Adum & Pals: Girl Finds Out She's Adopted (FEATURE FILM) | Dhar Mann
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 20 พ.ย. 2024
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The balls on this boi to heart his own comment, respect
Adum, Have you seen the latest Life is Strange fanmade film? It was out 3 weeks ago on youtube and it's called "Road Back" and It's more hilarious than the other one.
brooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
Which of the Pals is your favorite?
Mine is the insecure, gay, furry one.
Girl finds out she’s adopted immediately regrets it
...You won't believe what happens next!
What happens next is SHOCKING!
Girl eats two huge donuts, what happens next will shock you
Gone Sexual?!
Instantly, to make it more dhar Mann
The Brownie/Jackson thing was incredible
Never had a film try to gaslight its audience with racial epithets before, bravo Dhar Mann
It's like the Yanny/Laurel thing where you see a different name every time you look at the nametag
Seems like it was a botched reference to country singer songwriter Jackson Browne, but I doubt Dhar thought that far ahead lol
That was one of the most blatant continuity errors I have ever seen. It was awesome
it was a Jackson Browne easter egg
*LOOOL* 😂😂😂
I’m adopted and can confirm it’s not this dramatic finding out lol. I HATE when movies have the plot of “I have to find my birth parents to know who I am” that’s crap. It has nothing to do with anything.
I'm not adopted, but I thought season one of Heroes handled it pretty well.
Basically we see a flashback of when Claire the cheerleader was first told by her adoptive parents and she goes from surprise to confusion to gratitude and love for the people who adopted her. All in the span of a couple of minutes.
Her adoptive parents were loving and supportive and she doesn't just snap at them for no reason. She naturally asks some questions and is a bit shaken, but her adoptive father tells her that they're her parents now and she's grateful for it.
If this movie wanted conflict, it should have made the adoptive family less perfect. Give her an actually reason to wonder if her biological parents might be better.
Make the adoptive family somewhat flawed or have them fight before she learns the truth.
@@SpawnRevenge92 that’s a great way to handle it! I just mean when movies/shows have the adopted person “find out who they are” by looking for their birth parents. That’s what I can’t stand. I loved Hero’s btw great show!
It can be important for medical reasons, with genetics and stuff, but I'd assume in most cases the adoptive parents would have any significant information about that.
I feel like DC Shazam actually subverted that common trope pretty well. SPOILERS by the way.
The main character Billy ignores his foster family and doesn't want to be part of them, even though they clearly love him very much. He's in foster care because he was separated from his mother at a county fair and never saw her again, and he feels like she's still looking for him.
But when he finally finds her, it's revealed that she abandoned him on purpose and she didn't want to see him again. She refuses a hug, and when Billy tries to give her the toy she got him at the county fair she doesn't even recognize what it is. There's this great moment when it replays the flashback Billy had earlier in the movie of the moment they got separated. The first time, it's all bright and colorful, and she's laughing and affectionate with him. But this time, the scene is dark and muted, and she's snappy and irritable with him.
Billy's crushed and finally realizes who his real family was. He goes back home and ends up making a whole superhero team with his foster siblings.
@@FM-cp6kc all I know is I’m adopted and I didn’t know my real mother and I was fine with that. Then she reached out to me through fb and said she’d been looking for me forever. Turns out she’s still on drugs and just wanted money. She told me my dad never wanted me and stuff I really didn’t care to know. I spiraled to be honest and went to a pretty dark place so I guess maybe just for my situation I feel like that. It’s so disappointing usually so I don’t recommend..
I feel like I should point out this out, the idea you have to wait or should wait 24 hours to report a person missing is a myth. This is especially true for children. If you suspect, or believe that someone has gone missing, immediately contact police, especially if said person is a child or someone vulnerable.
Commenting to push this further up. It annoys me so much.
I looked into it a little and it seems it sort of is true and sort of isn't, but it's definitely not true in the case of children. If you're the legal guardian of a child and you don't know where that child is, there's no "wait 24 hours" in that situation.
