Freddie's astonishment at Rich Evans remembering how Shredder came back was incredible
Also his joy at Rich's introduction to TMNT being his favorite issue of the comic.
Only now realizing how powerful of a man Freddie is. He is the one who brought Batman showing Raphael where his parents died to life.
My biggest takeaway is how versatile an artist Frank Miller is.
I didn't know he wrote the lyrics to Go Ninja Go! Truly a renaissance man of our time!
There's a number of things I like about this specific Re:View...
1) Rich's joy at a franchise he loves.
2) Jay's familiar/knowledgable, yet, emotionally distanced POV.
3) Freddie's knowledge of/anticdotes related to his TMNT work.
Just a fun episode.
Jay also checked his box of "notices a hyper-specific detail that shows up only for a couple seconds that nobody else caught"
@@connor4wilson Also checked his box of "knows the name of an actress everyone else only knows from that one movie".
Of all the guests over the years, I think I've missed Rich Evans the most. So happy to see him return!
@@Tukenfarben indeed. His worth as THE Dick the Birthday Boy from Ellen has really improved his star power.
i heard they are creating a life sized muppet of Rich to reduce cost and preserve his likeness for future generations but capturing his laughter has become problematic.
Rich is so humble that even though he has become an internet superstar he still finds time to visit those hack frauds Mike and Jay.
The reason the Turtles were called "Hero Turtles" instead of Ninja Turtles in the UK was that the word Ninja was essentially banned from appearing in movie titles at the time, bizarrely. This followed the craze of ninja films in the 80s that Rich references. This was partly driven by the moral crusade against "video nasties" of Mary Whitehouse (who was also responsible for the word "Chainsaw" being similarly blacklisted) but her focus was more on gory horror movies.
The other, probably larger, reason ninjas were banned was that the craze surrounding the films led to a lot of people importing throwing stars and nunchucks. A friend of mine who must have been about 10 had a genuine, razer-sharp throwing star. He took it out and threw it at a telegraph pole, into which it embedded impressively. Unfortunately (or fortunately, really) a few throws later he missed the pole and it soared through a hedge, into a wheat field, and was never found.
Anything with nunchucks in was heavily cut by the BBFC, presumably to discourage the spate of idiots smashing themselves in the balls with the things. The Turtles films were cut in the UK because of this, and had much less nunchuck action. I remember at the time we just knew it had been cut, and this led to wild rumours about what the uncut American version contained. Someone I knew claimed to have seen it and painted a vivid picture of multiple beheadings and a turtles on April O'Neill gangbang.
Even The Secret of the Ooze was cut! The scene where Michaelangelo uses the sausages as weapons was cut because they looked too much like nunchucks. Arguably the only good thing to come out of the whole video nasty era was a note from the BBFC instructing the filmmakers to "Reduce to a minimum the dazzling display of swinging sausages" although now I think about it, it is possible they were referring to the scene with Splinter on the roof.
Thank you! I was going to write something similar. Even an episode of Babylon 5 was banned, wasn't it? Because it focused on martial arts?
@@deadNightwatchman I don't remember that, but it's exactly the sort of nonsense that happened at the time. Did the Babylon 5 episode contain a dazzling display of swinging sausages?
@@morganfellows8182 Unfortunately not. But it focused on kickboxing. Title is "TKO".
Your friends were telling the truth, sort of. There's no turtles on April gangbang, but there is a sex scene with April and Raphael. It's pretty hot too.
I cam here to post this. To this day Britain has some of the strictest laws regulating nunchuks and other ninja weaponry due to ninjas being a brief subsection of a moral panic.
The reason it seems like there are a lot of little things that are somewhat at odds with the tone of the film is because the final cut was not Steve Barron’s. In the end he was prevented from editing the film and bringing his full vision in the screen. The classic clash between art and commerce.
She used to post regularly on the IMDB board for this movie, so it should be no surprise she's here! Judith, I think it's awesome that you still have such an attachment to this film. It speaks volumes to the love and care that went into the making of this movie.
That makes sense, actually, considering the movie was independently produced at the height of the cartoon's popularity. And in the end, it paid off because the movie was a hit. I have to give the editing team credit: they really did find a good balance between the silliness of the cartoon and the dark satire of the comics.
Rich really does hit the nail on the head. The reason TMNT has stayed so popular is that it’s such a goofy premise that you can go any direction: dark or light hearted, serious or off the wall stupid. And it ALL feels in character and believable.
That and - or - but
It's heart IS Father and Sons.
The Bond of Brothers.
Family and Helping Others.
It reminds me of The Duck Avenger, which is basically what if Donald Duck was Batman. It starts off pretty goofy but as the comics went on it got way darker and more serious and at no point did I stop and think "oh this is getting stupid now" I was all in, it was such a good comicbook series.
As someone who loves basically all turtles media EXCEPT the 80s/90s TV series (and whatever the hell that live action series was), I think the main reason this movie holds up is that it sticks with the more PG tone and general plot of the comics while still keeping a few of the light hearted elements and characterizations from the series.
