this scene actually makes me really sad, even tho it used to make me laugh, cause it really shows how even if goob is treated nicely, he never stops feeling like everyone resents him. i feel like that almost all the time, like even if people are complimenting me or being nice, its cause they feel bad, or they're just hiding their annoyance with me. idk i kinda relate to goob in some sad way :')
I tried, oh I tried, to make it a thing, but it failed. At least I got to make “…mast-eerrr???” a thing with some of my friends as a combination of this film and _Igor_
I’m very surprised he didn’t mention the “secret” thing in the opening. The mother runs away after hearing something slip behind her. And in the sequence where Lewis goes back to the past, he slips on the stairs after finally deciding he didn’t want to know about his mom. It’s a nice little detail that I couldn’t spot when watching it.
this then implies that there's no "multiple timelines created whenever something is changed via time travel" trope which then breaks the continuity of that movie because Lewis decides to wake up Goob resulting in none of events of the movie taking place.
@@firespark0774 yes it does basically the prisoner of Azkaban scenario. However this movie also makes the mistake of showing the apocalyptic future impling choices can affect the future. Still a great movie
I adopted my son a little bit before this came out. He was just shy of 8 years old. After he watched this movie, it became his favorite for several years, and he asked for the DVD as a birthday gift from his grandma (my mom) when he was a teen, so he could watch it when he was at college. I think it helped him reconcile his past with his future. Since then he became a marine and then afterwards went to UCLA and is working for the government, and seems happy. I'm glad they had a good movie about adoption, and yes one where the group home foster mother is nice. He grew up in an orphanage, but the director there was nice, and was adopted herself, so not all are mean.
The thing I didn't like about this movie is the "orphanage" home when the U.S got rid of this and it became the foster care system. Honestly a little slap in the face cause many state governments like FL tend to call foster kids orphans when the term is defined as "a child whose parent(s) are dead". I'm glad you adopted your kid. I wished more people choose adoption.
@@sophieamandaleitontoomey9343 definitely. I was a lonely kid but it was almost entirely self-imposed bc I thought nobody wanted to be my friend, but looking back there were plenty of people that tried, I just wasn't receptive.
José Luis Rodríguez El Puma in latin american spanish, it's so funny I still openly laugh when i see the scene. This detail is one of the best of this movie, they didnt have to adapt it but they did bless them fr
@@octabodemes He was El Puma for me too. I haven't seen the film unless it was in theaters or on the Disney Channel, so I'm curious to know how that scene played out on VHS and DVD.
@@Kevin-cp3ex Dick Dastardly (Pierre Nodoyuna for me, personally, because of the Spanish dub), main antagonist of the Hanna Barbera series Wacky races (Los autos locos).
The T-Rex quote, “I’ve got a big head and little arms. I’m just not sure how well this plan was thought through,” is non-stop quoted within my family. We never forgot this movie.
My favorite part of this movie is when Bowler Hat Guy first goes to present the invention and is asked: "What do you hope to accomplish with this?" "Oh, nothing of consequence, I simply wish to *CRUSH THE DREAMS OF A POOR LITTLE ORPHAN BOY!* Beyond that... it's a little fuzzy." "You mean you haven't thought this through?"
One of my favorite exchanges in the movie comes just before that: You're the 2:00? Yes I am! You're Mary Johnson? Yes, it's short for... Marion? Can that be a boy name?!?! Yes (grins) Then, yes!
Fun fact: The Bowler Hat Guy was originally supposed to be a more evil and serious villain, but when John Lassiter took charge of Disney and read the script, he told the production crew to make him a more comedic yet sympathetic villain and have him a partner to balance him out.
There's one joke in "meet the Robinsons family" that i remembered to this day, my favourite out of movie. It's when Lewis lists all the Robinsons: "Spike & Dimitri are twins but I'm not sure how they're related?"- " Neither do we, go on." Meaning: Two random guys live in their tree pots. We don't know where they came from or who they are, but they're family
The “Incompetent Villain who’s kept in check by a well meaning henchman” trope is, in my opinion, one of the best villain tropes ever, and this movie pulls it off very well, if unconventionally
The reason this movie is my favorite Disney movie of all time is how they portray Wilbur. Wilbur has to be my favorite Disney character of all time. He’s funny and likable and he knows karate. But all that aside, he is a 13 year old boy who has made several mistakes. He is such a relatable character that it hurts when we figure out that he was never planning on taking Lewis to see his mother. But, if you played the video game or heard about it, you know the whole plot of the game is centered around Wilbur. He makes all these mistakes INCLUDING the one that set the whole movie up. Forgetting to lock the garage door. In the game, he goes back in time to try to fix the future. But, the future worsens the more he changes it. The movie picks up right where the game left off. Wilbur goes back in time, grabs Lewis and takes him to the future. Strikes a deal with Lewis (which he never intends to do) and Lewis tries to fix the time machine. The reveal of Wilbur’s lie to everyone was a great scene in the movie. It is so under utilized and should’ve been more focused on. Lewis’s glare at him when he ally’s with Bowler Hat Guy really shows his anger towards him. Wilbur messed up again and from what I thought when I first watched this movie, it was no way he was gonna fix it. But he did. Later though. When Lewis figures out the truth, Wilbur finds him and they escape from Bowler Hat Guy. However, Bowler Hat Guy takes Lewis’s Memory Scanner and tries to pass it off as his own. While he’s doing that, Wilbur tries to convince Lewis that he has to fix the time machine. And when he does that he says a line that gives me chills every time I hear it. The line is: “Look, I messed up! I left the garage unlocked but I’ve tried like crazy to fix things! Now it’s up to you!…You can do it, dad.” Then he’s erased from existence. I was crushed the first time I watched it because I never thought we’d see him again. Lucky for us though, he comes back and better than ever. And after everything, he still goes through with his deal to Lewis. Even though he could alter everything he’s ever gone through. Lewis didn’t actually meet his mother however and leaves a confused Wilbur to wonder why he didn’t. Wilbur’s goodbye to Lewis is so wholesome I literally felt like crying. Then he’s gone and that’s the last time we ever see him. Wilbur is a great character at heart like you said. He’s selfish and thinks only about himself. For some people, one lesson isn’t enough for them to realize their mistakes. Some people are just stuck and have to be pushed to a point where they have no choice but to realize the error of their ways and changing is the only way they can get unstuck. That is a definition of Wilbur. He is selfish and only likes about doing things his way. But then, he then chooses the selfless option rather than the selfish option and takes Lewis back to see his mom. Which is the sweetest thing ever. He’s a great kid and deserves more recognition. (Btw: The scene in the Science Fair when Wilbur trips some random kid who he thinks is Bowler Hat Guy is comedic gold in my opinion which you forgot to add in “The Funny”)
I’ve watched this movie a million times, and I don’t think I ever caught the part where Wilbur trips a kid he thinks is Bowler Hat Guy. Now I have to watch it again!
I like to imagine that in the new future, Goob became a famous baseball player who still remained friends with Lewis even after he became a famous inventor.
The scene where Wilbur is basically killing himself by fulfilling his deal with Lewis really shows how much he has matured. He's willing to let whatever happens even if it means that it kills him off.. It's basically teenage suicide in a Disney film.
Did not ever think about that, potentially getting yourself killed because of a promise you want to fufill. That's deep. It also kinda is suicide, just not in the traditional sense we're used to.
Something I find kinda sad is that the kids who were complimenting Goob and asking if he wanted to hang out were the same kids who beat him up at the ball game So even his teammates moved on from what Goob did but Goob didn’t
I mean, maybe if they apologized to him for beating him up and humiliating him, and told him that it wasn’t his fault they lost the game, maybe he wouldn’t have been so petty and bitter. Then again, Micheal/Goob’s fate may have been inevitable (that is if he couldn’t let go of the past and keep moving forward), because after that whole incident, it made him felt that his chances at something he seemed to have a passion for were gone. Because who will adopt a kid who made a dumb move like that in a game? Who will even want a make a career for him when literally fell asleep in the last inning?
The thing that makes even the background family characters in the future work for me, is the idea that all Louis wanted was a big happy family. A family that was supportive, loving, and weird like he was. So it didn't matter that they weren't all fleshed out, they all had a joke or two, and they were all warm, welcoming, and willing to sacrifice everything to protect him when it really mattered. And I feel like that's exactly what the Robinson's knock right out of the ballpark. It captures the vibe of when you walk into that house full of those people, you feel like you're welcome, and you're right at home. AND THEN ROB THOMAS RIPS MY HEART OUT MORTAL COMBAT STYLE AT THE END WITH LITTLE WONDERS!!!! AHHHHH!!! 😭😭😭😭
I really loved that about the film as well. Its nice cause I legit can't think of another film that explores this topic without the orphanage being a horrible place.
