One of the best movies ever. Not just animation or "kids" movies, it's fantastic. Sure it's the typical "boy and his dog" story but it does it so well.
yeah, because the Iron Giant doesn't act like a dog. he acts like a kid controlling a 50 story robot of mass destruction. I always hated when they made non-dog anything act like a dog. that's a horse, not a dog. make it act like a horse!
Masterpiece doesn’t do this film justice. This is borderline a perfect film. I mean how many other “kids” films do you know where an adult chloroforms a kid?
It's not a movie, but the Netflix show Arcane definitely has the exact same chloroform scenario in the end of episode 3... so freaky that it could happen twice 😳
We really have to give nearly ALL of the praise to Brad Bird because before he signed on board, WB was still in that phase of "We must copy Disney's formula" with their Disney wannabe movies like Quest for Camelot and The King & I. They wanted The Iron Giant a funny musical and possibly live action at one point but once Brad Bird came in, his pitch was "What if a gun had a soul and didn't want to be a gun?" which was the question he wanted to tell ever since his sister died from her husband who killed her with a gun and the movie was gonna get made and dedicated to her. Making it more of a personal film to Brad Bird. It became less of a musical and more of a mature and existential kids movie about death and self-identity. And while it was a huge bomb, it was good enough in Pixar's eyes that it led him to direct my favorite Pixar movies: The Incredibles and Ratatouille. Ironically, The Iron Giant felt more like a 2D Pixar movie or even a modern Disney film than what WB was intending the movie to be like which was completely copying Disney's craze from the 90s .
While the anti-war message is very apparent, I always felt that the ultimate message of the movie was defying destiny, or forging your own destiny. Great movie.
Which is the most overrated message in kids animation movies. I can’t think of a single animated kids movie that’s not had that message to at least some extent. I don’t even believe it’s a good message, cuz often ur just not probably qualified to make that destiny or you just don’t have the resources for what it takes
@@rom7809 Yeah, being a free thinking individual is soooo over-rated. The Giant should have just been a gun, cuz guns are rad and guns being rad is the only good message and it's so underutilized too...
@@mooseitself how did you misinterpret what I said so badly. The theme of being who you wanna be is really overrated in KIDS MOVIES. Then u said this had to to with the giant’s weapons n shit. No, the message is being ANTI-war not PRO-war. And it’s very underrated because why do you think people racistly stereotype others to the point they want to go to war with them. name THREE kids animated movies that have that warning. I really want to find the place you get ur drugs, cuz your mind is FUNKY
For being 9 years old, Hogarth is surprisingly mature and intelligent, from stopping the Giant from entering the town (despite being psyched about being seen cool by his classmates for having his own giant robot), being the one who teaches the robot about morality, and his schemes that got Mansley off their backs. I legit thought he was 12 when I first saw this and came back to it years later but it floored me when I learned his real age.
That's true, in the movie he is the gifted smart kid that skipped classes because he's really intelligent, he's seen as emotionally intuitive as well (cares about animals, other beings etc) so it fits well.
No joke as i kid i watched this movie easily over 200 times, sometimes on repeat. It’s a fantastic story, with really beautiful animation, some of which is even directly inspired by Norman Rockwell. Its an honest 10/10 experience that never got the recognition it deserves!
I remember my mom telling me that we went through a couple copies on VHS because I would watch it so much. Just watching the recap was giving me chills
Yeah Mansley's a very mad person who would never care for the iron giant to be a good guy or to be seen as a friendly but man what a villian he was Mansley
I watched this at about 9 years old, almost a decade on it still doesn't fail at making me cry God I absolutely love this movie and really hope more people can appreciate it
The scene with hogarth being high on caffeine and going on a rant about how kids bully him because he does his schoolwork properly is one of my fav scenes as well as the most relatable. I love it so much, plus the whole sequence was animated by one of my favorite animators, james baxter, which explains the insane fluid movement.
I love this movie and I hate that it doesn’t have as much big name appeal. I always tear up at the end when the giant sacrifices himself to save everyone in the town
And the end Clip that he didnt actually Die to the blast, Just Deconstructed. The iron giant is seen putting himself back together, Sucks that a second movie probably just couldn't work. But imagine this, Pixar decides to Make the 2nd movie and this time, the child Hogarth is older now, it's a Story of How the iron giant And Hogarth tries to stop the Rest of the robot Army coming to destroy the earth.
@@thegoldenplague-mask5438 while that's an interesting idea I think this is one of those movies that's best left as a standalone story. plus with all the sequelitis plaguing the movie industry right now, despite this film being from the 90s it's ironically a breath of fresh air
I cry so hard every time I watch this movie. Every. Single. Time. I love that everything is hand drawn EXCEPT the Iron Giant himself, he was animated with CG to make him seem more futuristic which was brilliant. I think that the most beautiful way to teach kids about death was that seen with the giant Hogarth and the dead deer. It doesn’t get into religion either, it’s just about souls and existence. Truly a beautifully delivered message
I love how they made the giants design to that of a lovable robot that can switch to a terrifying murder machine in a split second, the face is especially where you can see the most out of this for me
Yeah, I don’t get it though, Atlantis was a failure, but that movie was great. Treasure Planet was a failure, but again that movie was great. Spirit was again a failure, BUT YET AGAIN THAT MOVIE WAS GREAT. What is with this lmao
@@certifiedintellectualjames5053 Low exposure in the pre-Internet age due to poor advertisement. Well, not really pre-Internet, but it wasn't that good or widespread back then
@@steelbear2063 Eh good point, but you’d think with such good films they woulda at least advertised it better because of it, like say for example with how most films were popular back then, I mean who could miss out on Treasure Planet? Spirit? I mean freaking Atlantis?
@@certifiedintellectualjames5053 I missed Atlantis. Then again I'm not American, so you know, you get what you get. And I'm grateful that as a kid I watched Shrek and Iron Giant
Yeah I don’t know how they managed to do it but Christopher McDonald was perfect casting for Kent. He managed to make an antagonist both hilarious and menacing without dragging either side to him too much. Also, hearing him threaten Hogarth into talking or he’ll have him taken away from his mother, is quite a villain power move. Especially since he has reason to do so. He has proof that Hogarth without the power station, and if word got out through town that people’s power went out because a little boy was messing with it, people will start questioning where was the mom. Heck, he probably would find a way to pin the train wreck on Hogarth too. And because of this, people will start investigating the Mrs Hughes and the household, and find her unfit….
This movie had some Moments in it that stuck with me big time. "You are who you choose to be." is everything to me. It's absolutely amazing and I'm so glad you did a video on it.
I've never seen this movie before. I know a lot of people like it, but I never had a CLUE what happened in the movie. This is the best masterpiece of a movie I have ever heard of. It was a movie I thought about watching before, and am DEFINITELY going to be watching now. Also... so THAT'S where that "it's art!" gif came from XD
@@janae5989 I'm ashamed to say that I haven't watched it yet, even after two months. HOWEVER!!! I have recently made plans with some friends to watch it soon, so I will update you when we watch it! :)
This film is just such a good piece of children's media. It deserves far better on release then it got, and the cult following it gained years afterwards is absolutely well deserved. Sidenote - the fact the Giant is in Multiversus and got to MEET Superman is everything the little kid still in me wanted to see.