The whole 24 hour thing really only applies to situations where it's not necessarily reasonable to suspect the person in question might not be okay. If the person is an adult who's generally known to be of sound mind and body, and there's no evidence of foul play, then depending on the police department and the circumstances, it actually is possible they may tell you to wait a certain amount of time before a report can be filed. Otherwise a lot of police resources would probably be wasted by mentally-unstable people filing reports every time people miss their texts or something. And if an adult DOES just want to disappear off the grid for some reason, as long as they're not somehow breaking any laws by doing so, at the end of the day they do have the right to do that. But if a child or elderly or otherwise vulnerable person goes missing, or if there's any reason to suspect foul play, you shouldn't wait to file a report. And no matter what, you should at least CONTACT the police to see whether or not they even tell you that you'll have to wait. Don't just assume that you have to wait 24 hours, like these idiot characters.
In China it's true
@Philip K Anything that doesn't break the laws of physics.
In fact those first few hours are crucial, especially with children. It's really sad but a lot of what I've personally heard is that at least in the case of an abduction, if they haven't found the victim in the first 3 days the chances of ever finding them at all become depressingly slim.
This is hilarious because Dhar Mann really wants you to feel bad for the girl, but it's impossible because her actions are just... unhinged? She had three different people not including her adoptive parents, her best friend, her bio dad and her sister tell her to her face "Hey, maybe trying to find your mom isn't a good idea" and she just? ignores it??? and above all still wants to stay there while seeing firsthand what a decrepit state her mom lives in??! I'm speechless.
It's all part of her hero's journey to understand that family doesn't require blood
@@makeitthrough_ Before the Storm makes more sense and that's REALLY sad
@@dennercosta9314 haha I mean hell, One Piece represents that message flawlessly in most of the main casts flashbacks, that the person who raised them matters more than blood, and ties into the main crew..and it's just a bonus subtext to the larger story not the entire focus of the series like this video, which horribly fumbles it with a monstrous message hahaha
Yeah she’s very annoying lol
Not to mention how ungrateful she is to the the people who actually loves her and raised her...she could've just ended up on the street or in a care home...
"My adopted family isn't my real family!!"
*after spending literally hours in her birth mother's crack den*
"Actually, I think my adopted family is my real family now"
Quite the 180 isn’t it?
Seems like it'd be easier to just stay with your loving, non-biological parents. I mean, there's no sign that life with her current family was bad, so why mess with a good thing?
@@MegaManXPoweredUp Because Dhar Mann
"Bitch only has ONE orange in the fridge and she NEVER lets me smoke any of her crack... like, FOR REAL this is SO not cool."
As someone who is adopted, when I found out I didn't immediately shun my (single) mom. Gosh that's so rude, they took her in and she's gonna act like they aren't family.
I mean, Dhar Mann videos are bad, but this is just another level
Oh you decided to take care of me even though I'm not your birth child? Wow, how cruel and unusual of you. I'm gonna find my real mom and stay with her, even if she is a crack whore and immediately doesn't show interest in her daughter's existence!
@@meowertwelve I lost brain cells ngl
But they don't even share the same blood! /s
@@stijnvandrongelen5625 Wow I couldn’t even tell that was supposed to be sarcasm, so thank you for clarifying! /s
This movie is such “psa movie I’de be shown in 5th grade” material. You know, like something your teacher would show you cause they have to cover adoption in the state curriculum.
But instead of actually teaching you about the complexities of the topic they just make it as black and white as humanly possible because
“Children can’t understand nuance and I’m still hung over from last night so BRING IN THE TV!!”
Children can’t understand nuisance cause they are nuisance?
@@grunt221 crap spelling mistake thanks for letting me know! I’ll fix it so it actually makes sense
You seem to forget that little kids are dharman's audience. Also, babies on iphones get Cocomelon videos to 2 billion views, so.
I’m adopted and seeing how adoptions are portrayed in media is always entertaining for me. For context, my legal parents couldn’t get pregnant due to medical reasons and went the adoption route. My biological parents were 17 and in their junior year of high school - my birth mom knew she couldn’t be a single mom and a high school student and provide the best care for a kid, that wouldn’t be fair to the child. So I was adopted and my legal parents never hid that from me, I always knew.