NO! NO! NO! Many people say I am sick in the head. NOOOO!!!! I don't believe them. But there are so many people commenting this stuff on my videos, that I have 1% doubt. So I have to ask you right now: Do you think I am sick in the head? Thanks for helping, my dear cj
The scene where they adopt Lewis and give him his own science lab gets me crying every time, it’s so beautiful, the way they love him for who he is and support his passion is so heartfelt 🥺🥺🥺
Same. I tear up every single time. Also when Wilbur asks Lewis why he let his birth mom go and Lewis tells him it’s because he already has a family. Tears every single time. ❤️❤️
That scene always makes me cry. They are not rich by any means. Yet they bet everything on their beloved son to support him. And he understands it and loves them for it... Makes me cry every time
I was adopted. I was really nerdy, and have loved inventing little gadgets for as long as I can remember. I suffered from social isolation and estrangement most of my childhood, and later was diagnosed with Asperger’s. Meet the Robinson helped me find passion and purpose, and in a way, showed me how to get past my anxieties and isolation. I related to Lewis on a fundamental and personal level. It gave me my dream to become an inventor, an engineer, and physicist which I am currently pursuing in college. Without Meet the Robinsons, I wouldn’t be where I am today. Keep moving forward. - -Oh yeah, a super cool detail I learned very recently, I learned that my birth-mothers maiden name was actually “Robinson!” How cool is that?!?!
Me too. Though I was adopted by a cruel foster parent. I’ve had to study physics and mathematics on my own because the foster parent wouldn’t let me go to a real college, just a community college and it’s very hard to get into a real university if you first went to a community college and now that I’ve finally gotten into one I might never get to go back thanks to stupid COVID rules making it hard to get the help I need with the paperwork, as my autism makes it difficult to handle paperwork and money and other such social constructs. I’m afraid my future is going to be like the Bowler Hat Guy’s.
@@nuclearcatbaby1131 I may have no reason to say that and I clearly don't know you and your life situation, but nah man. No way you're ending up like the bowler guy, not at all! Future holds something greater for you. Just keep moving forward, friend :)
I love how we see that when Cornelius & Lewis meet they have the same expression BECAUSE they’re the same person. It’s a nice little detail to have in this movie (Also the music in the movie is good)
Continuity is also very cool because the slip on the steps is heard in the very beginning and the mom looks back. It's revealed it's Louis just changing his mind at the end.
@@doc_shmock5022 i like to think that the scene we were seeing at the beginning was simply the one we saw when he went to visit his mom, just less context as an introduction and the scenes after that are the past so that way, we start off the movie like that and jump back into current timeline (like in megamind, for example. If this makes sense) so when he went to wake up goob, we as a viewer simply saw everything that happened in between, so yes for their now future after that, there should be no villian
@@nadastic I like to think that after a while when Goob got to be as old as he was as BHG he visits Luis and he gets a different kind of hat, a nice one instead of an evil one.
Personally, the "they all hated me" is something that I really feel. It can be so easy to get stuck in a self-hate and being overly critical of yourself that you end up applying that to everyone else, assuming that they despise you to, but they're trying to hide it out of politeness or some other motive.
Sad to say I still feel this way well into my twenties. I'm aware of it, constantly working on it, and honestly this movie and the analysis is definitely calling me the hell out right now. But I'm trying
The self hate often doesn't come from nowhere though. It usually stems from parents or other family members that actually did hate you and took every opportunity to show it by dunking on you constantly until you have no self esteem left to give yourself.
@@kymo6343 that, or repeated failure coupled with anxiety/depression thanks basically force you to throw your life down the drain and convince you it's your own fault...
The end where bowler hat guy couldn't accept that he could be loved and have a family is genuinely so tragic and reflects real life trauma victims so viscerally it breaks my heart every time.
This also always gets me. But the good news is, that future basically got overwritten by the new better future that Cornelius created at the end, where Goob found a real family! So he could grow up being happy
It's really heart-wrenching, but then we see him not only catch the ball, but get adopted himself, so he gets another chance at life, so to speak. That's so beautiful, it makes me cry.
That scene with "how does he look like?" "Tom Selleck" was actually really well adapted because, depending on which language you watched it in, they would show a different picture of the respective voice actor. I find that such a neat little detail. Edit: All you lovely people responding to this, what does Lewis say in your language when he's asked "Where are you from"? I know this specific sentence was adapted for different languages and I'm genuinely curious.
Someone else already said that, but it just proves many people like the added detail. its a nice way to keep the running gag throughout different countries, while also making it relatable to that country.
Fun fact: Here, in Latin America, Cornelius was voiced by the Venezuelan singer José Luis Rodríguez, also known as "El Puma", so in the family identification scene Wilbur says that Cornelius looks like "El Puma".
This movie means a lot to me in a weird way. I grew up in a home that while I had family, it wasn't a great one. It seemed like only my mistakes were seen as a solely bad thing. But I got a few things from this movie. 1. It was my first obvious exposure to "found family" and I adored the idea. 2. They celebrate failure as a way to celebrate learning. Then even big "you're in trouble" failure leads to the family helping the person in trouble. 3. "Keep moving forward" has become a personal motto that's helped a lot.
I love that detail that young Franny scolds Wilbur in the beginning of the movie. It’s a small thing that happens and then at the end it’s like “oh that was the kid version of his MOM scolding him”. It’s funny, even as a kid Franny scolds her son.
As an adoptee, I adore this movie and it always makes me cry. It's the ONLY movie I've ever seen that really shows how I feel as an adoptee. My adoptive family IS my family. I couldn't care less about finding my birth parents, they're strangers who I never think about unless someone asks me about it. If they wanted to find me, sure whatever, but I would never think about finding them. All the depictions of adoption and "non-traditional" families in media are "You're not my REAL parents!" and "I need to find my birth parents for some odd reason because I think that will complete something in me!" I hated growing up when people would realize I'm adopted because they only knew stories like Cinderella. I had other kids ask me "Is your mom evil like in Cinderella?!" and I was so mad and upset by that because my mom is amazing and I loved her. The truth is, adoption stories are all so different - adoptees have completely different experiences, but we're not ALL looking for our birth families. Some of us are so completely happy and living normal lives. And I love that the main character never knows why his mother left him a the orphanage, because many of will never know and don't even care. Representation matters, and representing adoptive families as just another normal healthy family is important. EDIT: Wow, thank you everyone for your kind comments and sharing your stories as well! Never expected such a response. All the suggestions and stories shared just shows how vast the adoptive experience is and how important it is to show all those perspectives
Thank you for sharing your perspective. I've often thought about adopting kids in the future, and this is something that I've found myself wondering about from time to time, essentially being emotionally prepared for whichever way they would react to estrangement from their birth parents as they get older. It's really nice to know that you were able to bound so deeply with your adoptive family and really encourages that more people out there should adopt ❤
I totally see what you mean. I'm not adopted, but my mother was, and loved her parents as much as she would her birth parents. I don't remember why she was given up for adoption, but I still agree that not everyone is the same, and I'm happy you have an amazing family. I'm sure they're very happy to have you. ❤
You took the words right out of my mouth! I am also an adoptee who watched this when it came out, at the time I was 13 years old. It helped me feel seen & acknowledged. It made me realise that I didn’t “need” to look for my birth parents just because people would always ask: “Do you want to meet your REAL parents?” I never felt the need to! Maybe one day in the future I might, but being 28 now it hasn’t changed. I wish there could be more representation in media about adoption stories. We all have it so different, and there are many nuances to it. No adoption story is ever alike! I find it fascinating and beautiful. Im so grateful for this movie. 🥰
Dr Waluiginshmertz’s story is so intentionally similar to Lewis/Cornelius and I always saw that as so deep. Being stuck in the past and unable to move forward, then eventually realizing you must “Keep Moving Forward”
I still think it's a good idea with a bad execution. It's a very unique approach of childhood and I remember the author of the Robinson history was an orphan too. But on the other hand, the animation is terrible (this is same year as shrek 2 and mother fkin ratatouille come on) and the balance feels/funny/wtf is this shit constantly downgrade the entire film. I admit hat man is funny but it comes so randomly I felt like it was a very long series episode. Sorry for bad eng xD.
This was the only disney movie where i actually cried for a movie, I remember at that time i was in that age where i thought i was tough and nothing could make me cry until the end of lewis gets adopted
I quote Meet the Robinsons a moderate amount to this day. Especially “I have a big head and small arms, and I’m not so sure how well this plan was thought through”
i quote the frog version of that line a lot myself. i am a very short person and for some reason all my family expects me to get the stuff on the high shelves 😂😂😂
Lewis’s line near the end of, “I already have a family.” stuck with me for years. Just such a beautiful way of showing he’s finally ready to move forward. It’s so damn good.
I don't know if it's been discussed here, but the director was an orphan and he made that change at the end of the plot to have Cornelius NOT see who his mother was, and when asked why, "Because I already have a family" because the director had that very same experience. He thought when he got into college that he would want to find out his birth family, but by the time he got to college, he had forgotten all about it because his family and life were so full of love. That was so kewl. It's in the DVD extras...