When you were saying how the Iron Giant says “Superman” as he is flying to sacrifice himself, I teared up. I’ve never seen this movie but dang, that was good. Now I HAVE to watch it.
Brad Bird really was perfect to direct this film with his keen eye of the balance of wacky comedic moments especially with the hilarious antagonist but also embrace the more dramatic elements such as the Cold War setting, the Giant almost injuring Hogarth during play before Dean intervenes & of course the emotional ending. It’s one of the ‘90s most underrated films
I know it sounds silly but as a kid hearing adult characters say things like damn and hell made me like the show/movie a lot more. Felt like they respected me more by giving a more realistic representation of how people talked even though i was young.
And so many mature themes too... They didn't shy away of talking about death, war, politics, about depicting one of the greatest periods of mass panic, distrust and paranoia in human history accurately... All in ways a child could understand, but without underestimating their intelligence.
I'm about to put my soul into this. This is by far my favourite movie of all time. I remember eating sun chips while watching the movie and going "mama look I'm the giant" because the chips looked like the wavy piece of metal in the film. I just recently watched it with friends and there's that part where the bomb shelter song was playing (get low to the ground, it's time to duck and cover the bombs are comin' down) and I began singing it in autopilot. I've even got "you are who you choose to be" on the inside of my graduation ring. Well I know who I wanna be and it isn't the man of steel; It's the Iron Giant❤️
Every time I see an older movie that has a dark room scene involving developing photographic film, it's always really satisfying. When I was attending university, I took a course on Dark Room Photography, and all of our assignments involved learing and taking photos with a film camera, and it is tedious as hell using those things. Everything regarding the picture taking itself is completely manual; zoom, focus, light filter, shutter speed, all of it had to be specifically set and wasn't done automatically. Then you had to remove the film and do a step-by-step procedure of developing the film in a dark room that normally took at least an hour, ensuring that the film does not get exposed to light in the process, and you wouldn't even know if your photos came out okay until you did all this. If it didn't, or if the film was ruined at any point in the process, you would have to start over with a new film, which doesn't come cheap (you're in college; they expect you to pay for everything). So seeing scenes like Kent developing photos from Hogarth's camera in a bathroom under a dim red light are the kinds of things I get more appreciation from. Only complaint I have is that the photo would not develop that quickly in the developer. It takes a few minutes. But it's supposed to be a quick scene, so I understand they needed to rush it.
You know how there are just movies you watched so much as a kid that certain objects and movements always stick in your mind and you think back to a movie, and when you watch the movie everything is so vivid and you remember everything clearly.....Hard to describe what I mean, but iron giant is absolutely one of those movies for me. Particularly when he opens up the bread box and wraps the flash light on his gun, and putting the chocolate onto the shake
oooh yes I know exacly what you mean especialy for animation certain actions in movies stick in you mind like how Howard crumbles the chocolax on Kent's milkshake yes
I totally get this feeling, for me this would've been the first avengers movie, i remember having the dialogue and sound design memorized from watching it so much
"You are what you choose to be! You choose!" That really stuck with me as a kid, and still does to this day. I'm glad to see someone talking about this (imo) underrated classic.
This movie is like megamind. Both feels like a parody of superman and people demonstrate the main characters like monsters although they want to be the good guy.
Another theory, the dent could have come form a malfunction in the production line making the iron giants (knowing there are multiple of them). Kinda like a Star Wars droid gaining sentience from production line moment.
I don't think the giant poops. I think he just eats the metal and then uses like nanobots that deconstruct the metal and help to keep the parts together. That would make the most sense to me
My mother was born in ‘56, they did the whole duck n’ cover thing all the way into the early 60’s when she was in grade school. They would watch cartoons exactly like the ones in the movie. Along with the Cold War there was the Cuban missile crisis in ‘62, so there was a ton of fear both of my parents (they were born the same year) had to deal with back then. Scary scary shit!
This is one of my most favorite animated movies of all time. Brad Bird saved The Iron Giant & helped make it into what it is. The Incredible came shortly after & I love that the faces of the characters in both of these films look alike. It's kinda cute.
I watched this movie so many times as a kid and even back then it was one of my all time favorites. I am embarrassed to say that your video taught me that the film ends with the Iron Giant surviving. As a kid I was too stupid and/or too sad to understand the part with the screw meant that it reassembled itself again. All my life I thought it had this bitter sweet ending where it died but was remembered by the town, lmao
This movie really stuck with me and I LOVE it. I remember a few years ago it was playing on tv and my sister was like “wtf is this” and I was like trust me wait By the end we were balling, it’s SO good
This movie will always hold such a special place in my heart - its my grandads favourite movie, and every time i see him we always watch it together and it still makes him cry at the end, no matter how many times we watch it. I havent seen him since before the pandemic. I love you grandad.
Absolutely loved this as a child and just recalling the "superman" death scene made me cry. Masterpiece doesn't do this justice whatsoever. Almost 20 years later and it's still impeccable and dare I say even a foundational part of my personality.
actually, there's a massive difference between a movie being anti "shoot first and ask questions later" and anti "gun". a gun is a tool, which can be used or misused. the movie doesn't speak ill of self defense at all, but rather speaks ill of senseless killing and destruction.
@@kingcobra689 you have a way to disprove what i said, or are you just trying to generalize and label me in order to make my point look invalid without actually invalidating it?
A part of me strongly wants a sequel because there's so much stuff to explore about the Giant's origins, but the other part doesn't want it to happen because today's sequels tend to be trash and to ruin the original product because M O N E Y .
Controversial opinion: But I honestly think the ending should’ve been changed. Don’t get me wrong, eight-year-old me when I saw this movie had a happy smile on my face when I saw that the Giant turn out to be still alive. But now that I’m older, I think the ending ruins the theme of what Hogarth said about it’s okay to die, as long as you have a soul, because “Souls don’t die.”. If they really wanted this ending, maybe have it right at the moment when Hogarth is still sleeping and we see the bolt next to him, only for the film to cut when we hear the beeping noise, leaving it ambiguous to whether the Giant is still alive or not.
@@godfrey4461 He saying he didn’t want it to be where the peace moves. He wanted it to be left for the people to decide is he alive or is he not alive. To be honest in my opinion, this ending was good, but I feel like it should’ve been changed. Because, like the first comment said, Hogarth told us a lesson that it’s OK to die because souls never die. And then we find out the giant never actually died, he just was blasting the several pieces. It kind of messes up the message
@@Bookgurl656 maybe so, but it’s worth sacrificing for the happier ending. This movie deals with a lot of heavy themes but presents them in a way that younger audiences can digest. That ability to digest hinges upon Giant surviving and ending on a happy note.
Aside from The Incredibles, Brad Bird’s other animated endeavours should never have been slighted so hard. Also, it’s not animated but I loved Tomorrowland.
Interesting how you mentioned the deleted scene. Nowadays, if you buy a DVD of this movie, the scene is included in full. Also another amazing thing, the original run of the DVD only had the shot of the giant about to crash into the Earth, no title, no copyright, no nothing. Just the image. Always love the ominous-ness of it, and watching this as I grew up, my favorite film of all time.
