminded me of how my long dead father has put me on his shoulders and walked to my mother coming simple pilaf. not even the original recipe with all the proper spices, just an adaptation. but it still feels so homely. I'm still cooking it to this day.
It is worth noting that Chef Geusto's(sp?) Ratatouille recipe was considered a failure. Remy's recipe, though based on Chef Geusto's, improved on that original recipe. This is probably why it reminded Anton of when he was little. It was based on an older recipe, probably similar to one that his mother used.
To date, my favorite scene out of any Pixar movies. Topping only Ralph’s speech as he dives into the Diet Coke volcano with the mentos on top to save Venelope.
The scene where ego is writting down every single detail of the dish with his pen the sorce of his ego and power then once he eats the ratatouille Remy made, it brings back nostalgic memories that ego had long forgotten until he rembers after a bike accident his mother cooks him a delicious meal made with love as she also kissed his forehead and he enjoys as a kid his mother's cooking. We zip back to see ego having color in his skin again and his nostalgia for the same dish from his past is so nostalgic he let's go of his criticism, his power and his ego just like his pen fall to the ground and for the first time in decades he actually smiles as he enjoys his meal. If that scene doesn't get ya it ego's review that does. So i guess Remy went with the saying "Just like mother used to make."
you can tell how Ego probably became more and more tired of "high cuisine" over years of being a critic. Every restaurant giving him the most rare, special and expensive of dishes they could come up with. And over the years it just became mundane to the point where, just because its special doesnt mean its fullfilling and you are left with the same stuff with caviar, saffron and truffels covered in leaf gold. All he needed was a good heathwarming meal, just how mama or grandma used to make it. while i havent partaken in such a "nobles dish" no restaurant ive been in even comes close to the food my Grandma used to make. And that will always have a special place in my heart.
4:49 reminds me of an analysis of a show's antagonist design. It's where the strongest monster the hero has ever faced has the simplest design, embodying a shadowy creature with horns, which resembles the fear of the unknown. The greatest evil one can face is not a hellish demon but rather a human who has lost their humanity. When the monster starts losing against the hero, he is met with face of despair, and he grasped onto what sliver of determination was left in him, and grew in power to face the challenge. But not against our protagonist. That was where he couldn't grow any further, and so he lost his greatest quality and became a generic brutish, monster giant trying to crush his foes with raw size and power. Like so many other shortlived monsters before him. He looked "cooler and more detailed... and thus lost in 2 punches for his second transformation, and 1 punch for the final one. Yes, the hero saying "you're weaker than before" was about his monster form crumbling... but the same exact thing could be said of his other forms that lasted seconds. Without his martial arts, the perfect method of breaking humans... of breaking heroes, the monster was just another cool, mutant/demon/monster. Just like every other one the hero already beat.
A super subtle detail is that Ego’s revelation is actually foreshadowed in his introductory scene. When Ego is reading his review, he compares Gusteau to Chef Boyardee as an insult. What he doesn’t realize is that Chef Boyardee isn’t a household name because it’s the pinnacle of culinary excellence; it’s popular because it’s the childhood meal of many people across multiple generations. It’s the feelings of nostalgia that people feel when they eat it, a simple but very human pleasure that Ego had long overlooked. Ironic how he criticized the very concept that would sway him later.
Very deep comment. First off, a question mark. Second, who are you talking about? I ask because there is a lot of talking in both the scene and the narration. So maybe you are deaf, or have the computer on mute. Either way, not a good look.
Glad you made this video right when Ratatouille made its way into the top 250 highest-rated films on Letterboxd.
The peasant dish shows he came from humble beginnings.
Just like Remy.
Oh, yeah!
It’s more than that, it evokes memories like a specific scent from childhood
@@Blue_Azure101Yeah, it seems that he has maybe had a difficult life, and it's really hardened him. He loves food, but something always seemed missing. Giving critical reviews seemed to be his way of feeling powerful, holding that pen. By letting go of it, he wasn't a critic anymore. He was back in those truly happy moments, eating the delicious food his loving mother made for on such a rough day. He releases his guard to just be vulnerable and enjoy something he'd almost forgotten. It's really beautiful how simple this scene is and how it notably changes his perspective on life. He was harsh and looking for the extraordinary in his reviews, but was looking in the wrong places.
@@TayoEXEyour reply is exactly right, especially when dude was out of the job because of the restaurant going out of business despite his positive review tarnishing his credibility. This does not matter though, because the man is still living happily and finally gaining weight from the food remi cooks in his new restaurant.