Another thing about the ending of this movie that makes it utterly phenomenal: the song that plays over the credits. Rob Thomas’ “Little Wonders” emotionally DESTROYS me every time I hear it.
did you know: there was a deleted scene which at the point when lewis goes to defeat the hat, he brings bowler hat guy to the day of the baseball game where he fell asleep, and he tries to wake him up, and he does, which, If I remember correctly, erases him from existence, while saying thank you to lewis. If you want to look at the deleted scenes, look em up on youtube
I was going to talk about that myself but you beat me to it. He also looks at the hat and then says "I'll never invent you" which makes the hat disappear. I thought that deleted scene was sweet honestly
Perhaps it was deleted because it wouldnt make sense for goob to “disappear” after Lewis rights a wrong, its not like with wilbur and the possibility that Lewis will just never have him as a son, because goob will still around. If anything future goob would transform into whatever past goob grows into. I like the ending we got with him.
One of the saddest scenes for me was when the (future) Robinsons were all ready to adopt Lewis but they found out who he was telling him he had to go back. Lewis didnt know HE was the father so he was crushed. Like he finally found a family who was willing to accept him but they took it back knowing what would happen if they did.
He truly belived no one would ever want to let him into their family except his biological mom too, so it was a shock to him seeing them willingly want adopt him
I’m surprised you didn’t talk about the ending song with “Little Wonders.” Easily one of the most under appreciated songs in my opinion. It always makes me cry. Especially when the lyrics say “Let it go. Let it roll right off your shoulders. Don’t you know? The hardest part is over.” It’s just absolutely perfect when it comes to Lewis and how he finally lets go of everything that brought him pain and misery to look forward to the bright future he has. I know this movie isn’t perfect, but it’s still such a delight of a film.
I didn't even understand the lyrics that much at that age (English is my second language, and my family doesn't speak it) and still it invoked something in me. Now that I'm 20++ I think I know what that song sparked: Nostalgia. _In a child!_
I wondered if anyone else felt as emotionally attached to this song and movie as me. I’m glad people feel the same way. I cry every time as well. Beautiful nostalgic song.
To me In my opinion this is still one of my favorite disney movies to date. It stuck with me so hard throughout a lot of years of my life, despite me only watching it once as a kid.
Fun fact: in the Swedish version, when they say "Texas" in the American version, they change it to "Skåne" the part of Sweden most similar to the wild west.
Specially the Southeastern part of Scania. Sjöbo, Skurup, Ystad, Tomelilla and Simrishamn. I moved to Lund and they are less like the Wild West and more like a science town
When I was much younger I didn't much like Meet the Robinsons, but when I found Matchbox Twenty (few years later) and heard one of their songs was in it... I was excited to see it again (and I liked it that time).
When my sister got married, she had that song play as she left the church. I didn’t expect it at all and we’ve both loved it for years, and I started totally bawling my eyes out as the opening notes hit
That interaction Lewis had with adult Franny was really important though. Cause that's exactly what happened in the past in order for Franny to marry Lewis, he had to say she was "right" for thinking frogs had musical talents. If Lewis had said she was crazy, the future in which we saw would not have existed, because Franny wouldn't have married Lewis, and Wilbur wouldn't have been born
The whole family put on an act for lewis There is a scene in the movie that this is a story he would tell the family one day Meaning they knew the entire time xD
Events unfolding differently in the timeline is a difficult subject because of the uncertainty involved. Since time never had the chance to walk an alternate path, we never truly know exactly what would have happened. There is valid speculation that, had the Titanic successfully made its maiden voyage, there could have been many more casualties in the first World War since the Central Powers could have sank the Titanic, leading the United States to join the Entente Powers in the battlefield much sooner, with much less preparation time, and with the Central Powers still fighting close to their best. The U.S. joining the war later was likely key in the defeat of the Central Powers since everyone already involved had mostly tired themselves out then the U.S. jumped in and said "Sorry I'm late, let's kick some ass". If the U.S. had joined earlier as a result of civilian deaths at the hands of the Central Powers, the outcome of the war, and, by extention, the course of global history, could have been much different. Video games provide a good example of differing events. Undertale, for example, could see you dying at most any point, and no matter when or where you die, the course of that universe remains mostly the same from our perspective, though killing certain characters and sparing others gets you a phone call from Sans that is tailored to the scenario you left behind once you beat the game in a neutral run. Ultimately, unless you manage to spare everyone and complete the true pacifist route, the alteration of history in any universe is localized entirely to the underground since Frisk probably has no existing family since they can choose to stay with Toriel at the end of the pacifist run.
@@raphaeldagamer Russia turned the tide to win WW2 not the US. This is the exact reason why Russia reached the Capital of Germany and concentration camps sooner
@@DaftPunkSkittle I was talking about World War 1, not 2. Credit where it's due, Russia joining in was crucial to allied victory in the second World War. Hitler was an idiot and chose to piss off the only single country with the means to actually beat back his forces, and he chose to try to fight them in the middle of a violent winter. If the cold and lack of provisions left any soldiers standing, the Russian soldiers were sure to finish them off.
Also although i dont know how much thought they put into the time travel theme, but I really love how the whole motto and message of the movie is to "keep moving forward" through hardships and failures, but yet reflecting on past mistakes and physically traveling back in time is was caused the future to be saved. I remember loving this movie as a kid, and I'm seeing i need to rewatch it as an adult!
The subtle small detail at the beginning of the film when the mother hears present Lewis slipping and runs off and then showing what happened in Lewis Pov at the end of the movie. I absolutely loves this film
Why is no one talking about Mildred?? When she picks Lewis up, she looks at him with so much love! Lewis wanted to meet his mother, and he sees his first mother figure there!
One part of this movie I noticed that it doesn't seem others have, is at the beginning when lewis' birth mother leaves lewis on the top of the stairs, we hear someone slip and she looks behind her, and at the end when lewis is about to meet his mother, he walks away and slips creating the same noise and causing lewis' mom to look behind her. These little gems are why meet the robinsons is one of my favourite movies.
I also love the fact that at the beginning of the movie you can hear someone knocking on the orphanage door before Mildred opens it. In the end we find out that it was Lewis who knocked on the door. The attention to detail fascinates me, this movie is a gem.
Another thing to love about this is how they explicitely celebrate the love between adoptive parents and children, which is so criminally rare on children's media. It's always "oh, who is my real father" and blood relationship that see a wonderful family start up from a couple deciding to adopt this kid is such a wonderful thing, because that is also the experience of a lot of children. I love, love too that the movie never shows the biological mother or why she gave Louis because it doesn't matter anyway. If she went as far to go to an orphanage to give up the baby, she had already decided she didn't want to be a mom and Louis either wouldn't have convinced her of doing anything no matter what he said or she would have resented him for convincing her of doing something she didn't want to.
I think The Willobouys also has similar story. Elaborating the relationship between foster parents and children while focusing on the blood relationship isn't always good as it seems.
Nah dude 'cause I recently re-watched this movie and I was just SOBBING, it made me feel so many things. I was just crying at the Robinsons hyping my man after he failed to repair the PB&J machine. Absolute masterpiece, I remember it as one of my favorite movies as a child even when I didn't fully understand it at the time.
It's so good to have a children's film that doesn't have a narrative based around destiny in some form. Kids can get so discouraged when the media around them is full of Chosen Ones.
@@frank-2martialoffrankoslav151 Depends on the kid, I guess. Both extremes can happen when you teach people that greatness is some innate thing that you either have or don't.
Fun fact: Bowler Hat Guy was initially going to be played by Jim Carrey, but he turned down the role to star in the film, The Number 23, so the director, Stephen Anderson, stepped in to voice him, Grandpa Bud, and Cousin Tallulah!
Not gonna lie, the design of the Time Machine is such a freaking masterpiece, the sounds, how Lewis repairs it, the colors, the look; I would love to see designs like that more.
@@tomdrawsstuffs6092 Retrofuturism is a theme rather than a design artstyle. You can make retrofuturism of almost any design of the past, like Steampunk (Victorian).
keep moving forward this movie gave me that mentality in life.I was 8 when i watched this movie,im 21 and still remember to keep moving forward despite failure.
16:38 The part where Goob stays in the closed orphanage almost his entire life while listening to Lewis' accomplishments via radio, and we see him gradually getting older and more dismantled, it hits so hard.😨
As an adopted person, I latched onto this movie as a kid. I love its themes of failure and rejection, and still moving forward, as well as Lewis acknowledgment of his true family. I think everyone that is adopted can relate to both Lewis and Goob and their struggle to feel wanted. Its honestly I think the best movie aboit orphans.
“This is the era of Disney defined by its forgettability and mediocrity.” It’s true now that I’m grown up, but, as a 2000s kids who grew up watching most of those movies, I digress.
In the original ending outlines, Lewis and Bowler Hat Guy went back to the baseball game *together* to wake Goob up. They watch him be carried off on his teammates' shoulders and Lewis asked why didn't Bowler Hat Guy just do this in the first place. Bowler Hat Guy admitted he didn't know and then he faded away. I'm not sure which ending I prefer.
I think I like the ending they went with. It leaves more to the audience to guess what happened to him, if that changed his future and he faded away or that he was destined to become the Bowler Hat Guy anyway.