Childhood classic, I genuinely cried during the end bomb scene every time I watched it, and whenever it was on TV I'd ask for it on. It hit hard even if I couldn't get half of it as a kid and Its genuinely my favourite film to this day
GAWD this movie is so freaking good. Its just so well made, so visually pleasant, well scripted, well laid out, well acted, well voiced, well designed. Fun, sad, exciting, thrilling, frightening, relevant, memorable. Its cinema.
I loved and still love this movie, I just love how it’s both very funny, very scary at times, and also pretty sad as well while still balancing it all out pretty well
To this day, I still get chills when I see the raw levels of emotion that the giant shows whenever he thinks that Hogarth is dead. Everything from his hands trembling to the heartbreaking whimpers really demonstrate just how far the character has come since the beginning of the movie. His first few scenes have his body moving in a much more robotic and stiff way and this scene shows beautifully just how human the giant has become. This movie has always remained one of my all times favorite pieces cinema, let alone animated films. There’s a reason that this film has a cult following and I am so happy when I see new people getting introduced to it.
I love this movie so much. Its absolute perfection. I cant think of a single thing wrong with it. It's an absolute achievement to animation and movies in general. It's a wonderful movie, and the documentary that comes with the blue ray adds to the experience. One of the reasons of this movie was anti gun, because brad bird lost his sister to gun violence. It's so tragic and he channeled that grief into a masterpiece. And that's why I love art.
There are so many things i love and adore about this film from facts about it to just general appreciation for it, one of them being when hogarth is explaining about a soul to the giant the whole animation team where in tears when they saw the draft animation, as well as how the giants body movements go from being robotic to more human after his time with hogarth
It’s not often that I watch a review for a movie from when I was a kid and get moved to tears. So congrats you made me cry. 💀 I thought only the movie itself could make me cry.
No joke, I literally watched this film at least 3 times EVERYDAY. God, this movie was so good. Actually, NO, I take it back, this movie is more than perfect.
You’re just reminding me how much I love this movie. Never saw it in theaters, but I remember it annually airing on TV and always watching it. Even the CN marathon. My brothers and I friggin loved this movie. Then as an adult, I told grandma how much I wanted a blue-ray of it. After several years, for Christmas Grandma found it, and it was the biggest thrill from all us adults grandkids. Best gift.
03:29 There are two versions of the movie. One with and one without the scene in it. Hograth catches small glimpse of the Iron Giant's dream on their TV. I liked that the scene was included, it gives some extra context for the story. While the reaction craze for this movie was going around, a lot adults had the same question, which that deleted scene answered, but they watched the older version without it so they were confused. I'm bias towards it, of course, but I can also see how not having that scene can add to the mystery of who the Giant is and that it doesn't matter as much. Personally I think it's makes the Giant's character stronger with that tid bit of his past. It emphasises the change nicely.
I absolutely agree. It's a good thing the scene was deleted. That tid bit was super important and great to learn after the story is done if you want to know more about the world. But as a part of the story it would only draw focus away from the things that are important, like the relationship between Hogarth and the giant, or the fear that the army has because of the unknown of who the giant is or why he's here. Also I wouldn't be surprised to learn that he eats to make ammo
I used to always watch the iron giant when I was a kid, we had it on the VHS so whenever I'd come home from school, I would be able to watch rewind the tape and watch it again
I’ve been binging your content and I’m sooo glad you touched on this movie, it’s definitely one of my favourites and the style is so unique. it’s down to earth and very realistic, dare I say timeless even for being set in the 1940s. when I watched it as a kid (and even now tbh) the part where the Iron Giant goes full shoot-shit mode was terrifying and unsettling. I kind of wish there was a sequel or a spin off to see where the Giant ended up, and the kind of person Hogarth grew to be after his experience.
one of my top 10 favorite movies, its got a strong message behind it coming from a tragic backstory and deserves its spot as a masterpiece, i cry everytime he says superman
I loved this movie as a kid. Used to watch it a lot. I want to believe this movie was the main inspiration for the Bumblebee. While a lot of reviews I've seen compare that movie to ET and rarely did I see it be compare it to The Iron Giant. Which I think shows more how underrated and unappreciated The Iron Giant is.
My mom's old friend from highschool, Teddy Newton, worked on this film. This was one of the first animated movies along with the Incredibles that brought it down to earth that i too could some day be an artist who works on movies, even tho i was like 4 years old lmao. Still one of my favorite movies that holds a dear place in my heart.
I remember staying the night at a friend's and couldn't sleep during the 3 day marathon of this movie. I couldn't find the remote so I ended up watching it 4 times in a row before the morning came. The only bit of joy I felt was the cartoon short they played in between airings before it started back up again. I've never watched it since.
20:40 I just remembered this when watching this part, but this morning when I was waking up I was looking for something in my room and thought "where is it" and my exact next thought was "where's the giant, Mansley?!" and then I saw this video on my subscriptions tab lol how funny.
It's worth noting how personal the message of this film was to the director, Brad Bird. "What if a gun had a soul and didn't want to be a gun." Brad's sister was killed by a gun in a home invasion while Brad was still quite young, and it stuck with him his entire life. This movie almost seems like a part of his grieving.
Remember watching this as a kid on a giant laser disk at a cousin's house and was absolutely moved by all the characters. This film has everything, it's funny, charming, sad and uplifting and very mature. Brad Bird is a master. He treats the characters as real people and it shows in all his films from The Iron Giant to The Incredibles.
I watched this movie so many times when I was younger and it's definitely one of my favorites! Up there with Matilda. It's to the point to where when I saw the Nickelodeon fighter trailer, when Superman and Iron Giant meet up I almost shed a tear.
can i say, i always enjoy the next upload BionicPig makes. the way he edits and meshes the unpredictable humour and memes are some of my highlights of watching, as well as seeing childhood content brought back into the limelight.
I swear I've had literally the same experience as you. Last time I watched this I was probably 5 or 6 or sth. But I remember rewatching this like every week so much, that my whole family had seen it at least 10 times with me. My mom watched it every time with me she liked it very much too. This is such a nostalgia trip like holy shit
This was my older brother's favorite movie ever so by default, I watched it so many times. And even to this day it makes me tear up near the end. When the Iron Giant says superman I get so fucking soft. God this movie is perfect
This movie was so important to me as a kid, omfg. I still cry at the end, it's just so damn good. Honestly, there were some banger non-Disney animated movies in the 90s and early 2000s. Iron Giant, Quest for Camelot, Anastasia. All movies that I watched non-stop as a kid and would still watch today, if given the chance lol.
@@osmanyousif7849 Never saw that Batman movie but I 100% agree on everything else. I've watched all those movies multiple times, at least. Cats Don't Dance and Space Jam, especially, lol.
Literally my favorite film of all time since I was a child! So. Damn. GOOD! Also enjoyed since it came out, but very much appreciate it even more so as I got older. I know most people hate the live-action remakes, but I myself would die to see this movie get a live-action adaptation. Especially with today's CGI!? Hell yeah.
I remember borrowing this movie from my town's local library so often and watching it on repeat constantly at home when i was a kid. It was and still is such an incredible movie, and watching this just made me wanna rewatch it again:)
This movie was my absolute childhood, I remember going to my grandad's house and watching the Iron Giant along with other things like Family Guy, The Simpson, Nacho Libre and the Polar Express amongst other things so this movie is a very big deal to me because it means a lot and has so much nostalgia.