In a way, the first TMNT movie is sort of the gold standard by which other turtles media is measured against because it strikes such a perfect balance between the 2 interpretations that fans from every gen or sphere of the franchise love it. Sort of a prototype of the route the IDW series would take.
Shame angry puritanical parents came in and ruined the sequels.
Of all the guests over the years, I think I've missed Freddie the most. So happy to see him return!
I miss Mac a lot, it honestly felt like he was gonna be a guest as frequently as the canadians for a bit there
I've watched this movie nearly 100 times and I never noticed Raph has a scar on his face. I wish a modern Turtles movie would replicate the tone and aesthetic of 1990 Turtles. Those original full-body suits and animatronics still look better to me than any iteration since. This will always be one of my favorite movies.
I'm with you. The turtle costumes were the final creation of Jim Henson's creature shop overseen by the man himself before Henson's premature death at age 53 in 1990, and I think that's an important part of why it's successful. That man understood puppets and how to get emotion out of them as well as anyone alive, and what he created for that movie is definitely more special and long-lasting than any CGI turtle we've seen.
I would love to see a re:view of the Dark Crystal. The Jim Henson and puppetry discussion was really interesting, and it'd be a good movie to go into that more.
But given how Jay goes on about this being darker than what Jim Henson is known for makes me wonder if he drinks Wilkin's Coffee.
There is a version in the weird fantasy language and subtitled out there which is supposedly darker - though I have never watched it.
Stories from Rich’s childhood always feel like relics: precious, rare pieces of history.
Yes the 1920s were a special time and I appreciate getting to learn what life was like back then.
His story about seeing the first car ever made as a teenager will always be a classic
There are also interesting patterns to his childhood interaction with entertainment media. For example, how he was in to the Master of the Universe action figures but not the cartoon (this comes from their Master of the Universe movie commentary track), and how he was into the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles original comic more than its cartoon.
Really happy to have Freddie Williams back. One of my favourite guests. Very cool
i have nothing of worth to provide to this conversation so instead i will say "nice ænima pfp" like a loser
Me personally? I love Freddie Williams. And you know what that means, a new BOTW episode with him soon I'm sure!
The worms thing was absolutely hilarious to witness. Freddie in utter disbelief at Rich's recollection as Jay just loses it. Also Freddie's recollection of learning about the worms
I never felt that way about splinter on the rooftop scene. Instead he looks to me so masterfully in control of the situation because of how calmly he stands there, and all it takes is a slight hand movement to defeat Shredder. For me it really works to show how superior he is and how better his calm, thinking state is over Shredder's rage.
I'm not really sure what these three were smoking. Splinter is just standing up straight with his hands at his hips. They did the best they could with the technology they had. You're supposed to barely see the last exchange with Shredder and Splinter, because that's how fast it goes.
Honestly, Splinter as a pre-mutation rat practicing Yoshi's moves is one of my all time favorite movie moments. It hits the perfect tone of goofy and awesome!
I watched it a few months ago with my daughters... They made me replay that part like 50 times... So damn classic...
that whole montage is perfect. the music is very fun. i always loved impersonating splinter's lines like "four baby turtles!"
It also was really sweet when after Yoshi was killed, Splinter held his master’s hand with his tiny rat paws 🐾
I wish I could take credit for the observation but I appreciated it: Someone noted all the turtles are given weapons antithetical to their personalities. Sais are basically really close-in defensive weapons, and they were given to Raphael, the most aggressive of the turtles. Michelangelo is the most carefree and lackadaisical, so he was given the nunchuks, which will hurt the user if they're not used carefully. Donatello is the tech nerd who loves complication, so he gets a wooden stick and made to work with simplicity. And Leonardo is a good guy and most moral/heroic of the bunch, so he was given swords to make him have to use lethal force because sometimes it's what you need.
I have no idea if that was intentional writing or not but it makes Splinter come out looking like a genius to make them all have to grow and develop their character and round them out. And ever since it was pointed out to me I notice it in Turtles media.
Would that have been there from the start or would it have been brought in later, I wonder. I haven't read the original comics so I don't know how defined the characters were from the get-go.
In the latest story/comic all the turtles are dead except Mikey. It's explained he was given the chucks as a hinderance since his skill with all the weapons was far superior to that of his brothers. It's also why he's the last one standing in this story arc. It's a grim and sad story but fascinating to read watching the comedic relief of the group become a hardened warrior.
Really late to reply so maybe you have your answer but if not In the original comics all 4 turtles had essentially the same personality and the distinct personalities didn't develop until later on so the distribution of weapons is arbitrary it just is unfortunate as you are right in that they don't match the personalities.
I will say that I don't quite follow on questioning why Donatello being intelligent and tech savvy would make a bo staff a simplistic choice.... All 4 have melee weapons. Perhaps swords are more sophisticated but one can do very advanced techniques with a staff. At least that's how I see it
This is honestly one of my absolute favorite movies. I just wish they would have talked about the foot clan's hideout. That place was like a 80s-early 90s adolescent/teenagers dream world.