@@greenmushroom2587 Turns out, I was wrong. Lewis didn't ask Bowler Hat Guy why he didn't do this in the first place--but they do reconcile and then he banishes DORIS. ua-cam.com/video/f6bmG_YDcHA/v-deo.html
I really like that ending, but I think the ending they went with works a little better because it's a recognition that Lewis caused Goob pain and that he should try to correct that.
The final cut had better flow and better resolution with Bowler Hat Guy. The alt ending was rushed and way on the nose, they really needed to let the face-turn of BHG to sink in. Doris actually tries to put up a fight when Lewis comes to stop them, instead of just sitting there and letting it happen (3rd Law of Robotics). Lewis personally helps little Goob wake up in time, fixing something that was kinda his fault to begin with.
Two years after this review I still cannot get over this movie, literally one of the best I've ever seen. Specifically the scene where the news reporter says "you have a bright future ahead of you" and he just looks at Lucille, Bud, and young Franny with the biggest smile and says "Yeah." Because he's already seen what that future will be and he's looking forward to it. OML thats when the waterworks started, I love Meet the Robinsons with my whole heart.
Tiny detail I noticed. Just before Lewis leaves for the fair, Mildred tells Lewis that he's got another adoption meeting. During the end, Lucille mentions her ride isn't there yet. I believe they were going to be the next couple who were going to interview Lewis.
True though, also I like to add that Mildred said that this couple would be the 'one' for Lewis and considering that Lucille is a scientist herself and Bud is quite the eccentric guy, I find it quite possible they were the couple for that interview
I think what makes the "liar revealed" part work in this one is that Wilbur was doing a selfish and cruel thing, and its treated as such. He's called out for it, rather than "OH BUT HE HAD REALLY GOOD INTENTIONS!!!" he's shown to be wrong for misleading Lewis the entire time. Its not like "OH BUT I CAN SEE WHY HES DOING IT". Also, I do wish you mentioned that Goob outright says he wants to move on past the baseball game, and that's what his coach told him to do, but the Bowler Hat Guy tells him to keep it pent up and fester instead. It continues the message of taking ones failures and moving forward, since Goob was ready to do such but is sabotaged in a way by himself, which leads to his self sabotaging personality coming to fruition.
@@blugaledoh2669 he was really just bringing Lewis to the future to fix his motivation, but Lewis wanted to see his mom using the time machine. This caused it to break, and Lewis being smarter was the only one who could fix it without Wilbur letting his family know it was broken. Wilbur knew letting Lewis see his mom might erase his timeline, so he said he would take him but tells the family robot he is lying to Lewis, who later finds out. Wilbur of course, by the end stays true to his initial promise.
@@StagFiesta I am not sure how to feel about that. In your original comment, you make it seem like Wilbur is just being cruel and selfish (well I supposed he was), but doesn't have any good cause.
@@blugaledoh2669 His "good" cause for lying is to avoid getting in trouble with his parents if Antler didn't explain it well enough. He goes to the past to motivate Lewis because he is tired of failure, right? Good motivation. Then Lewis wants to go back in time to see his mother because he thinks he can convince her to keep him. Good intentions, probably doomed to fail and only make his life worse. Then they break the time machine when Lewis tries to go back to the past, which was an accident. Wilbur knows he has to bring Lewis back to his own time, so he need to fix the time machine, but since he can't do it himself, he either needs to tell his parents he took it and then broke it, or have Lewis fix it. Lewis won't fix it unless Wilbur promises to take him to see his mom, so Wilbur lies to get Lewis to fix the time machine without letting Wilbur's parents find out
"I've got a big head, and tiny little arms" was quoted a lot around my house. I really forgot where that came from but this is a charming movie. As someone who was... at least partly adopted, I have always loved movies with the theme of adoption. The family you make is more precious than the superficial blood that brings you into this world. Your family should love you - but the people YOU choose to love and who choose to love you - those are the people who are worth something.
@@timhess8249 my dad is my biological father, but my mom went through the trouble of adopting me. (There's a long story but suffice it to say that my biological mom didn't want to raise kids)
14:40 As a kid, I was blown away by both major twists/reveals in the movie. I DO see how they are just a wee bit predictable to almost anyone over the age of like.. 12, though. 😆
I'm honestly surprised that Schaffrillas didn't talk about how great the soundtrack is. Like, "Little Wonders" and "The Future Has Arrived" are genuinely some of the most uplifting songs I've ever listened to in my life.
I discovered this film through a Little Witch Academia AMV set to Little Wonders. I thought there was no way the scene could live Up to the expectations the song set for me. I was so wrong. This is what cinema is supposed to be.
I love the part near the end where child Lewis asks adult Cornelius if his future will still look the same and Cornelius tells him that (paraphrased) “it’s up to you” because I feel like that reinforces the themes of the movie so well and also keeps the movie from feeling like everything is inevitable/meant to be, despite there being time travel in the movie. Everything can change; it just depends on you. You get to shape the future that you want to see. Lewis always had the ability to make that future for himself, but it wasn’t until he saw that could that he felt empowered to actually push himself to make that reality a possibility for himself.
It's actually proven to not be inevitable or meant to be, because of the dark future where Doris took over everything. So it really is up to Lewis if he wants the good future to be as he saw it.
One thing that confused me was why Doris was trying so hard to kill Louis. Wouldn't destroying your creators past self cause the same result of it never being invented?
Maybe I’m looking too far into this, but isn’t Doris meant to be a manifestation of the dark side of Lewis’ failures? As in, it doesn’t care about logic or reason, as it’s all worthless and meaningless in the end? In that case, it makes sense that it would be trying to kill Lewis. We could also say this perhaps alludes to the theme of suicidal ideation but I highly doubt Disney would go THAT far, even when considering how heavy other themes of this movie are.
This movie is amazing and gets better with every viewing. There is just so much to unpack, and the depth is there. The final scene with Goob changing his check list at the end and not taking a handout is one of the best villain ending I have ever seen. It's very much a I screwed up and I need to figure this out on my own.
I’ve always thought of “Meet the Robinsons” as a spiritual successor to “Robots” not because both movies were inspired by the illustrative works of William Joyce, nor how Rodney and Lewis are inventors that each aspire goals worth fulfilling. Rather, it’s their simple, yet profoundly optimistic morals people like me will remember them for.
@@kittykittybangbang9367 There’s definitely a pattern with animated Joyce adaptations in which they usually fly under the radar for over a decade before each movie gradually develops an online following.
Fun fact: In the Latin American translation of this movie, they took the liberty to make the "How does Cornelius look like?" relatable by changing it to Jose Luis Rodríguez, El Puma, a Latin singer from the 80s. AND THEY ALSO CHANGED THE PHOTO. It's just so well done
@@Otra_Chica_de_Internet as milenial Colombian i didn't too but the fact that they changed it for a random latin reference i didn't even get made it even Hilarious imho
Same with the Italian version, they referenced Giovanni Muciaccia, the host of a very popular (and good) children's crafts programme (who also ended up voicing Cornelius). I remember laughing a lot at that joke as a kid, as it was one of the few "celebrities" I was actually able to recognise
This movie meant so much to me as a kid because I was adopted at an age before I could ever even begin to remember my mom. For a long time, I wanted to know and meet who my parents were, but my foster parents didn't know them, and my brothers always told me it was for the best I didn't. This movie really helped me to realize that I should just move forward and focus on what's in front of me. A few years ago, I did actually meet my mom and she is a nice lady, but she has a range of mental problems. On top of that, my dad was not only abusive, but a schizophrenic too; always thought she was cheating or that his kids (my brothers) were talking to police about him. When I was 3 months old, she decided to give all her children (4 sons including me) away to DCFS and have us protected from our father. My oldest brother only told me all of this after a night of drinking on his birthday. Anyways, yeah Meet the Robinsons was a pretty good film that meant quite a bit to me as a child, just thought I'd share.
The dynamic between Wilbur and Lewis is so friggin sweet and wholesome to watch, especially when Lewis figures out that he's Wilbur's father. That moment at the end where they have to say goodbye hits me in the feels every time.
I like when he grabs him by the ear and scolds him saying "I am your father and you have to listen to me! >:(" perfect blend of childish and parental lol
"Keep moving forward" was my graduation quote, but the one that comes to mind most often is "You failed! And it was awesome!" That one line and that scene overall has gotten me through so much in my career and life. And the family reminds me of the family in You Can't Take it With You with all their passions and quirks. Love this film.
Your analyses are my absolute comfort videos, they just make me all warm and fuzzy inside. And yeah, i have them on in the background when i play minecraft and other games. I watch them over and over :)
I remember how different this movie was after seeing it in theaters. I've never forgotten how blown away I was by Goob turning out to be Bowler Hat Guy!
i think the point of all the random filler robinsons was to show lewis they value everyone for their own unique interests and personalities. since we know lewis and franny both grow up as kids w special interests who werent accepted for it, this is the most important part of the movie for communicating what lewis is going to experience. its everything hes ever wanted. people who celebrate his strangeness and support him in failure. this house is such a safe space for the random creatures and people that inhabit it, truly such an amazing display of the found family concept. lewis is arguably the most 'normal' of all the robinsons extended family but i think he needed to see the whole family to really understand they WONT judge him and they WONT just cast him aside. if youre living with random twins who live in tree pots, an octopus, singing frogs, and a super hero pizza deliverer, a young inventor is absolutely welcomed.
that brings us to the question: How many neurodivergent characters are there in the movie? wait nevermind that's sounds too Twitter-ish. Or maybe I'm judging myself too much.