I remember hoping that a sequel would be made since I saw the ending for the first time, but now I realize that this masterpiece doesn't need a second movie. One movie is enough. Just like coraline, masterpiece. One book, one movie. The people saying they need a coraline 2 clearly don't know that there's only one book. Plus what would the sequel be about? The beldam is gone, the ghost kids are free, and Coraline is happy where she is. Just like how Hogarth is happy where he is. These masterpieces do not need sequels.
As a kid I would watch Iron giant so much and I'm so happy it's getting some more recognition Even hearing you describe the scene where the giant saves everyone makes me start to tear up
I never realised how great this movie is, I haven't seen it since I was a child and back then I didn't like it because it scared me. But I vividly remember parts that nowadays I love
The Iron Giant was and still is one of my favorite movies. It's definitely my favorite 2D animated movies. Also, even as a kid, I understood how hopeless the town felt when the bomb went up into the air
Heh... I always kinda imagined that, in the end, the the giant would use that memorial statue to reassemble himself--- so he'd still be an iron robot, but from then he'd be closer to human-size.
This movie was everything to me when I was younger. Even now when I watch it, it makes me cry. I have such a strong attachment to this movie I think if I ever lose the DVD I'll sob.
This was and still is one of my #1 movies and one of the very few that still make cry, hell i started tearing up when Bionic got to the Giants death scene 😭
Wait people don't like this movie? Just the 'horror' section alone with the Power Plant was great, every section having its own beautiful pieces, animation and remarkably fun characters.
I guess I never viewed this as an anti-gun movie, but more of a "how you use it matters" movie. the Iron Giant himself is a weapon of mass destruction, but uses himself for good reasons such as protecting those he loves and only acting in self defense, which is exactly what guns should really be used for. also, I was always taught that the Red Menance was for Communism as a whole and not just Russia, but im not entirely sure if that's accurate
Thank you for this video man. This is my favorite movie of all time and although I haven’t watched it in years, every time I do, I break down in tears. I even teared up a little watching this video bc of the nostalgia. It has such a special place in my heart and it deserves to be known as a masterpiece.
This movie is my childhood. Everytime CN had it on I watched it growing up (even when they played it 24 hours) I loved this movie and i still love this movie. It is my favorite movie of all time. No matter how many times i see it , i always laugh and cry at the same scenes. The deer scene, the souls don’t die scene and of course the ending, both the Superman moment and the literal last minute of movie when you see the giant rebuilding himself, I’m bawling. I would love to meet brad bird to personally thank him for my childhood with this film. This movie did not have to be so deep and mature but it was. I mean, what kid movie has the line “It’s bad to kill, but it’s not bad to die”. I recommend to anyone to get the blu ray release because not only do you get the deleted scene mentioned but there is also a whole making of documentary on it and it showcases everything to how Warner bros failed this movie with the marketing to seeing how they made the film and seeing all the animators have fun while also working their asses off making this film the best it could be. Even watching the crew watch a rough cut of the Souls don’t die scene is very emotional because every one is silent or crying. They all put their souls into this movie. Also, the anti-gun message hits harder when I learned (through this documentary) that Brad bird lost his Sister to gun violence. She was killed by her husband. It was so emotional hearing him talk about it. So Bird making a film with the premise “what if a gun didn’t want to be a gun” i can understand why he wanted to make that now. I can’t praise this film enough. I can literally go on forever about how much i adore this film.
One of the best movies ever. Not just animation or "kids" movies, it's fantastic. Sure it's the typical "boy and his dog" story but it does it so well.
yeah, because the Iron Giant doesn't act like a dog. he acts like a kid controlling a 50 story robot of mass destruction.
I always hated when they made non-dog anything act like a dog. that's a horse, not a dog. make it act like a horse!
The moral is definitely mature for a kids film. “You have the ability to be bad, but also the ability to be good. You are who you choose to be.”
I Agree it’s my Favorite WB Movie I seen
Watching this made me cry ....
@@beyondviolet so like undertale
It doesn’t matter how old I am, I cry every time when the giant says “Superman”
Same
For me it’s “you stay, I go. No following”.
I have “You Are Who You Choose To Be” tattooed on my leg. One of my first tattoos.
Same!
And now he gets to meet Superman it comes full circle
Masterpiece doesn’t do this film justice. This is borderline a perfect film.
I mean how many other “kids” films do you know where an adult chloroforms a kid?
The Incredibles technically lol
Why... why is an adult chloroforming a kid the example for a perfect film?
You’re using kid chloroforming as an example of it being perfect..
It's not a movie, but the Netflix show Arcane definitely has the exact same chloroform scenario in the end of episode 3... so freaky that it could happen twice 😳
@@mitchc.2660
Because it just is, if a movie doesn’t have at least one scene of an adult chloroforming a kid, then I’m out.
We really have to give nearly ALL of the praise to Brad Bird because before he signed on board, WB was still in that phase of "We must copy Disney's formula" with their Disney wannabe movies like Quest for Camelot and The King & I. They wanted The Iron Giant a funny musical and possibly live action at one point but once Brad Bird came in, his pitch was "What if a gun had a soul and didn't want to be a gun?" which was the question he wanted to tell ever since his sister died from her husband who killed her with a gun and the movie was gonna get made and dedicated to her. Making it more of a personal film to Brad Bird. It became less of a musical and more of a mature and existential kids movie about death and self-identity.
And while it was a huge bomb, it was good enough in Pixar's eyes that it led him to direct my favorite Pixar movies: The Incredibles and Ratatouille. Ironically, The Iron Giant felt more like a 2D Pixar movie or even a modern Disney film than what WB was intending the movie to be like which was completely copying Disney's craze from the 90s .
what if guns had feelings
damn.. more like CHAD bird haha.. …..
still one of my favorite movies to this day. i love how the characters ACTUALLY communicate frfr 💀
I like when kids movie introduce some mature theme.
While the anti-war message is very apparent, I always felt that the ultimate message of the movie was defying destiny, or forging your own destiny. Great movie.
Even when everyone else tells you what you’re supposed to be. Exactly, thank you for your comment.
Or when you go against your very nature you fucking die lol
Which is the most overrated message in kids animation movies. I can’t think of a single animated kids movie that’s not had that message to at least some extent. I don’t even believe it’s a good message, cuz often ur just not probably qualified to make that destiny or you just don’t have the resources for what it takes
@@rom7809 Yeah, being a free thinking individual is soooo over-rated. The Giant should have just been a gun, cuz guns are rad and guns being rad is the only good message and it's so underutilized too...
@@mooseitself how did you misinterpret what I said so badly. The theme of being who you wanna be is really overrated in KIDS MOVIES. Then u said this had to to with the giant’s weapons n shit. No, the message is being ANTI-war not PRO-war. And it’s very underrated because why do you think people racistly stereotype others to the point they want to go to war with them. name THREE kids animated movies that have that warning. I really want to find the place you get ur drugs, cuz your mind is FUNKY
For being 9 years old, Hogarth is surprisingly mature and intelligent, from stopping the Giant from entering the town (despite being psyched about being seen cool by his classmates for having his own giant robot), being the one who teaches the robot about morality, and his schemes that got Mansley off their backs. I legit thought he was 12 when I first saw this and came back to it years later but it floored me when I learned his real age.