So seeing things like Dhar Mann’s take on adoption is really funny because of how far off the mark it is to my experiences, and the experiences of others who went through the adoption system. I’ve never met someone who had their parents lie for decades and reveal they were adopted. AFAIK that’s just a thing that happens in movies. But Dhar Mann’s take is also really insulting because it feels like he’s saying adoptions happen because the parents are criminals or addicts and he isn’t acknowledging that sometimes it is the best, or only option for everyone involved. I dunno. Some of it feels gross. Most of it is just funny. All of it is incompetent. Thanks Dhar
damn thats interesting, you still in contact with your bio parents?
The real message of that video comes across as "You were put for adoption so your parents must be criminals or addicts or terrible people or all of these thing at once" which is just ridiculous...
Yeah that’s usually because they make adoptive parents do some light counseling where they advise telling kids they’re adopted when they’re young, usually people lie about informal adoptions between family members to avoid family drama until a kid is mature, but they never do that storyline either when they do adoption stories.
@@ishouldexpandmytasteincheese yes, actually. My bio mom made it clear that she would love to meet me one day, if that’s something I wanted to do. About ten years ago or so I decided I was emotionally mature enough to reach out and we connected. She’s awesome and we talk often. But the parents who raised me *are* my parents and not some substitutes like media portrays adopted parents.
And another thing that a lot of other media glosses over is how hard it is for the parents most of the time. My birth mom, 17, has a child and can’t take care of him, puts his life in another pair of parents’ hands. She doesn’t see him for decades and spends every day wondering if she made the right choice.
I’m not saying that stories like Dhar Mann’s dont exist or that it’s impossible. Just that to pretend they’re the only reasons why is really damaging, for those looking to adopt, those having to adopt their child, and children who are adopted.
I dunno this is just a very important topic to me since it’s such a big part of my life. I love talking about it and answering questions people have. And since this topic comes up so rarely in everyday life I take whatever chance I get to clear up misconceptions people may have.
The Psycho Mantis girl's acting is actually improving. She is better than the adults
Adachi what are you doin here , shoulnth you be killing children ?
you're that ninja...
Unironically hope she gets a better gig than this soon she's definitely being wasted in these videos and you know Dhar Mann's not the kind of guy to pay his actors well
Seriously, she was doing what she could
Don't lie. The father's face acting as amazing (read entertaining as fuck)
The second she discovers she's adopted, she talks with the saddest voice ever. You feel so bad for her, but after 10 scenes with the same voice, you get a little tired of it.
It's weird, I didn't feel bad for her until she asked to stay in the crack den. Then I realized she had brain damage and that must be really hard for her.
@@meowertwelve Your name and pfp are icing on the cake.
Who said I felt bad for her lmao
@@nataliehaag3595 me. check out my comment.
You felt bad for her instead of groaning and cringing the moment she started that shit? Really?
This just reminded me of something my brother said to my mom during an argument. "You can't tell me what to do, you're not my real dad!" *Dad thought it was hilarious.
I mean...he wasn't wrong. She wasn't.
i hope that if his dad walked in he'd be like "you can't tell me what to do, you're not my real mom!"
It's funny because it's true.
*Prepares and serves entire Thanksgiving dinner*
“How can I eat at a time like this?!”
12:23 “I understand now! You were just trying to protect me!”
What? Hell no! They thought you were emotionally mature enough to know that you were adopted. Obviously, they were wrong, and even _more_ wrong on a basic level about how smart they thought you were.
I'm just replying so you can see how much likes you got
The myth that the police won't help you if your loved one has been missing for less than 24 hours is dangerous and it's irresponsible for anybody to continue using the cliche.
Especially if a child or elderly or otherwise vulnerable person is involved
dont they still have that in some places? at least for adults?
@@someidiot420 sometimes in some places they do.
It depends of the willingness to work of the police.
@@someidiot420 if you have reason to suspect they are in danger or missing, usually you can file a missing persons report
The myth that the police will help you is dangerous and it's irresponsible for anybody to continue using the cliche.
I honestly never fully understood why learning that you are adopted is always depicted as such a shocking and negative thing to the point where "You were adopted!" has been used as an insult at times.
And don't get me wrong, there is a reason I used the word "fully". I definitely understand that it can be a very surprising and live changing thing to learn. Of course you would have a lot of questions, for example.