"I have no future. Nobody wants me." "But, nobody believes me. They all think I'm crazy." Yup, they'd grow up to have an aversion to judgment and estrangement.
I actually think the never ending list of Robinsons we have to meet serves a specific purpose. So far, we've seen Lewis be very focused on inventing and acting like a pseudo grown up with the solum, lonely task of finding family. We end up finding out that he has an endless list of people who, not only love him, but also let him have that youthful and quirky energy he missed out on in his childhood. Maybe 4 or 5 people could've been sufficient (as mentioned in the video) but I don't think this would have been fulfilling enough for Lewis after all he's been through.
Another cool note: Louis stopped himself from meeting his birth mother when she saw her hugging his past self. Earlier he said "my real mother is the only person who ever wanted me" but the movie even acknowledges that he has no way of actually knowing that. What Louis wanted most wasn't knowing his birth mother's identity, it was knowing he was wanted by someone. By seeing how sad the woman was to let go of her baby, he had closure. He knew that he had been wanted in the past and could fully except the family that wanted him in the future.
"Keep moving forward" is a line that stuck to me ever since I've seen this movie and even when sometimes I forget about who said it, I still remember this quote that motivates me to get up again when I feel myself slipping. One of the few instances I'll ever appreciate Disney is because of this movie
Me too ! I was struggling in college & kept feeling like a faliure but this quote reminded me to try & try again. Its because of my struggles that I remembered this impactful quote & then the movie that embodies it.
I like the original ending they had for Goob In a deleted scene, Louis takes Goob to the day of the game to wake himself up, and he thanks Louis and disappears. Then Doris is just by herself and Louis goes "I'm not gonna invent you" and she just pops out of existence.
That is a nice ending, but I think that the ending they chose best reflects the lesson of the movie. You can't and shouldn't change the past, instead, let it go and keep moving forward.
@@acroissant3721 actually, you know what would be better? Instead of changing the baseball game, maybe Louis would go to Goob after the game and tells him to just let it go, and not focus on the past so much. *Edit: and also apologize for keeping him up all night and try to make it up for him.* Or maybe stop the bowler hat guy from talking to Goob somehow idk
“-Hey Goob, cool binder. -They all hated me” me at 9 y/o: haha silly Goob, they dont hate you me now: This really portrays the deep emotional scarring Goob experienced from that moment as he can no longer see people genuinely being happy towards him, instead believing that it’s all a front to hide resentment
The fact that the Robinson's future isn't immediately erased after Lewis's science fair disaster is very much consistent with the themes of failure and "moving forward" (just as Goob's baseball disaster wouldn't have been the end for him had he adapted a forward-thinking mindset), and the last few scenes of the movie pretty much confirm that in the most subtle yet satisfying way. Neat stuff.
Maybe the disaster was what caused the Robinson family to get to where it was in the future, and would have been erased if Doris has never sabotaged him
You know that's probably why the science fair incident wasn't erased with the time travel shenanigans, it was always part of the story, just as failure is part of success, but we must *keep moving forward* . Idk, I just like to think about it like that.
Tbh I think as someone who was adopted, along with my brother, this movie was a big learning experience for us. I used to be really caught up on the “what if’s” that came along with adoption and always wondered why I was given up. But after this movie it kind of puts things into perspective and is honestly a really good learning tool
I think you misunderstood the part where Lewis interacts with his future wife before going back to his timeline. It's not supposed to be "weird", as you put it. You might actually be the first person I've seen to even put it in this light, which is ironically weird in itself. But anyways, all she says is "Remember one thing: I am always right. Even when I'm wrong, I'm right." What this scene conveys is that on a surface level, it seems like the tired joke "women are always 'right'" but it's actually Fran giving Lewis a hint on how to communicate with her younger self when they finally meet. She's been told by everyone around her that she was "crazy" and that her inventions were never going to work, she's similar to Lewis in that way and he does not only what his future family says in "keep moving forward" but also does what Future Fran told him while simultaneously returning the favor to her.
Yeah I don't find that part weird at all, it's quite wholesome and funny. There is one weird interaction I'd say and that's when Lewis called her "mom", but its pretty brief
@@magicalgirl4 yeah, but he didn't know it was his wife so it's not his fault. And honestly, Back to the Future was WAY weirder in that regard because they actually had a blood relative hitting on the main character (yes, I know she didn't know it was her son), which these movies put together tell me that your ancestors will try to bang you but not your future spouse aaaannnndddd I don't know how to feel about that... 😐
@@i_will_not_elaborate agreed, in BTTF it’s so much worse. At least on a first watch through of MTR it’s cute how he calls him mom, because she’s a mom to Wilbur and at that point he’d feel like they’re brothers of some sort (especially since he never got to call anyone mom), but then on rewatch it’s sort of weird bc you know that he’s her future husband
The "keep moving forward" theme hits me like a brick in retrospect. I loved this movie as a kid, and I'm watching this video because I've been on a big nostalgia kick due to not being able to recover from something that happened in my late childhood. god, that really hurts.
The ending still makes me cry honestly. It has that quick kind of humor that reminded me of the best of Hoodwinked, but also a very strong emotional core
The funniest part of the entire movie:
“Hey Goob! Nice binder!”
“You want to go to my house today!”
*They all hated me*
That’s such a great picture of what insecurity feels like
this scene actually makes me really sad, even tho it used to make me laugh, cause it really shows how even if goob is treated nicely, he never stops feeling like everyone resents him. i feel like that almost all the time, like even if people are complimenting me or being nice, its cause they feel bad, or they're just hiding their annoyance with me. idk i kinda relate to goob in some sad way :')
It's the funniest part of the movie, and is also surprisingly the most depressing and accurate part of the movie (mainly irl with.... many people)
My brother was like “bish no they don’t”
Loved it and loved how much I relate to it lmao
“they all hated me” and “i have a big head and little arms” have been running jokes between me and my brother for 10 years they’re hilarious😭
i love you both
I tried, oh I tried, to make it a thing, but it failed. At least I got to make “…mast-eerrr???” a thing with some of my friends as a combination of this film and _Igor_
Yes
"they all hated me" has been the same for me for YEARSSSS too :D
I’m so glad another person and their family has latched on to “I have a big head, and little arms”
I’m very surprised he didn’t mention the “secret” thing in the opening. The mother runs away after hearing something slip behind her. And in the sequence where Lewis goes back to the past, he slips on the stairs after finally deciding he didn’t want to know about his mom. It’s a nice little detail that I couldn’t spot when watching it.
Thats honestly amazing
Clever bit of continuity that makes the movie better.
this then implies that there's no "multiple timelines created whenever something is changed via time travel" trope which then breaks the continuity of that movie because Lewis decides to wake up Goob resulting in none of events of the movie taking place.
@@firespark0774 Wow you are very observant, what you said its true
@@firespark0774 yes it does basically the prisoner of Azkaban scenario. However this movie also makes the mistake of showing the apocalyptic future impling choices can affect the future. Still a great movie
I adopted my son a little bit before this came out. He was just shy of 8 years old. After he watched this movie, it became his favorite for several years, and he asked for the DVD as a birthday gift from his grandma (my mom) when he was a teen, so he could watch it when he was at college. I think it helped him reconcile his past with his future. Since then he became a marine and then afterwards went to UCLA and is working for the government, and seems happy. I'm glad they had a good movie about adoption, and yes one where the group home foster mother is nice. He grew up in an orphanage, but the director there was nice, and was adopted herself, so not all are mean.
awww
What a beautiful comment, thanks for sharing :)
goop
The thing I didn't like about this movie is the "orphanage" home when the U.S got rid of this and it became the foster care system. Honestly a little slap in the face cause many state governments like FL tend to call foster kids orphans when the term is defined as "a child whose parent(s) are dead". I'm glad you adopted your kid. I wished more people choose adoption.
That's a beautiful story. Happy father's day!
“They all hated me” is no joke the perfect blend of comedy and tragedy. Like it portrays both so well
It's the best joke in the movie for sure.
It was only funny then but now I understood that completely and man that hurts
It’s also like…How it feels to have severe anxiety and depression.
@@sophieamandaleitontoomey9343 definitely. I was a lonely kid but it was almost entirely self-imposed bc I thought nobody wanted to be my friend, but looking back there were plenty of people that tried, I just wasn't receptive.