Wait he isn't 12m
@@nivannakingsman1383 Nope, at least according to Wikipedia
That's true, in the movie he is the gifted smart kid that skipped classes because he's really intelligent, he's seen as emotionally intuitive as well (cares about animals, other beings etc) so it fits well.
Ah…
So ,what is his age?
No joke as i kid i watched this movie easily over 200 times, sometimes on repeat. It’s a fantastic story, with really beautiful animation, some of which is even directly inspired by Norman Rockwell. Its an honest 10/10 experience that never got the recognition it deserves!
So did I,god I need to watch it all over again.
Agreed
I remember my mom telling me that we went through a couple copies on VHS because I would watch it so much. Just watching the recap was giving me chills
Same here, i remember watching The Iron Giant a couple times during my childhood and it became one of my favorite childhood movies of all times :)
Yep same and since they put it on streaming I've watched tf out of it even more
All these years later and this movie still makes me cry.
"You stay, I go. No following." God, it hits me every time.
Me: Alright, you a grown ass man, dont cry-
"Superman..."
FUCK
thats the most beautiful thing i have ever seen in my entire life
*bomb goes off*
*whimper*
The Iron Giant: "Hogarth, I go now. You stay. No following."
That part will always make me cry
@@Otokichi786*sobs*
"The missile is heading directly to the giant, i saved the day!"
"Where's the GIANT, mansley?!"
*looks over, it's literally 50 feet away*
Yeah Mansley's a very mad person who would never care for the iron giant to be a good guy or to be seen as a friendly but man what a villian he was Mansley
That part was so sad, but I couldn’t help but laugh when Mansley realized what he did lol.
@@lordhendrickson8585 THAT MISSILE IS TARGETED TO THE GIANT'S CURRENT POSSITION! WHERE'S THE GIANT MANSLEY!?
@@viczilla24dreamer51 , uh…I… well…. We can duck-and-cover! There’s a fallout shelter, right over-
@@osmanyousif7849 THERE'S NO WAY TO SURVIVE THIS YOU IDIOT!!
I watched this at about 9 years old, almost a decade on it still doesn't fail at making me cry
God I absolutely love this movie and really hope more people can appreciate it
RIGHT?!?!!? Omg. Literally made me cry when I saw it recently… just..
“You stay.. I go.. no following..”
😭
Ofc kids gonna cry when they see a sad kid movie..
@• completely missed the point, I'm am adult now and it still makes me cry
The scene with hogarth being high on caffeine and going on a rant about how kids bully him because he does his schoolwork properly is one of my fav scenes as well as the most relatable. I love it so much, plus the whole sequence was animated by one of my favorite animators, james baxter, which explains the insane fluid movement.
I didn't like it in terms of story because
Bro
Settle
I love this movie and I hate that it doesn’t have as much big name appeal. I always tear up at the end when the giant sacrifices himself to save everyone in the town
suuper maaan.......
😭 same I literally cry every time
hell I'm tearing up just thinking about it. what a film
And the end Clip that he didnt actually Die to the blast, Just Deconstructed.
The iron giant is seen putting himself back together, Sucks that a second movie probably just couldn't work.
But imagine this, Pixar decides to Make the 2nd movie and this time, the child Hogarth is older now, it's a Story of How the iron giant And Hogarth tries to stop the Rest of the robot Army coming to destroy the earth.
@@thegoldenplague-mask5438 while that's an interesting idea I think this is one of those movies that's best left as a standalone story. plus with all the sequelitis plaguing the movie industry right now, despite this film being from the 90s it's ironically a breath of fresh air
This is one of my FAVORITE animated films. Just you describing the part when he says, "I go, you stay." made me tear up! Seriously great movie.
"No following ☝️" 😭
I cry so hard every time I watch this movie. Every. Single. Time. I love that everything is hand drawn EXCEPT the Iron Giant himself, he was animated with CG to make him seem more futuristic which was brilliant. I think that the most beautiful way to teach kids about death was that seen with the giant Hogarth and the dead deer. It doesn’t get into religion either, it’s just about souls and existence. Truly a beautifully delivered message
well, some other things were CG animated as well, such as the fighter jets.
I miss hand drawn animation
I love how they made the giants design to that of a lovable robot that can switch to a terrifying murder machine in a split second, the face is especially where you can see the most out of this for me
God when the iron giant says “Superman” right before he hits the nuke… god it hits me in the feels every time
I love how even though the movie is a failure, the power of the internet made it so popular that we even got it in Multiversus
Yeah, I don’t get it though,
Atlantis was a failure, but that movie was great.
Treasure Planet was a failure, but again that movie was great.
Spirit was again a failure, BUT YET AGAIN THAT MOVIE WAS GREAT.
What is with this lmao
@@certifiedintellectualjames5053
Low exposure in the pre-Internet age due to poor advertisement. Well, not really pre-Internet, but it wasn't that good or widespread back then
@@steelbear2063 Eh good point, but you’d think with such good films they woulda at least advertised it better because of it, like say for example with how most films were popular back then, I mean who could miss out on Treasure Planet? Spirit? I mean freaking Atlantis?
@@certifiedintellectualjames5053
I missed Atlantis. Then again I'm not American, so you know, you get what you get. And I'm grateful that as a kid I watched Shrek and Iron Giant
I’m just happy Iron Giant finally got to meet his hero: Superman.
Kent and Hogarth’s rivalry is my favorite part of this movie, every time they’re on screen together I’m always catching myself dying of laughter!
Yeah I don’t know how they managed to do it but Christopher McDonald was perfect casting for Kent. He managed to make an antagonist both hilarious and menacing without dragging either side to him too much.
Also, hearing him threaten Hogarth into talking or he’ll have him taken away from his mother, is quite a villain power move. Especially since he has reason to do so. He has proof that Hogarth without the power station, and if word got out through town that people’s power went out because a little boy was messing with it, people will start questioning where was the mom. Heck, he probably would find a way to pin the train wreck on Hogarth too. And because of this, people will start investigating the Mrs Hughes and the household, and find her unfit….
@@osmanyousif7849 he was also really funny
Kent Mansly is a great villain
it was a rivalry between a kid with a kind heart and a man with ego issues
This movie had some Moments in it that stuck with me big time. "You are who you choose to be." is everything to me. It's absolutely amazing and I'm so glad you did a video on it.
I see iron giant. I MUST click. This movie is a classic!!
It's my childhood, nostalgia!!!!
I've never seen this movie before. I know a lot of people like it, but I never had a CLUE what happened in the movie.
This is the best masterpiece of a movie I have ever heard of. It was a movie I thought about watching before, and am DEFINITELY going to be watching now.
Also... so THAT'S where that "it's art!" gif came from XD
Did you end up watching it? What were your thoughts?