But how is it an inherently bad thing? As long as you love each other, does it matter wich vagina you shot out of?
I guess it must be the aspect of implying your birth parents didn't want you,( which isn't always the case)so by default no one ever will. But i agree with u, its a strange insult when u consider being adopted means someone does want you in the most positive way possible.
Now that I think about it, stuff like inheriting your parents' features and genetics in general is a place of enormous pride for some. It may help with some insecurities about your own body like "I can't grow a beard, but then again neither can my dad and he turned out OK".
But I have no idea how the vast majority of people react to knowing they're adopted. The few peoole I am aware of adopting have told their kids that from a very young age and AFAIK they grew up fine. It defo shouldn't be an insult though. Maybe between siblings, but even then your parents *chose* you instead of just having you. Idk I'm kinda dronk rn lol
It’s confusing and painful. At a young age you’re expected to reconcile why your bio parents literally got rid of you. You feel like you’ve been living a lie.
its mostly tied to victorian era sensibilities which itself was a corruption of medieval sensibilities. People in the medieval era (for sake of dynastic lineages) thought having illegitimate children was fine, but the child was seen as bad luck (even though its not their fault) mostly because they could start a civil war being a pretender/possible heir. Then in the 19th century, an era known for getting history wrong and just inventing morality for different eras, they extended a small minority upper-class convention to the entire population, and then made it worse because the rise in prostitution meant there were plenty of illegitimate kids, and mothers unable to care/provide for them.
Tie that in with the booming phrenology/eugenics movements in the 19th century, and suddenly people think a kid born of a prostitute is inherently evil because the two people who produced the kid did something immoral... and so that stigma got applied to orphans in general. this movie seems to play on that stigma of orphans coming from shattered/horrible people, which certainly does happen, but making it the axis of the movie seems really regressive.
It should be seen as an achievement. Like wow, you're adopted? You were lucky enough to get out of the adoption system that's been known to torture kids and ruin them psychologically? There were people who were happy to spend hundreds or thousands of dollars on you so they could take you in as their own? So they could feed, bathe, and shelter you? You're adopted? Lucky you. Good job.
Dhar Mann apparently believes that when adopted kids are trying to find their real parents, it's because they are planning to ditch their adopted parents?
It feels like he listened to someone else explain the basic trope of “adopted person goes to find their bio parents, but learns that their adopted parents are the only family they need” but took it 100% literally to mean that adopted kids would’ve want to live with their parents if they knew they were adopted
This is why i hate Dhar Mann. His head is so far up his ass that he thinks his surface level interpretations of very serious and complex issues are groundbreaking and worthy of making a film out of.
Ok I'm halfway through the video but I'm having trouble believing even if she's mad about being adopted, that the girl would chose to live with in the crack cave with her biological mom and the other guy OVER the actual nice house she has with two people proven to actually love her.
At that point she should be THANKFUL she was adopted, not commiting to running away
This is what would happen in Dhar Mann's mind. It's wacky up there.
This is a fairly common trope and I DON'T GET IT. You would think that if an adopted kid was told "your father is unknown and your mother was a crackhead; we wanted to save you from that household," they'd be like "oh, shit, thats insane, thank you."
Being mad about being adopted is okay but only in the contexts of "You lied to me my whole 12 year old life" or "You snatched me of better opportunities".. not when you were basically rescued from a crack addict and a father who is in prison.. this is just one of those Dharr things.. like the children are innocent so obviously they want to stay with their parents whereas in the real world even a 6 year old will not go inside a crack house...
Like it's one thing that she wants to meet her bio parents despite everything, but the fact she's like mad with her adoptive parents for no reason? Like bitch they raised you and you didn't seem to have a single issue with them before.
If I was her mom I would sign her over to her bio mom lol
Did they realize that “Browne” was too on-the-nose and change his name mid-shoot? 😂
what probably happened is Dhar Mann picked out the first name tag and then a cast or crew member approached him halfway through the shoot and pointed out how bad of an idea the name is. he then changed the name tag but didn't re shoot the previous footage to remove the old one.