As far as I can tell, Shredder's master plan was to establish an illegitimate Dave & Buster's.
Yasss! I loved both the foot's hideout and the turtles' hideout. II was worse than I for sure, but the turtles' hideout was amazing in that one!
I could listen to Freddie explain the engineering of a clock radio. Such an eloquent man, always a delight to have him on.
The Red Letter Media guys are such good interviewers. They don't interrupt people too much and always build off what someone just said.
Fr. Memes aside their conversations on film are incredibly entertaining to watch because of that
Indeed. They always genuinely seem to have a lot of respect for their guests, while perfectly incorporating them into the style with editing (mainly in BOTW episodes). The only episode that didn’t kind of have that completely natural RLM feel was the one with Patton for some reason.
@repentandbelieveinJesusChrist8 So does this mean that after Jesus died, they fed him to the space worms?
And that there's a colossus and 4 armed jesus out there for a time?
@repentandbelieveinJesusChrist8 A wonderful tribute to His Excellency Dnus Ecclae B. BB. Rich Evans.
One thing they sadly didn't touch on was that the movie had a real theme - fatherhood and growing up. Not only between Splinter and the Turtles, but also between teenage boy Danny and his dad. Even April talks about how she still lives above her late father's antique store and can't part with his things. Man, what a multi-layered movie about humanoid reptiles.
That's the kicker, I'll rewatch it later.. haven't seen it since I was a wee lad
calling it now, this is an under appreciated comment, but solid gold nonetheless
Awesome comment; Turtles are amphibians, bringing this up now to take the wind out of the sales of everyone else who can't wait to enlighten us all.
@@_formlessoedon8989turtles are reptiles. Amphibians, frogs for example, have gills in their larval stage (tadpoles) and undergo significant metamorphosis to reach their adult stage. Turtles come out of their eggs looking like tiny adults and just get bigger over time.
Yeah it’s easy to dismiss the movie as a summer popcorn flick, especially today when the IP has been Bayified. But it’s a real movie with actual themes, character development, and plot progression.
Jim Hensons The Storyteller.
Thank you Jay!! I watched that as a child when sick with flu and always wondered if the hedgehog playing the bagpipes was actually on a TV show or part of my fevered dreams.
You've put to rest a 20 year personal mystery.
let me know if im correct cuz i think i just realized that THIS is what i watched as a kid and had nightmares from it that i can still remember. the hedgehog can turn into a handsome man and visits a woman and while he sleeps, she wants to do him a favor and does something, like stitch his coat or something, but she actually screwed up big time cuz now the hedgehog man cant turn back to his handsome man shape anymore and while in his beast form, he goes "what have you done? what have you done?". that moment gave me insane nightmares. that feeling of guilt of having accidentally done something with terrible consequences has psychologically haunted me. is that it or is my rambling totally offtopic?
@@samson6707 haha the video is on TH-cam. You're close to the jist of the story. He can take off his spines at night and is handsome. He tells her if you keep my secret for three nights I'll be a man forever. But the girls mother tells her you must burn the spines. The girls burns them thinking her mother must be right. And (this is the bit that was nightmare fuel) the hedgehog man begins to smoke and scream in pain and is turned to a hedgehog. The episode was about 25 minutes? But still only worth watching if you think it will help to close a chapter in your life like I did haha. Whatever you choose to do with this information. Good luck.
@@studunney7149 thanks for letting me know. i feel relieved already to be able to put this memory in context. this tale really is psychologically traumatizing for a kid. i think i can finally heal now. lol. thanks.
When you look at movies like this and The Dark Crystal, seeing how well Jim Henson's talent translated into more mature settings... it's heartbreaking to think of what he could have given us with more time.
to live in a world where Peter Jackson asked for his help making Lord of the Rings.
…. or working on freaking Harry Potter even 😢
Yea, that was the first celebrity death that hit me on a personal level as a kid. Labyrinth, The Witches, The Storyteller, Jim Henson was magical.
They did lend their talents to Farscape which does have more mature a dark tones sometimes.
@@jigawatt1.215 Brian Henson did great in Farscape (although it did change somewhat after season 1, Rygel looked less animated and stiffer, but i think they changed puppeteers after season 1), but theres still an odd something missing with all post Jims death work the Henson company does... All the stuff Jim was involved in just has to me at least more life in it, theres a fluidity to it that vanished after he died, but still their the top notch even after he died.
I love that the original film has the turtles outside of their costumes! The guy in the back of the cab, the guy who delivers the pizza, the foot soldier who ‘delivers a message’, and one other extra are all the actors inside the suits.
Unless I'm mistaken, the guy in the cab is also Raph's voice actor as well as suit performer. He's the only one of the voices who also wears the suit.
This pairs so well with their background extra bit. Red Letter Media is inexplicable.