It is so fitting that Ego closes the movie with the words "Surprise me" - that is what the artist and critic need from each other: the critic needs to be surprised, and the artist needs to be challenged.
That scene from Ratatouille with Ego is absolutely incredible. One of the greatest things to ever come out animation itself.
I love this scene. Every time I watch it, I cry. The same thing happened to me once. There's once a simple dish I ate often when my father was around. He wasn't the one who made it but the dish was a 'when he's alive' type of thing. After he's gone, I never ate it (just because nobody makes it anymore around me). The first bite broke me when I came across that dish years later.
The speech Ego gives is pretty spot on too. chef kiss
I see what you did there… ^^
The genius in this movie is that they came up with a premise - a rat that cooks - and a title that was a play on that concept - “ratatouille” - and then reverse engineered it into a classic and compelling movie.
People need to make movies based on very simple premises again.
I can’t get over how well Ego’s character is written! He reminds me of Frollo, but he’s obsessed with food, instead of gypsies. And the scene where he tastes Remy’s ratatouille is handled really well. I love how he doesn’t utter a single world once he tastes it. His expression says it all, going from shocked to ecstatic. I also really like how he handled the truth about a rat cooking his meal. Instead of taking back all his praise, thus destroying his arc, he’s initially a bit surprised, but soon realises what Gusteau truly meant:
“No matter who you are or where you come from, you’re capable of achieving your dreams if you work hard enough.”
And despite losing his job and credibility, he still maintains a positive persona and respects Remy for changing his perspective on food.
I get tears in my eye every time i see Ego's flashback. Mothers love is something special and with how old Ego is, you know its been awhile since hes seen her. Memories of a blissful past, of mother. Cherish yours while she is still here.
Food memory is a very real, very POWERFUL thing. Markiplier showed that in one of his video's.
Mark tried food he hadn't had since he was very young, when his father was still alive. He went on to say he could remember how the walls Smelled, the house, the yard. He was taken backto that point, thanks to food memory.
Beautiful thing to include :)
Never before or since have I witnessed a scene that so effectively captures the feeling of nostalgia when reintroduced to a long forgotten memory, particularly in the context of food.
Great video! Thought I'd add that the choice of Ratatouille also revisits two themes of the movie in a pretty strong way:
1. It's another angle on the idea that "greatness can come from anywhere"
2. It re-states Remi's now complete character arc, where he's come to accept and even be proud of where he comes from and what he is. He's the humblest of chefs, and chooses to apex his work with a very "humble" meal.
I'd like to add to this.
When we see skinner eating it, he goes through similar emotions like ego did, but more hastily and trying to hold back his joy and disbelief on how good it is. He may of, for a split second, was taken back to his childhood for he also likely grew up poor and was made this dish as a comfort
I have my own theory, I think rattatouile was a meal Guesto cooked for skinner in their youth, just as a meal between two friends. Not something skinner would necessarily associate at first glance, but when he tastes it, it reminds him of the time when his best friend was still alive, and that's rattatouile taste exactly as Guesto used to make it. I believe that's why he said "it can't be" rather than something like it's amazing.
Well… this is ironic. I’ve been obsessed with this movie for the past week.
I think it also reminds of his mother as well as showing us that even through bad times something good can come afterwards, we see this in the shot with him standing at the back door of the house, his bike is broken, he got a nasty scrape on his leg and looks like he ready to cry. That tells us he was riding his bike fast and got into a little accident. Then we see his mom who looks at him a smile, and a face that says" You hurt yourself riding your bike fast didn't you?" giving us that this must happen from time to time, with the scene then cutting her giving him a nice warm meal and a motherly kiss on the head to tell him everything is okay.
Plus just from the life he lived in the past to now it shows he, lived in the country side most likely somewhere in the middle or lower class family and had a love for food that his mother made him. I think if you take these into account and how he lives now, at some point he was a good person, but once he got into the life of a critic that love of food and good was sap out of him, the life of a food critic is no joke, the work that goes into it is a lot harder then people give credit. But for once when he finally got to eat something so good that little spark reminded him of home, an even his mother, it that moment you know when food is done right when the taste can take you back to a time when things were much simpler.
This is one of those scenes that come once in a generation. No words can describe how much I love this part of the movie and nothing comes close to
The feelings it brings to me
Guys, a rat cooked my dinner. A rat was able to coordinate with other rats and humans in order to prepare one of the greatest meals of my life. These things are cognitive! They have intellect like this and we've been killing them en masse!
this scene just reminded me of how my long dead father has put me on his shoulders and walked to my mother coming simple pilaf. not even the original recipe with all the proper spices, just an adaptation. but it still feels so homely. I'm still cooking it to this day.