Dude fr
I’ve seen the “they all hated me” thing as a meme and the backstory makes it a 100 times more funny
Yes
I'm surprised the bowler hat guy hasn't become a meme yet, there is so much potential
@@kittykittybangbang9367 wasn't there a meme with him saying "I am here to change the future" or something
@@masicbemester I don't think so
@@masicbemester @kittykittybangbang sounds like someone did change the future
Fun fact: in most dubs, Tom Selleck's face was changed to reflect Cornelius' voice actors from different countries, which were usually celebrities.
José Luis Rodríguez El Puma in latin american spanish, it's so funny I still openly laugh when i see the scene. This detail is one of the best of this movie, they didnt have to adapt it but they did bless them fr
True!!!!
True ! Comfirm this from latinoamerica
@@octabodemes He was El Puma for me too. I haven't seen the film unless it was in theaters or on the Disney Channel, so I'm curious to know how that scene played out on VHS and DVD.
Ahh yes,el puma.
Describing bowler hat guy as a combination of Waluigi and Doofenshmirtz is perfect
Whos the guy in the middle of the graph?
@@Kevin-cp3ex Dick Dastardly (Pierre Nodoyuna for me, personally, because of the Spanish dub), main antagonist of the Hanna Barbera series Wacky races (Los autos locos).
Dr. Doofuigi 😂 classic 😅
@@ramonparelladamartin4877 Dick Dastardly yes but also Snidely Whiplash from Rocky & Bullwinkle for sure
Genuinely surprised there was never a FNAF reference in this video...
The T-Rex quote, “I’ve got a big head and little arms. I’m just not sure how well this plan was thought through,” is non-stop quoted within my family. We never forgot this movie.
...,Master ):
100th like
I never even saw it for years and it was a great quote from the commercials
Same in our family! 😂
Us too lol
Honestly, I didn't expect the twists of Lewis being wilbur's dad or bowler hat guy being goob when I first watched the movie
This is one of the few good twist villian plots that actually worked
I watched the movie a lot during years 1-4, but my memory wasn’t good enough to remember the twists until I was five. They were always shocking.
same and I was 14 when I first watched it lol
I'm your 700th
I think I guessed the Lewis being Cornelius pretty early, but BHG being Goob totally caught me
“Perfect melding of waluigi and doof”
Truer words have never been spoken
I hate to be that guy...
But Actually: you just said truer words.
LOL
Funnily enough, Dr. Heinz Doofenshmirtz also debuted in 2007.
My favorite part of this movie is when Bowler Hat Guy first goes to present the invention and is asked:
"What do you hope to accomplish with this?"
"Oh, nothing of consequence, I simply wish to *CRUSH THE DREAMS OF A POOR LITTLE ORPHAN BOY!* Beyond that... it's a little fuzzy."
"You mean you haven't thought this through?"
🤣🤣🤣
One of my favorite exchanges in the movie comes just before that:
You're the 2:00?
Yes I am!
You're Mary Johnson?
Yes, it's short for...
Marion?
Can that be a boy name?!?!
Yes
(grins) Then, yes!
Fun fact: The Bowler Hat Guy was originally supposed to be a more evil and serious villain, but when John Lassiter took charge of Disney and read the script, he told the production crew to make him a more comedic yet sympathetic villain and have him a partner to balance him out.
Well at least he did one good thing I guess
I didn’t know John worked on the movie, I can kinda see his influence in it now that you mention it
………… huh. Lassiter actually did some good. Who would’ve thought???
@@Dr.Meme-Man
He did direct toy story 1 and 2 after all. Misconduct at work sure, but we can't dismiss his good works.
@@sethhowell3067 whatd he do?
There's one joke in "meet the Robinsons family" that i remembered to this day, my favourite out of movie. It's when Lewis lists all the Robinsons:
"Spike & Dimitri are twins but I'm not sure how they're related?"- " Neither do we, go on."
Meaning: Two random guys live in their tree pots. We don't know where they came from or who they are, but they're family
I guess they just appeared one day and sort of stayed.
crying rn
Maybe they're plant-human hybrids that Louis made
😂😂😂
@@ashikjaman1940 Oh my gosh, I love that theory. 😂👏
The “Incompetent Villain who’s kept in check by a well meaning henchman” trope is, in my opinion, one of the best villain tropes ever, and this movie pulls it off very well, if unconventionally
It Often Explains how a Villain can be So Incompetent, yet, so Successful
Except its a stretch to call dorris "well meaning"
Dr drakken and shego are my favorite examples of this trope.
The first thing that came to my mind is Lord Hater and Commander Peepers from Wander Over Yonder
@@glendarjj3991 In context for the scenes she(?)'s involved in... yeah definitely. It does feel like that before Dorris is an actual threat
The reason this movie is my favorite Disney movie of all time is how they portray Wilbur.
Wilbur has to be my favorite Disney character of all time. He’s funny and likable and he knows karate. But all that aside, he is a 13 year old boy who has made several mistakes. He is such a relatable character that it hurts when we figure out that he was never planning on taking Lewis to see his mother.
But, if you played the video game or heard about it, you know the whole plot of the game is centered around Wilbur. He makes all these mistakes INCLUDING the one that set the whole movie up. Forgetting to lock the garage door. In the game, he goes back in time to try to fix the future. But, the future worsens the more he changes it.
The movie picks up right where the game left off. Wilbur goes back in time, grabs Lewis and takes him to the future. Strikes a deal with Lewis (which he never intends to do) and Lewis tries to fix the time machine.
The reveal of Wilbur’s lie to everyone was a great scene in the movie. It is so under utilized and should’ve been more focused on. Lewis’s glare at him when he ally’s with Bowler Hat Guy really shows his anger towards him. Wilbur messed up again and from what I thought when I first watched this movie, it was no way he was gonna fix it.
But he did. Later though. When Lewis figures out the truth, Wilbur finds him and they escape from Bowler Hat Guy. However, Bowler Hat Guy takes Lewis’s Memory Scanner and tries to pass it off as his own. While he’s doing that, Wilbur tries to convince Lewis that he has to fix the time machine. And when he does that he says a line that gives me chills every time I hear it. The line is:
“Look, I messed up! I left the garage unlocked but I’ve tried like crazy to fix things! Now it’s up to you!…You can do it, dad.”
Then he’s erased from existence. I was crushed the first time I watched it because I never thought we’d see him again. Lucky for us though, he comes back and better than ever.
And after everything, he still goes through with his deal to Lewis. Even though he could alter everything he’s ever gone through. Lewis didn’t actually meet his mother however and leaves a confused Wilbur to wonder why he didn’t. Wilbur’s goodbye to Lewis is so wholesome I literally felt like crying. Then he’s gone and that’s the last time we ever see him.
Wilbur is a great character at heart like you said. He’s selfish and thinks only about himself. For some people, one lesson isn’t enough for them to realize their mistakes. Some people are just stuck and have to be pushed to a point where they have no choice but to realize the error of their ways and changing is the only way they can get unstuck. That is a definition of Wilbur. He is selfish and only likes about doing things his way. But then, he then chooses the selfless option rather than the selfish option and takes Lewis back to see his mom. Which is the sweetest thing ever. He’s a great kid and deserves more recognition.
(Btw: The scene in the Science Fair when Wilbur trips some random kid who he thinks is Bowler Hat Guy is comedic gold in my opinion which you forgot to add in “The Funny”)
I’ve watched this movie a million times, and I don’t think I ever caught the part where Wilbur trips a kid he thinks is Bowler Hat Guy. Now I have to watch it again!
13 years from 2024 that means louis has this kid at 29 while he becomes a inventor
I like to imagine that in the new future, Goob became a famous baseball player who still remained friends with Lewis even after he became a famous inventor.
I wish we would’ve saw that like he’d look like a more athletic Bowler Hat guy (keeping his mustache hopefully)
@@Mr_bukowski4435 yeesss
@@Mr_bukowski4435 He become is *THE ONE* but no one is *THE ONE* the One as *Escanor* !
IM GONNA GO DRAW THAT RN AHHHH THANK YOU THANK YOU
He did end up freakishly tall
The scene where Wilbur is basically killing himself by fulfilling his deal with Lewis really shows how much he has matured. He's willing to let whatever happens even if it means that it kills him off.. It's basically teenage suicide in a Disney film.
I love that band, great to see they are getting recognition by Disney!
Did not ever think about that, potentially getting yourself killed because of a promise you want to fufill. That's deep. It also kinda is suicide, just not in the traditional sense we're used to.
@@CausticSpace lol
Oh my goodness
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Something I find kinda sad is that the kids who were complimenting Goob and asking if he wanted to hang out were the same kids who beat him up at the ball game
So even his teammates moved on from what Goob did but Goob didn’t
OMG IVE NEVER NOTICED THAT!! It could just be reusing character models again but I like this interpretation.
Prolly different characters but same model..
Or maybe not
I mean, maybe if they apologized to him for beating him up and humiliating him, and told him that it wasn’t his fault they lost the game, maybe he wouldn’t have been so petty and bitter.
Then again, Micheal/Goob’s fate may have been inevitable (that is if he couldn’t let go of the past and keep moving forward), because after that whole incident, it made him felt that his chances at something he seemed to have a passion for were gone. Because who will adopt a kid who made a dumb move like that in a game? Who will even want a make a career for him when literally fell asleep in the last inning?