@@cabe3231 He adds 'SHUT IT!', but that's basically it.
But he actually has quite a few lines, and you can hear his accent despite wearing the mask!
I worked with the director Steve Barron years ago on something called The Durrells. He had a lot of stories about studio control and how he avoided the edit if he could as it didn’t feel like his movie anymore. It was pretty sad to hear as he was a huge fan. He gave me four original storyboards from the film and said that he wouldn’t sign them as it would only decrease their value.
Random Turtles story: One day my mom calls me up and asks if I have any of my Turtles toys left around. I say maybe, I'd have to look in storage, why? And she explains that her friend's kid is super into the Turtles and apparently these old 90s toys would make him the happiest kid in the world, because apparently Turtles action figures are really hard to get nowadays. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles is one of these concepts that's just kind of timeless in that a kid will still want the same 25 year old toys I used as a child.
Man. Seeing Freddie in studio and knowing he's probably gonna be in the next BOTW is like seeing your parents come home from the mall 2 weeks before Christmas and sneaking an Xbox into the closet.
Oh man, I didn’t even think of that. That will be great! I think he and Len might be the best BOTW guests
The original movie is so good because they treated the audience mostly seriously. It has some really good themes about adopted familys, the relationships between fathers and sons as well as brothers, and the disconnect between different generations, of youth and adults. It such a good movie.
Master splinter and Optimus prime were like surrogate dads for a generation of us who had a shitty dad or no dad
@@the-craig Oh-shit, you are right...me and my brother was in that situation too.
To expand on the father and son theme, it doesn't just show what healthy masculinity looks like, but also what toxic masculinity looks like, via the self-appointed "alpha male" Shredder. And how easy it is for impressionable youth to fall for the glamour of the latter when they really need the former.
Humble little Splinter vs egomaniac Shredder. It's perfect.
@@rabd3721 I wouldnt go so far as calling it toxic masculinity. Shredder was exploiting the youth, and using them for his own goals. Thats not toxic, thats just evil.
I grew up knowing the original cartoon, but I LOVED the 2003 TMNT. That Nickelodeon series did some incredible stuff, feeling like Batman The Animated Series, and even adapted What Goes Around Comes Around. Solid solid run.
As a kid Raphael screaming shocked me. The look of the scene and the camera really was intense.
I had exactly the same experience. It's the equivalent of Christopher Reeve doing the same thing in Superman: The Movie. Both shook me as a kid.
Fun fact, the passenger in the cab that Raphael flips over is actually the voice of Raphael
Freddie's not wrong: Kevin Eastman is an awesome guy, and has managed to stay humble, approachable, and grounded with all his success. Had the pleasure of meeting him on a few occasions (and ONCE was published in Heavy Metal Magazine when he was still overseeing it).
Wait, you're not actually J.M. DeSantis from the Chadhiyana comics, right?
If you are, those comics rock
@@TheGoategg1 OMG! Someone knows me on here?! I really thought this was going to be a sarcastic comment. Hahaha! Thanks! I'm shocked. Glad you enjoy them! You just made my day.
@@jmdesantis This is so wholesome and genuinely made me smile. Do you have an online archive/portfolio?
@@benjaminfalbo I do, but you'll have to search me. It seems I can't posts links (that's okay--I feel guilty promoting on someone else's content). And I really appreciate the RLM gang. Their content helped keep my spirits up during the pandemic (which is when I started watching). Can't thank them enough.
And I was a TMNT fan growing up. Loved this movie as a kid (born in '82), but I think I started with the cartoon. So meeting Eastman was a thrill--only I didn't know it was him. 😅 I was just having a nice convo at the Heavy Metal booth at NYCC. Then he gave me his card and it dawned on me. Again, very cool guy.
This is still one of my all time favorite movies. They got it all right the first time.
Family, brotherhood, great suit acting, great voice acting, great script.
And soundtrack. I still get chills when the turtles fight shredder at the end and that music kicks in.
Yes, it’s easy to forget with the Michael Bay movies muddying the IP, but this movie was a real movie, with themes, character development, plot. There are no big plot holes and every character is distinct and interesting.
I loved it as a kid. Took a break and was blown away as an adult. It is amazing how good it is.
As a kid, Secret of the Ooze was my favorite. As an adult, the first one is clearly superior and still holds up.
Speaking of cloning, I love how Freddie is morphing into a Super Josh.
How dare you! Josh is blossoming into a beautiful "high school teacher who is into linux", and I am super into it.
Freddie is going more into "What if Patton Oswalt but less depressed" and I am also here to celebrate him.
@@marcosdillon “high school teacher who is into linux” is scarily accurate 😭😭😭
As we know, Josh the Wizard is the apex of human evolution. Given enough time, all of the human race will have long beards and know way too much about obscure bands.
For some reason this episode is really great in my opinion. It’s full of tidbits and I really like the fact that Freddie and Rich just genuinely love what they are talking about. Fantastic editing as usual! The visual references are fantastic, I love that you added the picture of the sketch on the release form.