@@janae5989 I'm ashamed to say that I haven't watched it yet, even after two months. HOWEVER!!! I have recently made plans with some friends to watch it soon, so I will update you when we watch it! :)
@@WinglessMoonstone yes please do! It’s such a good movie
It’s also where the “Welcome to Downtown Coolsville” came from
Also the meme with Dean holding a mug
This film is just such a good piece of children's media. It deserves far better on release then it got, and the cult following it gained years afterwards is absolutely well deserved. Sidenote - the fact the Giant is in Multiversus and got to MEET Superman is everything the little kid still in me wanted to see.
When you were saying how the Iron Giant says “Superman” as he is flying to sacrifice himself, I teared up.
I’ve never seen this movie but dang, that was good. Now I HAVE to watch it.
Brad Bird really was perfect to direct this film with his keen eye of the balance of wacky comedic moments especially with the hilarious antagonist but also embrace the more dramatic elements such as the Cold War setting, the Giant almost injuring Hogarth during play before Dean intervenes & of course the emotional ending. It’s one of the ‘90s most underrated films
I've got serious tears from the ending scene without sound, that's some powerful filmmaking right there
I know it sounds silly but as a kid hearing adult characters say things like damn and hell made me like the show/movie a lot more. Felt like they respected me more by giving a more realistic representation of how people talked even though i was young.
And so many mature themes too... They didn't shy away of talking about death, war, politics, about depicting one of the greatest periods of mass panic, distrust and paranoia in human history accurately... All in ways a child could understand, but without underestimating their intelligence.
@@starkillersneed absolutely 100%
Nowadays TH-cam will shadowban you for not using the correct speech m8
How did we let things go this far
@@RobotronSage because you're all a bunch of weak ass men in America
I'm about to put my soul into this. This is by far my favourite movie of all time. I remember eating sun chips while watching the movie and going "mama look I'm the giant" because the chips looked like the wavy piece of metal in the film. I just recently watched it with friends and there's that part where the bomb shelter song was playing (get low to the ground, it's time to duck and cover the bombs are comin' down) and I began singing it in autopilot. I've even got "you are who you choose to be" on the inside of my graduation ring. Well I know who I wanna be and it isn't the man of steel; It's the Iron Giant❤️
Every time I see an older movie that has a dark room scene involving developing photographic film, it's always really satisfying. When I was attending university, I took a course on Dark Room Photography, and all of our assignments involved learing and taking photos with a film camera, and it is tedious as hell using those things. Everything regarding the picture taking itself is completely manual; zoom, focus, light filter, shutter speed, all of it had to be specifically set and wasn't done automatically. Then you had to remove the film and do a step-by-step procedure of developing the film in a dark room that normally took at least an hour, ensuring that the film does not get exposed to light in the process, and you wouldn't even know if your photos came out okay until you did all this. If it didn't, or if the film was ruined at any point in the process, you would have to start over with a new film, which doesn't come cheap (you're in college; they expect you to pay for everything).
So seeing scenes like Kent developing photos from Hogarth's camera in a bathroom under a dim red light are the kinds of things I get more appreciation from. Only complaint I have is that the photo would not develop that quickly in the developer. It takes a few minutes. But it's supposed to be a quick scene, so I understand they needed to rush it.
This movie made me cry as a child! Seeing it now and noticing it’s references to war, wow! Truly stands the tests of time!
This movie makes me cry as a grown man.
You know how there are just movies you watched so much as a kid that certain objects and movements always stick in your mind and you think back to a movie, and when you watch the movie everything is so vivid and you remember everything clearly.....Hard to describe what I mean, but iron giant is absolutely one of those movies for me. Particularly when he opens up the bread box and wraps the flash light on his gun, and putting the chocolate onto the shake
YESS THE CHOCOLATE ON THE SHAKE
it's the reason why oreo shakes are just *chefs kiss* for me
@@elaineirwin8918 Yo oreo shakes are also my favorite 😳 also twinkles because of this movie
oooh yes I know exacly what you mean especialy for animation certain actions in movies stick in you mind like how Howard crumbles the chocolax on Kent's milkshake yes
I totally get this feeling, for me this would've been the first avengers movie, i remember having the dialogue and sound design memorized from watching it so much
*Hogarth not Howard I just remembered his actual name wtf sorry xD
"You are what you choose to be! You choose!"
That really stuck with me as a kid, and still does to this day. I'm glad to see someone talking about this (imo) underrated classic.
This movie is like megamind. Both feels like a parody of superman and people demonstrate the main characters like monsters although they want to be the good guy.
Another theory, the dent could have come form a malfunction in the production line making the iron giants (knowing there are multiple of them). Kinda like a Star Wars droid gaining sentience from production line moment.
Another movie that could be used as direct comparison could be Short Circuit/ short Circuit 2, it's rather interesting as a concept.
Remember seeing this on VHS when I was little. Rewatched it recently and I adore it even more. Bird's career with his debut is a banger 😃
I don't think the giant poops. I think he just eats the metal and then uses like nanobots that deconstruct the metal and help to keep the parts together. That would make the most sense to me
To this day, watching this movie always makes me a wreck when the giant sacrifices itself for the town. I love this movie
My mother was born in ‘56, they did the whole duck n’ cover thing all the way into the early 60’s when she was in grade school. They would watch cartoons exactly like the ones in the movie. Along with the Cold War there was the Cuban missile crisis in ‘62, so there was a ton of fear both of my parents (they were born the same year) had to deal with back then. Scary scary shit!
This is one of my most favorite animated movies of all time. Brad Bird saved The Iron Giant & helped make it into what it is. The Incredible came shortly after & I love that the faces of the characters in both of these films look alike. It's kinda cute.
I watched this movie so many times as a kid and even back then it was one of my all time favorites.
I am embarrassed to say that your video taught me that the film ends with the Iron Giant surviving.
As a kid I was too stupid and/or too sad to understand the part with the screw meant that it reassembled itself again.
All my life I thought it had this bitter sweet ending where it died but was remembered by the town, lmao
This movie really stuck with me and I LOVE it. I remember a few years ago it was playing on tv and my sister was like “wtf is this” and I was like trust me wait
By the end we were balling, it’s SO good
You mean bawling?
This movie will always hold such a special place in my heart - its my grandads favourite movie, and every time i see him we always watch it together and it still makes him cry at the end, no matter how many times we watch it. I havent seen him since before the pandemic. I love you grandad.
Absolutely loved this as a child and just recalling the "superman" death scene made me cry. Masterpiece doesn't do this justice whatsoever. Almost 20 years later and it's still impeccable and dare I say even a foundational part of my personality.
actually, there's a massive difference between a movie being anti "shoot first and ask questions later" and anti "gun". a gun is a tool, which can be used or misused. the movie doesn't speak ill of self defense at all, but rather speaks ill of senseless killing and destruction.
You Americans defending your guns lmao
@@kingcobra689 you have a way to disprove what i said, or are you just trying to generalize and label me in order to make my point look invalid without actually invalidating it?
A part of me strongly wants a sequel because there's so much stuff to explore about the Giant's origins, but the other part doesn't want it to happen because today's sequels tend to be trash and to ruin the original product because M O N E Y .
Controversial opinion: But I honestly think the ending should’ve been changed. Don’t get me wrong, eight-year-old me when I saw this movie had a happy smile on my face when I saw that the Giant turn out to be still alive. But now that I’m older, I think the ending ruins the theme of what Hogarth said about it’s okay to die, as long as you have a soul, because “Souls don’t die.”. If they really wanted this ending, maybe have it right at the moment when Hogarth is still sleeping and we see the bolt next to him, only for the film to cut when we hear the beeping noise, leaving it ambiguous to whether the Giant is still alive or not.