What child would stay in that house over her adopted parents house, like she's smart enough to find her mom she *should* be smart enough to see a unsafe house and just leave asap
I dunno. When you're sheltered and naive, I think it's easy to assume that dangerous-looking places are just unfamiliar. That's how people get into bad situations in real life.
She really wanted that orange in the fridge...
Well to be fair being smart enough just meant using Google I guess
@@My20GUNS The Christmas Orange
Love makes you blind
So blind in fact
That it's infuriating
So you see… It was only a matter of time until Adum came crawling back to Dhar Mann.
P.S. Faces Man and Heterochromia Lady are the IT couple of the Dhar Mannverse.
Generation Hope is Adum’s new love now.
I have 4 siblings who were adopted. All international so it is a bit different. All of them had very traumatic backgrounds and it does effect them to this day, but this portrayal of adoption is just fucking wack. My siblings always knew they were adopted and loved my parents as any other kid does. The idea that only drug addicts and criminals give up children is just gross.
I met the mother of two of my siblings who are actually biological siblings themselves and it was a very tough situation. Their father had died and their mother wasn't able to work and support two children especially in Ethiopia. We all knew it was the hardest decision their mother could make but she loved my brother and sister so much that she was willing to let them be adopted and moved to the U.S to have a better chance at life.
Long winded comment, bottom line: don't let the medias portrayal of adoption fool you into thinking it's not an amazing thing. Understand that children have traumatic experiences but are also capable of understanding that they're in better places now and love their adoptive families.
I'm just replying so you can see how much likes you got
I really feel like you can't possibly stretch a Dhar Mann video out too an hour, but let's see how this goes.
EDIT: After watching the video I can confirm, there was no reason for this to be an hour long.
Ze mani doe
Dhar Mann needs to start adding musical numbers to his movies.
but an hour means so much more ad revenue!
i have managed to watch this entire 15 minute video within 1 minute and can confidently say its really good!
Speedrunning is getting out of hand :0
I mean you could've easily watched the whole commentary yesterday
HELP!!! Everybody at my school cyberbullies me because they say me good good GOOD videos are extremely BAD!!! Please help me, dear rtiv
I watched this video and actually got Time from watching it. I traveled 15 minutes into the past so I finally used this free time to watch paint dry while high on ever drug. I finally understand the Dharmann
The girl's biological parents are exactly like Mac's parents from It's Always Sunny
Except Mac's parents, who are effectively just running jokes with names, still manage to have more charm and personality than characters introduced in a serious "FEATURE LENGTH MOVIE"
Omg I thought of Luther when she was visiting
@@MasterOphSky i mean that’s 15 years on and off of tv
You want some money, son? Well, you'll have to do me a little *favor*.
The Gang Sue Dhar Mann For Copyright Infringement
It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia
Is it fucked up that Dhar Mann only plays off of stereotypes? No teenager in their right mind would react this way.
Yes
if you watch enough of his stuff, you start to pick up that Dhar Mann just really doesn’t have a solid grasp on how other people behave, especially when they belong to a different social class/gender/race/age than him.
Even his moral lessons give off that vibe, where about 90% of his videos essentially end with “don’t judge a book by its cover,” even when it comes to topics like fucking racism, because his moral framework is as simplistic as Green Eggs and Ham
He’s just a rich dude with an ego who grew up as a rich kid with an ego, and that’s all he really understands about the world
everyone calling her friend "tomorrow" ended me
Only the best of Dhar's troupe can be in his featured film. **Only the best.**
But I didn't see Nelson anywhere!
Haha I just love that Adams few weekends of obsessing over these dumpster fires has finally crossed over to the main channel
Peruvian Joker is sadly absent.
10:50 also, the "within 24 hours" rule is not only not real, it's actively harmful to think it is
Thank you for the information. I didn't know that, and it's kinda fucked up that I didn't know that, so... thank you.
@@undeadMonk fixed
@@sunbleachedangel Cool, I'll edit mine, too
God damn. Dhar is already so fucking stereotypical. Good for you for making it through the whole thing
Can't wait for Generation Hope's first movie. Wild, I tell ya!
They finally say the N-word! With hard R!
Brownie and Jackson were clearly two different people guys. They were just identical twins who were both prison guards.