The first Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles movie is absolutely priceless. They nailed it. Lighting in a bottle. What's interesting to me is just how much work that movie did to elevate the Ninja Turtle franchise. It made TMNT feel like it had interesting stories to tell. As a kid who only watched the cartoons, seeing that first TMNT movie made me take the cartoon more seriously for much longer than I would have otherwise. I can't praise it enough.
Agreed. It was also educational as I assume most kids had never heard of cricket.
@@lanceareadbhar
It depends where they're from.
Cricket never really took off in the US
but it's huge in other parts of the world.
It's pretty big in the UK, Jamaica and Pakistan.
I'm from Greece, where it's not particularly popular
but people know what it is.
If you never read the comics, find a way to read the first 30 or so, there really were some compelling comic stories in there. My favorite was the down to the river series.
Freddie's reaction when Rich remembers Shredder being revived by worms is fucking incredible.
Freddie seems like such a nice and genuine dude. Happy to see him back.
So nice hearing Jay talking about being a kid and a legitimate fan of TMNT, and really into it.
What I love most about the 2012 cartoon is that it used EVERYTHING that had come before it. They used worms. They used the alien triceratops. They used Casey Jones crushing Shredder in a garbage truck. It took all the best stuff from the source material, and was never afraid to get extremely bizzare
Check into the ongoing IDW comic--it uses bits of everything that came before, not just Triceratons and the like, but toys, prior animated shows, the movies, the Archie comics, the Mirage comics....
Agreed, the IDW comics are utterly brilliant, and still led by creator Kevin Eastman. The Last Ronin was one of the best fucking comic books I've read in 20 years.
I argue that the 2003 series did it better and arguably was extremely faithful to the comics but the 2013 series is a great show too
@@ImmaLittlePip Having watched both series relatively recently, the 2003 version started off really strong. But it kinda fell flat towards the end, right around the part where the turtles went to the future. The 2012 TMNT got consistently better as it went on. And while I do feel the last season wasn't the best, it still ended on a good note.
@@kingofsapi it's because the lost season never aired and 4kids told them that the show got too dark so they had to make it more kid friendly I'd say around s5/6 since fast forward is practically its own show
I've always liked how the Turtles were characterized by the weapons they were given by Splinter.
Mike is the youngest and most erratic of the bunch and has to learn self discipline, so he gets a weapon that needs practice and focus so he doesn't hurt himself.
Raph is emotional and aggressive, so he gets a short-range defensive weapon to keep his impulses in check.
Don is the smartest, so he gets the simplest weapon, a stick, so he has to use his head to make it useful.
And Leo is the leader of the group and gets the only weapon that is lethal by design, so must learn to carefully judge his actions.
@@xRagma I don't know, but you are obviously smoking crack if you think you have room to criticize him.
Freddie is SUCH a kind and humble person while being so eloquent and insightful. I'm always so happy to see him make an appearance ♥️♥️♥️
i watched the remastered bluray of this a few years ago & couldnt believe how well it has aged, easily the best TMNT movie
Indeed it is. I actually just got back from watching the new Seth Rogan one and it was pretty garbage. I did like the way it was animated, but that was about it.
Freddie Williams is quite simply delightful. It's a joy to have him in these episodes.
They kind of guy you just want to have beers with and talk about nerd shit all night
I love how his face lit up when Rich said "worms". He's a breath of fresh hair on the channel, since none of the RLM regulars are capable of that kind of joy anymore.
He's one of the most amazing people I ever had the pleasure of working with.
@@vertigoinkWould've loved to have beer with him. TMNT was a huge part my childhood and Freddie genuinely seems to loves the ips he works on and seems to be just a super nice guy, 10/10
@@lukesvanne381 He was really good to me and I'll always consider him a friend.
The final scene between Splinter and Shredder is one of the best written final villain scenes I've ever seen. The turtles getting their asses handed to them. Splinter leveraging Shredders rage against him, aikido style. The Shredder risking death so long as he kills Splinter in the process. And Splinters calmness through the whole thing. It all still gives me goosebumps. The reasons the other Turtles movies weren't as good was because Splinter wasn't incorporated as well.
Nailed it! I totally agree. Splinter handles shredder exactly how a wizened old Zen master would, with serene calm.
One of the best "condemning villain to death" lines in any movie, too.
"Death comes for us all, Oroku Saki. But something much worse comes for you. For when you die, it will be... without honor."
@@damkylan3 And then Casey Jones just nonchalantly grabs the operating lever of the truck and goes, "Oops!"
I highly disagree with some of the comments here like "awkwardly fighting in rubber suits". No, the fighting is fantastic considering how heavy and hot the costumes were. Or "they could barely do the turtles". No, the articulation, movement and expression in their faces is pretty damn flawless.
This movie was the PERFECT blend of the comics and cartoon. Dark but funny. Violent but bloodless. Just an absolute 10/10 that still holds up today.