It is worth noting that Chef Geusto's(sp?) Ratatouille recipe was considered a failure. Remy's recipe, though based on Chef Geusto's, improved on that original recipe. This is probably why it reminded Anton of when he was little. It was based on an older recipe, probably similar to one that his mother used.
To date, my favorite scene out of any Pixar movies. Topping only Ralph’s speech as he dives into the Diet Coke volcano with the mentos on top to save Venelope.
Wreck it Ralph isn't a Pixar movie
The scene where ego is writting down every single detail of the dish with his pen the sorce of his ego and power then once he eats the ratatouille Remy made, it brings back nostalgic memories that ego had long forgotten until he rembers after a bike accident his mother cooks him a delicious meal made with love as she also kissed his forehead and he enjoys as a kid his mother's cooking. We zip back to see ego having color in his skin again and his nostalgia for the same dish from his past is so nostalgic he let's go of his criticism, his power and his ego just like his pen fall to the ground and for the first time in decades he actually smiles as he enjoys his meal. If that scene doesn't get ya it ego's review that does. So i guess Remy went with the saying "Just like mother used to make."
One of my favorite moments in any movie, as well as his review monolog afterwards
you can tell how Ego probably became more and more tired of "high cuisine" over years of being a critic. Every restaurant giving him the most rare, special and expensive of dishes they could come up with. And over the years it just became mundane to the point where, just because its special doesnt mean its fullfilling and you are left with the same stuff with caviar, saffron and truffels covered in leaf gold. All he needed was a good heathwarming meal, just how mama or grandma used to make it.
while i havent partaken in such a "nobles dish" no restaurant ive been in even comes close to the food my Grandma used to make. And that will always have a special place in my heart.
4:49 reminds me of an analysis of a show's antagonist design.
It's where the strongest monster the hero has ever faced has the simplest design, embodying a shadowy creature with horns, which resembles the fear of the unknown. The greatest evil one can face is not a hellish demon but rather a human who has lost their humanity. When the monster starts losing against the hero, he is met with face of despair, and he grasped onto what sliver of determination was left in him, and grew in power to face the challenge. But not against our protagonist. That was where he couldn't grow any further, and so he lost his greatest quality and became a generic brutish, monster giant trying to crush his foes with raw size and power. Like so many other shortlived monsters before him. He looked "cooler and more detailed... and thus lost in 2 punches for his second transformation, and 1 punch for the final one. Yes, the hero saying "you're weaker than before" was about his monster form crumbling... but the same exact thing could be said of his other forms that lasted seconds. Without his martial arts, the perfect method of breaking humans... of breaking heroes, the monster was just another cool, mutant/demon/monster. Just like every other one the hero already beat.
The power of Nostalgia
A super subtle detail is that Ego’s revelation is actually foreshadowed in his introductory scene.
When Ego is reading his review, he compares Gusteau to Chef Boyardee as an insult. What he doesn’t realize is that Chef Boyardee isn’t a household name because it’s the pinnacle of culinary excellence; it’s popular because it’s the childhood meal of many people across multiple generations. It’s the feelings of nostalgia that people feel when they eat it, a simple but very human pleasure that Ego had long overlooked. Ironic how he criticized the very concept that would sway him later.
Capitalist comment told me everything I need to know about you.
Having low stakes makes this my favorite pixar movie . It just hits harder.
3:48 bruh did this guy just claim that feudilistic middle ages were rooted in capitalism...? Lol
American Leftists don’t understand mercantilism or feudalism lol
@@macfly6237 I'm right here, dude.
Great channel dude!!!
Thanks!
good people are good, simple as.
plot twist Anton Ego is a descendant of judge Claude Frollo
3:54 ahh yes, the middle ages, famous for capitalism, and ideology that came about hundreds of years after the middle ages.
3:55 If the term was used since the Middle Ages then it predates capitalism.
Was the pen expensive? Was it a Mont Blanc?
Capitalism didn't even exist in the middle ages. Feudalism was the order of the day. Otherwise I enjoyed the video.
What the fuck is this guy talking about. I haven't heard him say a single word.
Very deep comment. First off, a question mark. Second, who are you talking about? I ask because there is a lot of talking in both the scene and the narration. So maybe you are deaf, or have the computer on mute.
Either way, not a good look.
@@shakkazulu7870 all he's doing is summarizing Ego's flashback why should I listen to something like that? Also your comment has major GPT energy
@@j.grimes4420 You clearly did, and was there a need for profanity? On the bright side, we are making progress with the question mark.