Dharman being the master of avoiding copyright claims:
Having static on tv
Having beer bottles turned around etc...
Girl Finds Out She’s Adopted is my lock of the week for Best Picture this year
This movie is cringe as hell. Like after she found out she's adopted, she just forgets she loves her adopted parents. Honestly who the fuck cares if you're adopted, I mean that doesn't change shit unless you want it to. Overreacting so hard, people don't act like that.
I've always wondered about where this characterization comes from.
I like to believe most children after finding out they're adopted would not have any big reaction, assuming their family was already a loving one.
Excited for the Dhar Mann Cinematic Universe to take off with its first feature length film.
It would rival The Room
@@abeldnite Nothing will ever rival The Room. Nothing. The Room is a masterpiece that nothing will ever match.
I’ve said it before, but Dhar Mann videos don’t even feel like they’re real. Like they seem like they’re from another dimension, one where standards are way lower, the views, the positive comments the actors, all from a dimension of mediocre content. Yet somehow they have crossed over to our world. It’s the only thing that makes sense.
I think even aliens from another dimension have a better understanding of how humans act then Dhar Man
Jokes aside the girl's friend was surprisingly not bad for a child actor.
I hope she's able to find fulfilling work outside of bad TH-cam videos.
She's crying in literally every line. That's not good acting.
@@DysnomiaFilms it’s not good directing to have her do it in every scene but fake crying is one of the hardest things to pull off convincingly
@@DysnomiaFilms I said her friend not the main girl herself.
@@DysnomiaFilms "Fool, what're you cryin' for? What're you cryin' for, fool?"
Girl finds out she's adopted, INSTANTLY REGRETS IT
Um, does Dhar Mann think that being adopted is like having aids or something? Because it sure seems that way, considering the way the characters act about it.
I'm just replying so you can see how much likes you got
What I hate is that whilst children can be adopted from rough homes, I feel like this movie fails to establish that there can be many reasons this can happen? Imagine being a dumb kid who watches this and then gets it in their head for a huge chunk of their lives that all people who have to give their kids up for adoption are evil and all adoptive families are saints
A problem with almost everything Dhar Mann has made is the deliberate classism. The girl's biological parents cannot just be too poor to raise her, they have to be dangerous criminals who don't work and do drugs all day. If her biological parents were actually good people then the moral of the story completely collapses. The true lesson in all these stories is that poor people are bad unless they can become rich.
@@xristosxi393 and are also visibly in their 60s
Anything after that "Imagine being a dumb kid who watches this" is not really a good criticism in my opinion, art is art, if you worry about the reaction of people too much you just can't make anything. A lot of songs about depression goes in that route of overwhelmingly nihilistic, those were the songs that actually spoke to me and made me feel alive. They might as well act as a potential trigger for some people, but should you sacrifice artistic expression for that? Take Fight Club or Animal Fear for that regard, should you sacrifice artistic expression for the sole reaction of the viewer?
@@fritz6600 this is such a shite take I'm not going to deconstruct and point out why, you're hopeless
@@fritz6600 they promote themselves as moral stories with purported educational value. If it were literally anything else I wouldn't give a sht. Bad take lmao
The worst part of all this (to me) is that this is such a real scenario. It means so much to so many people. And it was created with no heart and no brain.
2:59 did Adum just hum the theme of "Under the Skin" XD
YES I LOST IT
What a weird sequel to Abduction, Taylor Lautner wasn't in it and there was no government espionage. Acting was ok 5/10
If Taylor Lautner isn't in this movie, then who is this? 2:05
I urge you all to watch the full film with commentary, every frame is a painting.
I did when watching the full commentary and it's very dry, boring, and infuriating at times, the only saving grace was having the commentary track over it.
Did Gael just spawn as an adult? Is that why he doesn't know what a person you go to class with is or what a female child is called?
I keep forgetting his name isn’t “Guy L”
He had a... "troubled" childhood that he would sooner forget.
Adam didn't say we're all gonna die at the end, so technically viewers are now immortal.
RIP Scott ❤️
Laugh now. in 2029 The Top earning films of the year will be Star wars 10, Fast and the furious 11, and "Kids MAKE FUN OF Boy With AUTISM, They Instantly Regret It"
This is a real movie guys.