I was talking to a friend of mine who didn't like the movie much (but loved the del Toro Hellboy films) and I tried to explain that the TMNT movie had similar budget/technological constraints for the time, and they got pretty pissed off with me for making the comparison
Born in 86, so TMNT was my jam from an early age. Had a few episodes on VHS with Pizza Hut commercials beforehand. This movie was like a grownup version of the turtles, which was one of my favorite things to imagine for franchises as a kid, like Power Rangers. This is still one of my favorite movies ever!
This is probably my favorite movie of all time. Loved it as a kid, even more as an adult. I was born in 88.
@@MellowMutated Born in ‘88 as well and I’ve seen this movie more than any other in my entire life. I can quote it word for word. I still like to listen to DuPrez’s OST sometimes too, that dark brooding soundtrack was 🔥. This movie made me a TMNT fan for life. Currently binging the 2003 cartoon series on Paramount Plus.
Fun Fact: Robin Williams, who was a big fan of the TMNT franchise, provided Judith Hoag with information regarding her character through his comic book collection
@@BillySotherden I found it in the trivia of IMDB, but it’s source is to some local newspaper called Tulsaworld which apparently interviewed the actress at a convention. Whole article was behind a paywall though :/
@@BillySotherden It's certainly possible. Hoag did Cadillac Man with Williams which came out only 2 months after TMNT.
That Splinter and Raphael scene is one of my favorite movie scenes of all time and probably the most underrated father/son scene in movie history. Telling him to never forget his family and that holding on to his anger will turn to an “unconquerable enemy,” I mean goodness this was in a 90’s TMNT movie 🤯
It is almost as if people in the past knew about morale and Star Wars:D
@@guyincognito959 It 's not about the past, it's about the 90's. If Raphael had exploded into neon squiggles and triangles while a guitar riff played it would have been more appropriate for the time.
Freddy is such a nice person, I could listen to him and Rich talk about comics for hours, even though I haven't been very interested in comics myself.
Nothing beats the 90s man. Kids these days are living an odd life
Well at least they'll be able to enjoy what we love far longer than we. They are younger and have access to the stuff we liked in a much easier way than we did...
@@thestarkknightreturns its not the same though. Unless you experience it live, you won't feel it the way we did.
@@sonnyblack7226 you got a point indeed. And they most likely won't pay attention to all those things the same way we did back then...
For the record, I too get choked up at the Splinter Fire scene.
Its a dad saying what he believes is his final goodbyes to his sons, reminding them of his love for them. As both a Dad and a Son, I find that super emotional.
Same, I've watched that movie with my niece and nephew a bunch and I've always had to distract myself or leave the room during that scene cause I didn't want them seeing me tearing up lol
You’re not alone sir as somebody that lost there dad in their early 20’s that scene and the “all fathers care for their sons” resonates with me and now that I’m a dad to a son it’s even bigger.
So funny how the origins of this film are in a comic made on a goof but the film is so layered and has a lot of emotions.
Gets me everytime, this movie is almost perfect in the sense it has everything: action, emotion, and it funny. It still holds up pretty good today
I’m glad I’m not the only one who chokes up during that scene. I had a poor relationship with my abusive dad. Seeing a father care that much, to reach out through time and space with the last of his dying strength, to tell his sons he’s proud of them, always hit hard. I grew up wanting that.
It's really a testament to the fact that the movie was played seriously, that you don't even realize it's a giant rat taking to 4 giant turtles.
I remember being a wee kiddo pretending to kick my friends in the face when the turtles were all the rage. I have fond memories of crowding around an open manhole where some maintenance guy was doing whatever his job was. One of my friends called down asking him what was down there and we heard him say: "Turtles!" Gasp! "What are they doing?!" "Eating pizza!" Ha ha, bless that guy.
Replace "pretending" with "actually kicked" and you'll understand why I'm still grounded well in to my late 30s
As of this writing, 23 people have liked this comment and not one of them has made a Manhole joke yet
Louisiana girl here. When all my friends went to beaches for graduation/spring break, I went to NY, NY. It was 1999 and I wanted to know what that city was like because of TMNT. 🤣 I was also the only girl out in the farming rural areas who begged to take karate
This movie shocked everyone with how good it was. And one of the Coreys as Donatello was absolutely perfect for that time. And til this day, the movie holds up. Its just a GOOd movie. A solid late 80’s action flick.
These movies were what the Big Kids watched when I was little. There's something really unique about this era of live-action movies, with dark lighting and rubber puppets. At the time it felt very mysterious and a little bit frightening.
It’s a cliché to say, but they truly don’t make them like they used to, and this film is a perfect example. A rare movie that is dark in tone, yet fun , that both adults and kids could enjoy.
I rewatched this movie like a month ago for some reason, i forget why..... no, i remember. Someone told me to read the Last Ronin and i did and it was incredible and it made me want to rewatch the old movie. I forgot how truly good that movie was.