@@osmanyousif7849 It was his fault they lost the game.
The axe forgets. The tree remembers.
The thing that makes even the background family characters in the future work for me, is the idea that all Louis wanted was a big happy family. A family that was supportive, loving, and weird like he was. So it didn't matter that they weren't all fleshed out, they all had a joke or two, and they were all warm, welcoming, and willing to sacrifice everything to protect him when it really mattered. And I feel like that's exactly what the Robinson's knock right out of the ballpark. It captures the vibe of when you walk into that house full of those people, you feel like you're welcome, and you're right at home.
AND THEN ROB THOMAS RIPS MY HEART OUT MORTAL COMBAT STYLE AT THE END WITH LITTLE WONDERS!!!! AHHHHH!!! 😭😭😭😭
I'm gonna give this movie immediate props for being LITERALLY the only film I can think of for not making an orphanage or its owners a terrible place.
I really loved that about the film as well. Its nice cause I legit can't think of another film that explores this topic without the orphanage being a horrible place.
NO! NO! NO! Many people say I am sick in the head. NOOOO!!!! I don't believe them. But there are so many people commenting this stuff on my videos, that I have 1% doubt. So I have to ask you right now: Do you think I am sick in the head? Thanks for helping, my dear cj
@@AxxLAfriku with that reply you probably are
@@AxxLAfriku I think I've seen u comment this before somewhere
this movie and My Life As A Courgette are literally the only movies I've ever seen where the owners actually give a shit about the kids
The scene where they adopt Lewis and give him his own science lab gets me crying every time, it’s so beautiful, the way they love him for who he is and support his passion is so heartfelt 🥺🥺🥺
Same. I tear up every single time. Also when Wilbur asks Lewis why he let his birth mom go and Lewis tells him it’s because he already has a family. Tears every single time. ❤️❤️
SAME OMFG:(
That scene always makes me cry. They are not rich by any means. Yet they bet everything on their beloved son to support him. And he understands it and loves them for it... Makes me cry every time
This is the reason that I only watch this movie once. Because i legit ugly cry during the ending scene. 😭😂
The music makes it so much better
I was adopted. I was really nerdy, and have loved inventing little gadgets for as long as I can remember. I suffered from social isolation and estrangement most of my childhood, and later was diagnosed with Asperger’s.
Meet the Robinson helped me find passion and purpose, and in a way, showed me how to get past my anxieties and isolation. I related to Lewis on a fundamental and personal level.
It gave me my dream to become an inventor, an engineer, and physicist which I am currently pursuing in college.
Without Meet the Robinsons, I wouldn’t be where I am today.
Keep moving forward.
- -Oh yeah, a super cool detail I learned very recently, I learned that my birth-mothers maiden name was actually “Robinson!” How cool is that?!?!
Me too. Though I was adopted by a cruel foster parent. I’ve had to study physics and mathematics on my own because the foster parent wouldn’t let me go to a real college, just a community college and it’s very hard to get into a real university if you first went to a community college and now that I’ve finally gotten into one I might never get to go back thanks to stupid COVID rules making it hard to get the help I need with the paperwork, as my autism makes it difficult to handle paperwork and money and other such social constructs. I’m afraid my future is going to be like the Bowler Hat Guy’s.
@@nuclearcatbaby1131 I may have no reason to say that and I clearly don't know you and your life situation, but nah man. No way you're ending up like the bowler guy, not at all! Future holds something greater for you. Just keep moving forward, friend :)
@@hagonistheman7880 How do you know it's fake?
Coincidence? I think not!
we found the protagonist
I love how we see that when Cornelius & Lewis meet they have the same expression BECAUSE they’re the same person. It’s a nice little detail to have in this movie
(Also the music in the movie is good)
Continuity is also very cool because the slip on the steps is heard in the very beginning and the mom looks back. It's revealed it's Louis just changing his mind at the end.
That along with the knock at the door being louis and not his mom
yeah but then when he wakes goob up it technically means that there should have been no villain for the whole movie
@@doc_shmock5022 i like to think that the scene we were seeing at the beginning was simply the one we saw when he went to visit his mom, just less context as an introduction and the scenes after that are the past so that way, we start off the movie like that and jump back into current timeline (like in megamind, for example. If this makes sense)
so when he went to wake up goob, we as a viewer simply saw everything that happened in between, so yes for their now future after that, there should be no villian
@@nadastic I like to think that after a while when Goob got to be as old as he was as BHG he visits Luis and he gets a different kind of hat, a nice one instead of an evil one.
@@TheBlackAntagonist Oh Yes!! That’s so nice.
Personally, the "they all hated me" is something that I really feel. It can be so easy to get stuck in a self-hate and being overly critical of yourself that you end up applying that to everyone else, assuming that they despise you to, but they're trying to hide it out of politeness or some other motive.
and here I sadly raise my hand to say I relate ✋🥲
Sad to say I still feel this way well into my twenties. I'm aware of it, constantly working on it, and honestly this movie and the analysis is definitely calling me the hell out right now. But I'm trying
and it really can be that obvious too
The self hate often doesn't come from nowhere though. It usually stems from parents or other family members that actually did hate you and took every opportunity to show it by dunking on you constantly until you have no self esteem left to give yourself.
@@kymo6343 that, or repeated failure coupled with anxiety/depression thanks basically force you to throw your life down the drain and convince you it's your own fault...
The end where bowler hat guy couldn't accept that he could be loved and have a family is genuinely so tragic and reflects real life trauma victims so viscerally it breaks my heart every time.
Bowler hat guy was simultaneously so cartoonish in design yet so human in his personality
This also always gets me. But the good news is, that future basically got overwritten by the new better future that Cornelius created at the end, where Goob found a real family! So he could grow up being happy
It's really heart-wrenching, but then we see him not only catch the ball, but get adopted himself, so he gets another chance at life, so to speak. That's so beautiful, it makes me cry.
My favorite part of this movie is how Luis remembers to go back and wake up Goob, and Goob will never know that that was something so important :)
Especially when so much of the first half of the movie, Lewis forgot about Goob. It's awesome. I love this movie.
That scene with "how does he look like?" "Tom Selleck" was actually really well adapted because, depending on which language you watched it in, they would show a different picture of the respective voice actor. I find that such a neat little detail.
Edit: All you lovely people responding to this, what does Lewis say in your language when he's asked "Where are you from"? I know this specific sentence was adapted for different languages and I'm genuinely curious.
Someone else already said that, but it just proves many people like the added detail.
its a nice way to keep the running gag throughout different countries, while also making it relatable to that country.
@@glendarjj3991 Haha not surprised that other people said it before me. I'm just doing my part to help the UA-cam algorithm. :)
Gotta love the latino spanish version... ''¿A quien se parece Cornelius?'' ''Al Puma'' ''¿¡Jose Luis Rodriguez!?''
In Latin Spanish Cornelius was described as the Venezuelan singer José Luis Rodriguez
We got the short end of the stick, sadly. No Portuguese voice actor.
Dammit, we can be so lame sometimes...
As a kid, the T Rex not being able to reach with his short arms and him pointing out the poor a decision that was, absolutely slayed me every time.
That gag was the ONLY thing about this movie that I remembered as an adult.
hey it still kills me
Still, to date, one of the funniest jokes in a movie I've ever seen.
THEY DID THE SAME JOKE TWICE IN THIS MOVIE AND BOTH TIMES STILL HIT!!! HOW?!?!
@@raiknightshade3442because of how on the f’ing nose it is 😂 Goob’s plans weren’t thought trough at all, in both situations
Me & my adult best friend quote this almost regularly. So glad other people do too.
Fun fact: Here, in Latin America, Cornelius was voiced by the Venezuelan singer José Luis Rodríguez, also known as "El Puma", so in the family identification scene Wilbur says that Cornelius looks like "El Puma".
And I love that scene.
Here in Brazil, I don't remember if he says something different than the original version. Dammit, now I'm really curious!
@JayLeeBeanz They changed the portrait as well!
Dammit I was about to comment this lmao, a nice Easter egg
They change it depending on who is voice acting Cornelius and also change the portrait. very cool
This movie means a lot to me in a weird way. I grew up in a home that while I had family, it wasn't a great one. It seemed like only my mistakes were seen as a solely bad thing. But I got a few things from this movie.
1. It was my first obvious exposure to "found family" and I adored the idea.
2. They celebrate failure as a way to celebrate learning. Then even big "you're in trouble" failure leads to the family helping the person in trouble.
3. "Keep moving forward" has become a personal motto that's helped a lot.
Been waiting for you to talk about bowler hat guy. He's such a underrated villain
G O O B
Sorry your comment section is filled with bots brotha
True…
W a l u i g i
goob!