For real though, who tells their kid that they were adopted _on their birthday?_ xD
"Alright, sweetie, blow out the candles!" *[Celebratory cheering]* "You're adopted!" *[Immediate awkward silence]*
I swear, Dhar Mann is from another planet and human-to-human interaction is still a learning process for him.
I love that the 24 hour trope is still a thing in cinema
It's literally not real
If a person goes missing for any given reason , an _ADULT_ up to the age of 25 (or 21 i forgot) police must take immediate action. And we're talking about a 15 year old girl. Of _course_ they would immediately start searching.
Besides, to visit the prison she would have had to give her details.
Whoever did hair and makeup for Heroin Mum deserves an award
If there's anything heroin addicts love more than life itself, its oranges.
Turns out they were orange addicts 🍊
So if the sister is also adopted, why does she have the same last name as her bio father? Especially if she's trying to keep it a secret
Veronica Dhar
"Suck on the battery, gain its powers." might be one of the greatest lines I've ever heard.
I couldn't even imagine acting like this when I found out I was adopted, I don't remember exactly when I found out but I was super young and it's always something I just knew, I never made a difference to me
Context, I was adopted as a baby because my birth father died and my brother mother was a drug addict
I love the idea of Adum just bringing them in, telling them to shut up and sticking this on. Content farm babyyyyyy
I can’t get over how she has the same tone of voice, crying and edge of crying, throughout this movie. It’s like a Jorden Peterson lecture
I love the idea that Dhar Mann had the security guy named Browne but then thought "no that's too on the nose" so he changed it mid scene to Jackson
I can't stop thinking about how Dhar Mann can be referred to as "Mister Man"
I truly believe the natural reaction to finding out you're adopted is to ask an inmate and an orange addict to help you with homework. Dhar Mann really lets me see the world for what it is.
Dhar Man feels like the video equivalent to those facebook profiles of Indian men who stand on mountain tops and make really obvious platitudes like they're this mind-blowing shit.
Like I don't think he makes these videos out of cynicism, I think he geniunely believes he's changing lives with this stuff.
Kids don't have to be missing for 24 hours before the police will intervene. Under 18 and the cops can usually start taking information/issuing Amber Alerts in as little as 30 minutes. Dhar Mann didn't do his research.
I remember when my mother told me I was adopted. Such a gifted orator she was, well is, she's still alive. ANYWAYS. She called me into my bedroom, she made it all dramatic and was like: "There's something we need to tell you, you're not really part of this family, you were adopted.BUT that doesn't mean we love you any less." Well, needless to say that set a nice tone for the next 14 years. Especially when the memories of my time in the Romanian Orphanage was starting to come back. OH boy, being born during a revolution, and adopted at 3 years old. MEANS you remember those bodies. And the things you had to do to survive. Late 80s Romania was fun for us orphans. 80% mortality rate for their orphanages.
I mean it would suck to find out you're adopted, but I really don't think a kid would run away from her safe loving family to live in a crack house
I went to the actual video to see if I could find any gems in Dhar Mann's comment section
but they were all so generically positive I couldn't differentiate between genuine positivity and sarcasm
it was like being in the Twilight Zone
He didn’t say “we’re all gonna die. synecdoche” at the end 😢
We're gonna live forever. Cyberchode.
My parents never hid I was adopted
I never cared about my bio parents to me my family is what was around me
I did get to meet my bio mom later, I really didn’t care or didn’t want to
But because I was adopted from Guatemala there was also a language disconnect
I did it to let her know I was ok
My parents are the ones that raised me
That’s it no drama, no longing
Like for some reason it’s so hard for people to understand I don’t care???
I’m sure my cat I adopted doesn’t obsess about her old family or parents
I’m her family and I love her
Same with my parents
I wish, I *wish* Scoot and Adum hadn't seen the badge. I would've loved to have Gael try to convince them that the guy's name totally was Browne, and it just changed for absolutely no reason.
As someone who's family is mostly adopted, this was crazy to watch. It's like a trope of a trope. Congrats dhar man. You somehow removed yourself so far from reality that out of touch hollywood movies seem more grounded.