Back when Hollywood still had the talent to pull something like that off. Now all we get are remakes and sequels. Even those are less concerned about telling a good story than they are about pushing certain ideologies. There's very little I enjoy coming out anymore.
so much so the second and third movie weren't done like they used to in the first
@@bradleyj.fortner2203 The talent would still be there, the execs just don't want to take chances.
Yea at first glance it looks like The Crow and many of the other dark, edgy 90s movies, but it turns it out it’s a movie about four talking turtles and a rat.
Great chemistry with these three. Always a treat to see Freddie.
The first movie was a masterpiece, the entirety of the TMNT universe is held up by that one movie.
My father worked for Konami/Ultra when they made the TMNT games. They started developing based on the comics with the understanding there would be a kids TV show. When they heard the cartoon studio had introduced the rainbow headbands it was like "Too late for the boxes, but we can probably squeeze it into the game."
Good on them for including that at the last minute. The different headbands was such an upgrade.
They had a shelf of random unsolicited stuff that people mailed in... movie scripts, comics, toys, RPGs. TMNT came from that pile. My dad happened to grab TMNT #1 to read on a bio break and was like "This is ridiculous...ly awesome!!!"
Before that he worked at Parker Brothers and they had a similar storage room of unsolicited stuff. I got a Buckaroo Banzai promotional headband from that room. Unfortunately a BB game wasn't going to happen because the Atari market had crashed and PB was closing up their video game division.
A 47 minute long RLM discussion of the TMNT movie. This is what I live for sadly.
its crazy how stuff from our childhood can hit us so deeply like the fire scene. I cant watch the sandlot without eventually being overcome by emotions of being a kid just playing ball all day ... good stuff, no matter what the topic is, if its done well it will stay with you forever.
Seems like film-makers and films from that era really capture the essence and magic of being a kid
Me too, very glad to see Freddie back. That his first contact to the TMNT was the pen-and-paper RPG is just another feather in his cap :)
My high school art teacher ripped into me for drawing beefy mature turtles in my sketchbook. Congrats on your career Freddie!
I met the actress who plays April at a con earlier this year. She's incredibly sweet and energetic, and she seemed to genuinely enjoy talking to fans.
Thank you for this video. I had lost touch amidst my read through of the IDW run so this helped kick it back up again. Needless to say, hearing TMNT fans talk about TMNT is always a treat.
This movie is so endlessly re-watchable and unexpectedly economical. Discovering Menke was an editor on it locked a lot of that into place.
I think the thing about this movie that all other iterations of the turtles seem to lack is that the turtles really feel like brothers, there's a sincere attempt to make them all feel like family & that for me is what makes this movie one of the best.
The CGI one nickolden did is awesome, I say this as a grown woman and mother who loved TMNT growing up and wanted to hate it.
OMG yes! Fans of the nick series. Yes the 1990 movie was excellent and the Nick series nails it on so many levels. Absolutely brilliant, haha I'm watching it now and they really do justice to all the characters and stories
The IDW comics also handled it really well by incorporating reincarnation into their backstories.
Thanks for this lovely christmas present of sitting listening to you guys talking about one of my favourite films as a kid. So glad it still holds up and the appreciation of how good it was for a silly concept. My biggest shock though is finding out Freddie's never seen The Storyteller. I only watched in later in life but damn that and it's Greek Story 2nd season were amazing and I hope he gets the chance to see them. Great re:View guys and glad after all the trouble you got to finally mate it.
I only just noticed, at 26:22, the clip of Splinter telling them he is going to die one day, Raphael is the only one not kneeling at first. It looks like the actor didn't realise they were filming and is casually standing there chatting or something, then he realises and gets down on one knee. Clearly they can't see or hear shit in those costumes. 😆
Good to see Freddie back such a great guy!
I think this might be my favorite Re View they have done yet. Freddie as a guest, great depth in the convo/chemistry, and an awesome movie to boot. Awesome episode!
Watched this with the kids a few weeks ago ... everyone loved it .. each time I watch it over the years the less its flaws bother me and for a kids movie it holds up pretty damn well
I’m 30 years old, and I still freaking *adore* this film 😅
Freddie is the best. So humble and one of the best artists. So excited to see him back again.
Freddie has such a great energy about him! Loved seeing him again, I hope you made him suffer through another Best of the Worst while he was there! :)
I was lucky enough to watch this in the theaters, and I'm pretty sure it was the second movie I ever saw. It's a small, but essential part of my childhood. I must have watched the VHS at least 100 times. It feels like a lifetime ago...
I love when Freddie comes back! That behind the scenes story about Space Cop was cute too.
The scene with Raph and Splinter always gets me choked up. I'm glad Freddie mentioned this connection. This movie is SO under rated and a great example of how great practical effects can be.
I don’t think I’d say underrated. It was one of the most popular movies of its time.
@@philliphuey231 I think what he means is more, which movies are looked back on as classics from our childhood. TMNT(1990) doesn't seem to get as much love as others.