@@osmanyousif7849 If the bolt moves its no longer ambigious. Its blatently clear he lives as the movie gives us context on how he fixes himself....
@@godfrey4461 He saying he didn’t want it to be where the peace moves. He wanted it to be left for the people to decide is he alive or is he not alive. To be honest in my opinion, this ending was good, but I feel like it should’ve been changed. Because, like the first comment said, Hogarth told us a lesson that it’s OK to die because souls never die. And then we find out the giant never actually died, he just was blasting the several pieces. It kind of messes up the message
@@Bookgurl656 maybe so, but it’s worth sacrificing for the happier ending. This movie deals with a lot of heavy themes but presents them in a way that younger audiences can digest. That ability to digest hinges upon Giant surviving and ending on a happy note.
@@Thor-Orion True true, I see your point
Aside from The Incredibles, Brad Bird’s other animated endeavours should never have been slighted so hard. Also, it’s not animated but I loved Tomorrowland.
Interesting how you mentioned the deleted scene. Nowadays, if you buy a DVD of this movie, the scene is included in full.
Also another amazing thing, the original run of the DVD only had the shot of the giant about to crash into the Earth, no title, no copyright, no nothing. Just the image.
Always love the ominous-ness of it, and watching this as I grew up, my favorite film of all time.
It really makes you think.
“Is this the villain? Who is this? Is this the hero? Is the giant going to help the town or destroy it?”
Childhood classic, I genuinely cried during the end bomb scene every time I watched it, and whenever it was on TV I'd ask for it on. It hit hard even if I couldn't get half of it as a kid and Its genuinely my favourite film to this day
Ok, so I can't be the only one who remembers the 24-hour marathon of this movie on CN in the early 2000s
Oh yeah me too, I remember they also, if rarely, played PG-13 movies too.
Like NINE for example,
“totally good” for the kids. Lmao
I just made a comment saying the same thing!! I like the movie but I cannot watch it anymore because of that marathon.
@@certifiedintellectualjames5053 they played 9 on CN?! Lmaooooooooo fucking fantastic movie
GAWD this movie is so freaking good. Its just so well made, so visually pleasant, well scripted, well laid out, well acted, well voiced, well designed. Fun, sad, exciting, thrilling, frightening, relevant, memorable.
Its cinema.
I loved and still love this movie, I just love how it’s both very funny, very scary at times, and also pretty sad as well while still balancing it all out pretty well
You forgot to mention the fact that this movie is also written and directed by THE “Brad Bird”. one of the main reasons this is a masterpiece.
To this day, I still get chills when I see the raw levels of emotion that the giant shows whenever he thinks that Hogarth is dead. Everything from his hands trembling to the heartbreaking whimpers really demonstrate just how far the character has come since the beginning of the movie. His first few scenes have his body moving in a much more robotic and stiff way and this scene shows beautifully just how human the giant has become. This movie has always remained one of my all times favorite pieces cinema, let alone animated films. There’s a reason that this film has a cult following and I am so happy when I see new people getting introduced to it.
I love this movie so much. Its absolute perfection. I cant think of a single thing wrong with it. It's an absolute achievement to animation and movies in general. It's a wonderful movie, and the documentary that comes with the blue ray adds to the experience. One of the reasons of this movie was anti gun, because brad bird lost his sister to gun violence. It's so tragic and he channeled that grief into a masterpiece. And that's why I love art.
This movie imprinted a powerful message on me as a child; the meaning of courage & sacrifice. Loved it then & love it now.
There are so many things i love and adore about this film from facts about it to just general appreciation for it, one of them being when hogarth is explaining about a soul to the giant the whole animation team where in tears when they saw the draft animation, as well as how the giants body movements go from being robotic to more human after his time with hogarth
This movie is amazing, there's also the extended version which includes one of the most intense scenes that was cut from the theatrical release.
It’s not often that I watch a review for a movie from when I was a kid and get moved to tears. So congrats you made me cry. 💀
I thought only the movie itself could make me cry.
No joke, I literally watched this film at least 3 times EVERYDAY.
God, this movie was so good. Actually, NO, I take it back, this movie is more than perfect.
You’re just reminding me how much I love this movie. Never saw it in theaters, but I remember it annually airing on TV and always watching it. Even the CN marathon. My brothers and I friggin loved this movie.
Then as an adult, I told grandma how much I wanted a blue-ray of it. After several years, for Christmas Grandma found it, and it was the biggest thrill from all us adults grandkids. Best gift.
03:29 There are two versions of the movie. One with and one without the scene in it. Hograth catches small glimpse of the Iron Giant's dream on their TV. I liked that the scene was included, it gives some extra context for the story. While the reaction craze for this movie was going around, a lot adults had the same question, which that deleted scene answered, but they watched the older version without it so they were confused. I'm bias towards it, of course, but I can also see how not having that scene can add to the mystery of who the Giant is and that it doesn't matter as much.
Personally I think it's makes the Giant's character stronger with that tid bit of his past. It emphasises the change nicely.
This movie is so good I started tearing up by just listening to the end part. Iron Giant was just too good for us.
I absolutely agree. It's a good thing the scene was deleted. That tid bit was super important and great to learn after the story is done if you want to know more about the world. But as a part of the story it would only draw focus away from the things that are important, like the relationship between Hogarth and the giant, or the fear that the army has because of the unknown of who the giant is or why he's here. Also I wouldn't be surprised to learn that he eats to make ammo
I used to always watch the iron giant when I was a kid, we had it on the VHS so whenever I'd come home from school, I would be able to watch rewind the tape and watch it again
I’ve been binging your content and I’m sooo glad you touched on this movie, it’s definitely one of my favourites and the style is so unique. it’s down to earth and very realistic, dare I say timeless even for being set in the 1940s. when I watched it as a kid (and even now tbh) the part where the Iron Giant goes full shoot-shit mode was terrifying and unsettling. I kind of wish there was a sequel or a spin off to see where the Giant ended up, and the kind of person Hogarth grew to be after his experience.
one of my top 10 favorite movies, its got a strong message behind it coming from a tragic backstory and deserves its spot as a masterpiece, i cry everytime he says superman
I loved this movie as a kid. Used to watch it a lot. I want to believe this movie was the main inspiration for the Bumblebee. While a lot of reviews I've seen compare that movie to ET and rarely did I see it be compare it to The Iron Giant. Which I think shows more how underrated and unappreciated The Iron Giant is.
Seeing the giant distressed makes me feel so sad and makes me tear up every time and "you stay, I go. No following" makes me bawl my eyes out
“We also find out that Dean is kind of a very cool person”
FACTS
My mom's old friend from highschool, Teddy Newton, worked on this film. This was one of the first animated movies along with the Incredibles that brought it down to earth that i too could some day be an artist who works on movies, even tho i was like 4 years old lmao. Still one of my favorite movies that holds a dear place in my heart.