The browne/jackson thing might be the funniest moment from the entire Adum & Pals series
"I'll show you some unwanted children" I was laughing for 5minutes off that. 🤣
Ok wait but unironically this kid is a better actor than like 90% of kids in real movies
RIP Scoot. This was in my top 5 favorites.
Every person I know who was adopted pretty clearly knew it from the get go… like why hide this information, it’s not hard to explain
I still cant believe they left the "Brownie" name tag scene on lmao And then just change it to "Jackson", like if they couldnt think of any other stereotypical name for him.
The other day I had a dream, or rather a nightmare, about Dhar Mann winning an Oscar.
Hell nah, that'd be the worst nightmare
Psycho Mantis girl and Steve (the dad) are genuinely good actors IMO. I hope they get more than just Dhar Mann for their career
Psycho Mantis?
The lady with the two different colored eyes is a good actress too.
Them changing the COs name from Browne to Jackson destroyed me.
This is such a weird movie because Dhar Mann wants to you feel bad for Sabrina (the adopted girl) but she’s so stupid. I can understand that finding out you’re adopted can be a big deal, but verbally disowning the people who loved you and cared for you was just so awful. Not to mention that she wanted to stick around in a crack house despite her bio mom clearly not giving a shit about her. Also yeah I definitely hate the trope of “I didn’t tell you (or lied to you) because I just wanted to protect you 🥺” She would’ve been protected more if the parents just told her “your bio mom is a drug addict and your bio dad is a violent criminal in prison.” She’s 15 and completely old enough to understand what that means.
This is like one of those cringy health class videos where the parents find out their daughter is bulimic, yet nobody in the class can relate because we're all 30lbs overweight and also not adopted.
Interesting comment.
@@UKImmigrationLawGeek pointless reply 😊
@@notveryniceatall name checks out
that edit where it went from psychomantis on the computer to taylor lautner almost made me think he somehow got dragged into the dharverse
Funny story, I'm a service plumber and I had a call come in for a leak at a Kandy Johnson's house. I immediately thought of this.
Someone i knew from high school was in a dhar man video recently and I didn't even know what dhar man was before that. Went through a rabbit hole of incredible content afterwards lmao
If my parents told me I am adopted, I dont think I would have cared because in the end, they raised me with love.
Damn, that was fast. Adam’s a true Dhar Mann fan.
Some would call him a...
Dhar Fann
We've finally come to this moment, to watch Dhar Mann's first movie.
"This is, uh Twilight brothers." I love how aggressively unenthusiastic Adum says that. It's a very 'enough already' tone.
I love that her parents stand around her when she's having that corn cub and stares like they wait for the poison to kick in. And that is NOT the strangest thing in this ... I have no kind names for this thing lol.
If you're adopted don't go looking for your birth parents, they gave you away for a reason and they suck. You should be grateful for your adoptive parents instead. Thanks for this very important life lesson, Dhar Mann, very cool!
Lol what a stupid generalization. You don't know everyones situation and the reason why they did it.
@@acreativename2781 Good thing that's the moral the movie left us
That’s not always true for people who went with adoption. A lot of them do love the child and want to keep them, but they’re not able to take care of them.
That guy playing the dad was amazing and the movie should have been about him.
Dad Finds Out He's Adopted (FEATURE FILM)
Goddamnit, why didn't I find Adum & Friends years earlier? It's freaking hilarious and I love it. Rest in peace, Scoot.
The design and character of the biological father is so subtle and nuanced, bravo Dhar Mann
At the thanksgiving dinner they should have broken it to her that "We're glad you're safe, but where putting you back up for adoption you little shit."
"I'm a whole cob kinda guy AND I eat it vertically" Hahahahahahahaha wow
As someone with, uh, relevant experience, I gotta say that was a pretty good depiction of a junkie pad
I like how Dhar Mann decided to keep the TH-cam video subtitles for his feature length film lol
Why did this need a feature film? It takes like 5 seconds to do this.
"Hey, um, you're adopted"
*credits roll*
Dhar Mann reactions with pals is the perfect segment
I haven’t watched one of these dhar mann videos in like a year because they’re so hard to watch knowing how much praise and support he gets for them but I’ll try to get through this one