Splinter was my favorite character in the movies, even as a little kid, but that's because he goes from wise sage to "I made a funny". There's a genuine sense that he cares about them, not just physically, but wants to relate to them emotionally.
@@random__joe Just love when a movie like that ends with a song that makes you want to dance triumphantly
I never noticed before what you guys were saying about the faces being entirely static when a turtle is doing stunts! Also, while that by itself is crazy, the more interesting part of that to me is that when the turtles' faces are torqued up into a grimace/scowl like that, they're sculpted into an almost-perfect recreation of faces that would have been drawn by Eatman/Laird or Jim Lawson.
I could go on for hours about this movie. At every phase of my growing up, I could return to it and find a new aspect of it that I enjoyed. Decades later, it is still in my mind not just a good TMNT movie, or a good comic book movie, it's just a legitimately great film full of various forms of artistry that I'm glad got made the way it did.
I recently did a rewatch of TMNT thanks to this Re:View and yeah the first TMNT holds up incredibly well. It was such a fun movie to watch.
Trending top 10 and 500k+ views in a day. It brings me so much joy to see this
My Dad took me to see this film when I was a kid. For him, it was just a kids movie, but he was surprised by how wise Splinter was and he found himself nodding along to the things Splinter said 😂
I was supposed to go see the movie when it first came out but I lied to my parents about doing my chores (weeding the garden) and I didn't get to go with everyone and I cried but then later my parents took me and I was so stoked!
For me, my parents didn't want any part of it. So I was dropped off at the local theater. And I waited in such a long line, that I missed the 5pm showing. And had to watch it at around 9pm. And then for my birthday, I got the VHS of the movie the following year!
But I got into TMNT from a friend, who was a fan of the comics. And then after the movie, I watched the cartoon and bought all the toys.
Same, my dad was a bit mad that they were showing punk kids getting away with shit (mostly smoking), and then when Splinter came around he was all nodding and doing these awkward looks at me as if I needed take that as an example instead of mohawks, smoking, tattoos and skateboards. I also have bad news regarding that.
This and '89 Batman were some of my favorite movies as a kid and still are to this day. Please be gentle with my childhood.
I'm a little surprised they didn't mention a very young Sam Rockwell appearing in this flick.
I wanted this to keep going even longer. I was born in 1993 and as a kid i rented Ninja Turtles 1 and 2 countless times from Blockbuster. It was my first exposure to the franchise and I loved them both. As a kid I loved the 2nd more than the first but I do see how parts don't age so well as an adult watching them again. Rich and Jay you are my idols and if Mike reads these comments, i love you too bud.
Freddie Williams is my favourite RLM guest! I'd love him to join the crew permanently, but as a talented artist, it must be hard for him to be surrounded by such hack frauds - and hotties, like Rich Evans.
This movie meant the world to us back in 1990. Still the best TMNT movie ever made.
This video is like an review, interview and TMNT retrospective all in one. No one does it like RLM.
Jim Henson's The Storyteller mentioned is truly wonderful! I can't express how worth a rewatch it is.
2 of my favorite tid bits of trivia about the 1st live action TMNT movie are:
1. Barron used pages of the comics to storyboard the movie.
2. Judith Hoag (April O'neil) shot Cadillac Man with Robin Williams at around the same time and when he heard Hoag was April he gave her comics as reference materials. She even invited him and his family to the premire.
I have a hard time believing #2, but damn it if I don't want it to be true.
@@TheDrunkestSailor looked for an interview with Hoag to confirm and I'm not sure about the part about the sharing comics...BUT she'd never heard of TMNT and when Robin got excited on the set of Cadillac Man (she was doing pre production stuff for TMNT and going to North Carolina and back to Cadillac Man and people asked what she was doing and said TMNT) it was all the approval she needed.
@@TheDrunkestSailor It's a true story. Robin Williams had a strong interests in video game and comic books. He even named his daughter Zelda.
This Re:View was a delight, and it was really nice to see all of their enthusiasm and love for the franchise. I'm a decade younger but the cartoons were still very much popular well into the 90s, so I had the same experience as Jay with the cartoons and toys and video games. My mom wouldn't let me rent the movie and I never understood why. I think I finally saw it when I was a teenager and had a...less than favorable reaction to it.
I always remember noticing Sam Rockwell in this movie as one of the teens at the warehouse who helps save Splinter. Crazy how your brain connects these things from watching this movie when I was a kid.
The first Ninja Turtles movie holds up so well. Watched it with my kid for the first time in years. So good.
So happy to see Rich Evans back. This should be one to remember.
You guys have no idea how excited I was to see this in my subscriptions. The TMNT are what made me want to be a comic artist as a kid, and this movie is a huge part of that. Plus, Freddie coming back is always rad.
Knowing Freddy drew the famous “This is where my parents died Raphael” blows my mind.
Holy shit, I never made that connection. That's amazing lol
tHiS iS wHeRe YoUr PaReNtS dIeD, *OOPS OOPS*
Michaelangelo
"Cowabummer"
This is where I watched my parents die, Parappa.