I remember staying the night at a friend's and couldn't sleep during the 3 day marathon of this movie. I couldn't find the remote so I ended up watching it 4 times in a row before the morning came. The only bit of joy I felt was the cartoon short they played in between airings before it started back up again. I've never watched it since.
20:40 I just remembered this when watching this part, but this morning when I was waking up I was looking for something in my room and thought "where is it" and my exact next thought was "where's the giant, Mansley?!" and then I saw this video on my subscriptions tab lol how funny.
It's worth noting how personal the message of this film was to the director, Brad Bird. "What if a gun had a soul and didn't want to be a gun." Brad's sister was killed by a gun in a home invasion while Brad was still quite young, and it stuck with him his entire life. This movie almost seems like a part of his grieving.
It was her husband that killed her, not a home invasion.
Remember watching this as a kid on a giant laser disk at a cousin's house and was absolutely moved by all the characters. This film has everything, it's funny, charming, sad and uplifting and very mature. Brad Bird is a master. He treats the characters as real people and it shows in all his films from The Iron Giant to The Incredibles.
I watched this movie so many times when I was younger and it's definitely one of my favorites! Up there with Matilda.
It's to the point to where when I saw the Nickelodeon fighter trailer, when Superman and Iron Giant meet up I almost shed a tear.
can i say, i always enjoy the next upload BionicPig makes. the way he edits and meshes the unpredictable humour and memes are some of my highlights of watching, as well as seeing childhood content brought back into the limelight.
I swear I've had literally the same experience as you. Last time I watched this I was probably 5 or 6 or sth.
But I remember rewatching this like every week so much, that my whole family had seen it at least 10 times with me. My mom watched it every time with me she liked it very much too.
This is such a nostalgia trip like holy shit
This was my older brother's favorite movie ever so by default, I watched it so many times. And even to this day it makes me tear up near the end. When the Iron Giant says superman I get so fucking soft. God this movie is perfect
This movie was so important to me as a kid, omfg. I still cry at the end, it's just so damn good. Honestly, there were some banger non-Disney animated movies in the 90s and early 2000s. Iron Giant, Quest for Camelot, Anastasia. All movies that I watched non-stop as a kid and would still watch today, if given the chance lol.
Don’t forget Batman: Mask of the Phantasm, The Swan Princess, Ferngully, Space Jam, and Cats Don’t Dance….
@@osmanyousif7849 Never saw that Batman movie but I 100% agree on everything else. I've watched all those movies multiple times, at least. Cats Don't Dance and Space Jam, especially, lol.
@@osmanyousif7849 oh man, Cats Don't Dance fuckin _slaps_
Masterpiece of a film and I love how its still getting love to this day
Literally my favorite film of all time since I was a child! So. Damn. GOOD!
Also enjoyed since it came out, but very much appreciate it even more so as I got older. I know most people hate the live-action remakes, but I myself would die to see this movie get a live-action adaptation. Especially with today's CGI!? Hell yeah.
It was one of those early movies that used 3D for things within 2D and still have it fit it damn near perfectly and it still holds up today
The Iron Giant is a masterpiece. Easily a definitive piece of animation and storytelling.
Iron Giant was one of my favorites as a kid, rewatched it a couple weeks ago as a 25 year old. Awesome underrated gem for sure!
I remember borrowing this movie from my town's local library so often and watching it on repeat constantly at home when i was a kid. It was and still is such an incredible movie, and watching this just made me wanna rewatch it again:)
Fitting you said Incredible given who directed The Iron Giant
This movie was my absolute childhood, I remember going to my grandad's house and watching the Iron Giant along with other things like Family Guy, The Simpson, Nacho Libre and the Polar Express amongst other things so this movie is a very big deal to me because it means a lot and has so much nostalgia.
I remember hoping that a sequel would be made since I saw the ending for the first time, but now I realize that this masterpiece doesn't need a second movie. One movie is enough. Just like coraline, masterpiece. One book, one movie. The people saying they need a coraline 2 clearly don't know that there's only one book. Plus what would the sequel be about? The beldam is gone, the ghost kids are free, and Coraline is happy where she is. Just like how Hogarth is happy where he is. These masterpieces do not need sequels.
As a kid I would watch Iron giant so much and I'm so happy it's getting some more recognition
Even hearing you describe the scene where the giant saves everyone makes me start to tear up
I never realised how great this movie is, I haven't seen it since I was a child and back then I didn't like it because it scared me. But I vividly remember parts that nowadays I love
The Iron Giant was and still is one of my favorite movies. It's definitely my favorite 2D animated movies.
Also, even as a kid, I understood how hopeless the town felt when the bomb went up into the air
Heh... I always kinda imagined that, in the end, the the giant would use that memorial statue to reassemble himself--- so he'd still be an iron robot, but from then he'd be closer to human-size.
This movie was everything to me when I was younger. Even now when I watch it, it makes me cry. I have such a strong attachment to this movie I think if I ever lose the DVD I'll sob.
Thanks now I'm crying my eyes out. This movie was and is a masterpiece.
This was and still is one of my #1 movies and one of the very few that still make cry, hell i started tearing up when Bionic got to the Giants death scene 😭
Wait people don't like this movie? Just the 'horror' section alone with the Power Plant was great, every section having its own beautiful pieces, animation and remarkably fun characters.
One of the symptoms of covid is a loss of taste
Such an underrated movie, makes me cry every time I watch it
I guess I never viewed this as an anti-gun movie, but more of a "how you use it matters" movie. the Iron Giant himself is a weapon of mass destruction, but uses himself for good reasons such as protecting those he loves and only acting in self defense, which is exactly what guns should really be used for.
also, I was always taught that the Red Menance was for Communism as a whole and not just Russia, but im not entirely sure if that's accurate
Thank you for this video man. This is my favorite movie of all time and although I haven’t watched it in years, every time I do, I break down in tears. I even teared up a little watching this video bc of the nostalgia. It has such a special place in my heart and it deserves to be known as a masterpiece.
Watched this movie so much as a kid, the ending still gets me and I’m nearly 30now 😅😭
This movie is my childhood. Everytime CN had it on I watched it growing up (even when they played it 24 hours) I loved this movie and i still love this movie. It is my favorite movie of all time. No matter how many times i see it , i always laugh and cry at the same scenes. The deer scene, the souls don’t die scene and of course the ending, both the Superman moment and the literal last minute of movie when you see the giant rebuilding himself, I’m bawling. I would love to meet brad bird to personally thank him for my childhood with this film. This movie did not have to be so deep and mature but it was. I mean, what kid movie has the line “It’s bad to kill, but it’s not bad to die”.
I recommend to anyone to get the blu ray release because not only do you get the deleted scene mentioned but there is also a whole making of documentary on it and it showcases everything to how Warner bros failed this movie with the marketing to seeing how they made the film and seeing all the animators have fun while also working their asses off making this film the best it could be. Even watching the crew watch a rough cut of the Souls don’t die scene is very emotional because every one is silent or crying. They all put their souls into this movie. Also, the anti-gun message hits harder when I learned (through this documentary) that Brad bird lost his Sister to gun violence. She was killed by her husband. It was so emotional hearing him talk about it. So Bird making a film with the premise “what if a gun didn’t want to be a gun” i can understand why he wanted to make that now. I can’t praise this film enough. I can literally go on forever about how much i adore this film.