I love that detail that young Franny scolds Wilbur in the beginning of the movie. It’s a small thing that happens and then at the end it’s like “oh that was the kid version of his MOM scolding him”. It’s funny, even as a kid Franny scolds her son.
especially because "dont sass me" is such a mom thing to say lmao
So true omg
As an adoptee, I adore this movie and it always makes me cry. It's the ONLY movie I've ever seen that really shows how I feel as an adoptee. My adoptive family IS my family. I couldn't care less about finding my birth parents, they're strangers who I never think about unless someone asks me about it. If they wanted to find me, sure whatever, but I would never think about finding them. All the depictions of adoption and "non-traditional" families in media are "You're not my REAL parents!" and "I need to find my birth parents for some odd reason because I think that will complete something in me!" I hated growing up when people would realize I'm adopted because they only knew stories like Cinderella. I had other kids ask me "Is your mom evil like in Cinderella?!" and I was so mad and upset by that because my mom is amazing and I loved her. The truth is, adoption stories are all so different - adoptees have completely different experiences, but we're not ALL looking for our birth families. Some of us are so completely happy and living normal lives. And I love that the main character never knows why his mother left him a the orphanage, because many of will never know and don't even care. Representation matters, and representing adoptive families as just another normal healthy family is important.
EDIT: Wow, thank you everyone for your kind comments and sharing your stories as well! Never expected such a response. All the suggestions and stories shared just shows how vast the adoptive experience is and how important it is to show all those perspectives
Thank you for sharing your perspective. I've often thought about adopting kids in the future, and this is something that I've found myself wondering about from time to time, essentially being emotionally prepared for whichever way they would react to estrangement from their birth parents as they get older. It's really nice to know that you were able to bound so deeply with your adoptive family and really encourages that more people out there should adopt ❤
Have you watched instant family? I don’t know why but as an adopted kid that movie got me real good. I was absolutely sobbing
I totally see what you mean. I'm not adopted, but my mother was, and loved her parents as much as she would her birth parents. I don't remember why she was given up for adoption, but I still agree that not everyone is the same, and I'm happy you have an amazing family. I'm sure they're very happy to have you. ❤
You took the words right out of my mouth! I am also an adoptee who watched this when it came out, at the time I was 13 years old. It helped me feel seen & acknowledged. It made me realise that I didn’t “need” to look for my birth parents just because people would always ask: “Do you want to meet your REAL parents?” I never felt the need to! Maybe one day in the future I might, but being 28 now it hasn’t changed.
I wish there could be more representation in media about adoption stories. We all have it so different, and there are many nuances to it. No adoption story is ever alike! I find it fascinating and beautiful.
Im so grateful for this movie. 🥰
This is a wonderful message
Dr Waluiginshmertz’s story is so intentionally similar to Lewis/Cornelius and I always saw that as so deep. Being stuck in the past and unable to move forward, then eventually realizing you must “Keep Moving Forward”
More and more people are starting to realise the brilliance of This overlooked Disney Gem, I couldn’t be happier!
Honestly!
I still think it's a good idea with a bad execution. It's a very unique approach of childhood and I remember the author of the Robinson history was an orphan too. But on the other hand, the animation is terrible (this is same year as shrek 2 and mother fkin ratatouille come on) and the balance feels/funny/wtf is this shit constantly downgrade the entire film. I admit hat man is funny but it comes so randomly I felt like it was a very long series episode. Sorry for bad eng xD.
it was totally deserved
This was the only disney movie where i actually cried for a movie, I remember at that time i was in that age where i thought i was tough and nothing could make me cry until the end of lewis gets adopted
I quote Meet the Robinsons a moderate amount to this day. Especially “I have a big head and small arms, and I’m not so sure how well this plan was thought through”
i quote the frog version of that line a lot myself. i am a very short person and for some reason all my family expects me to get the stuff on the high shelves 😂😂😂
I quote Wilbur a lot "That is an excellent question."
"It's been a long day, full of emotional turmoil and dinosaur fights."
same
I knew I wasn't the only one hung up on this line
Oh my gosh, SAME. That's my favorite quote in the entire movie. 😂
Lewis’s line near the end of, “I already have a family.” stuck with me for years. Just such a beautiful way of showing he’s finally ready to move forward. It’s so damn good.
I don't know if it's been discussed here, but the director was an orphan and he made that change at the end of the plot to have Cornelius NOT see who his mother was, and when asked why, "Because I already have a family" because the director had that very same experience. He thought when he got into college that he would want to find out his birth family, but by the time he got to college, he had forgotten all about it because his family and life were so full of love. That was so kewl. It's in the DVD extras...
Another thing about the ending of this movie that makes it utterly phenomenal: the song that plays over the credits. Rob Thomas’ “Little Wonders” emotionally DESTROYS me every time I hear it.
did you know: there was a deleted scene which at the point when lewis goes to defeat the hat, he brings bowler hat guy to the day of the baseball game where he fell asleep, and he tries to wake him up, and he does, which, If I remember correctly, erases him from existence, while saying thank you to lewis. If you want to look at the deleted scenes, look em up on youtube
I was going to talk about that myself but you beat me to it. He also looks at the hat and then says "I'll never invent you" which makes the hat disappear. I thought that deleted scene was sweet honestly
@@ashuraconla2550 yeah, I really liked the scene but the one we got I liked more
@@ashuraconla2550 honestly I feel that schaffrillas can make a separate video of the deleted scenes from meet the Robinsons
@@willthedoofus4525 I'm satisfied already tho, maybe he'll take a crack at deleted scenes one day
Perhaps it was deleted because it wouldnt make sense for goob to “disappear” after Lewis rights a wrong, its not like with wilbur and the possibility that Lewis will just never have him as a son, because goob will still around. If anything future goob would transform into whatever past goob grows into. I like the ending we got with him.
One of the saddest scenes for me was when the (future) Robinsons were all ready to adopt Lewis but they found out who he was telling him he had to go back. Lewis didnt know HE was the father so he was crushed. Like he finally found a family who was willing to accept him but they took it back knowing what would happen if they did.
He truly belived no one would ever want to let him into their family except his biological mom too, so it was a shock to him seeing them willingly want adopt him
LITERALLYYYY it’s so sad to see him going through the pain of what he thinks is not being wanted AGAIN 😭
As an adopted kid, hearing that your foster parent doesn't actually want to adopt you despite your close relationship stings.
I’m surprised you didn’t talk about the ending song with “Little Wonders.” Easily one of the most under appreciated songs in my opinion. It always makes me cry. Especially when the lyrics say “Let it go. Let it roll right off your shoulders. Don’t you know? The hardest part is over.”
It’s just absolutely perfect when it comes to Lewis and how he finally lets go of everything that brought him pain and misery to look forward to the bright future he has.
I know this movie isn’t perfect, but it’s still such a delight of a film.
I didn't even understand the lyrics that much at that age (English is my second language, and my family doesn't speak it) and still it invoked something in me. Now that I'm 20++ I think I know what that song sparked:
Nostalgia. _In a child!_
That song made me cry when I was a little kid... It still does to this day.
The two songs in this film are certified bops and bangers for sure
Just reading about the scene gives me goosebumps. Thank god I'm not the only one who cries everytime at the end of the movie.
I wondered if anyone else felt as emotionally attached to this song and movie as me. I’m glad people feel the same way. I cry every time as well. Beautiful nostalgic song.
To me In my opinion this is still one of my favorite disney movies to date. It stuck with me so hard throughout a lot of years of my life, despite me only watching it once as a kid.
Fun fact: in the Swedish version, when they say "Texas" in the American version, they change it to "Skåne" the part of Sweden most similar to the wild west.
Specially the Southeastern part of Scania. Sjöbo, Skurup, Ystad, Tomelilla and Simrishamn. I moved to Lund and they are less like the Wild West and more like a science town
Va'? Det minns jag inte (i och för sig så var den sista gången jag tittade på filmen bokstavligen några år sedan).
Wait swedens real??+??1
@@Trolololyoulose uhm yes it is real-
@@fay2000xox No way...
I have so much nostalgia for this movie. Listening to "Little Wonders" just instantly brings me back to my childhood.
Same here.
It’s so strange how we all have these small hours in our past that we will never forget.
😭 that song gets me every time
When I was much younger I didn't much like Meet the Robinsons, but when I found Matchbox Twenty (few years later) and heard one of their songs was in it... I was excited to see it again (and I liked it that time).
same. when this movie was in theaters, I remember hearing it on the radio. And at lunchtime in elementary school.
When my sister got married, she had that song play as she left the church. I didn’t expect it at all and we’ve both loved it for years, and I started totally bawling my eyes out as the opening notes hit
That interaction Lewis had with adult Franny was really important though. Cause that's exactly what happened in the past in order for Franny to marry Lewis, he had to say she was "right" for thinking frogs had musical talents. If Lewis had said she was crazy, the future in which we saw would not have existed, because Franny wouldn't have married Lewis, and Wilbur wouldn't have been born
The whole family put on an act for lewis
There is a scene in the movie that this is a story he would tell the family one day
Meaning they knew the entire time xD
Events unfolding differently in the timeline is a difficult subject because of the uncertainty involved. Since time never had the chance to walk an alternate path, we never truly know exactly what would have happened. There is valid speculation that, had the Titanic successfully made its maiden voyage, there could have been many more casualties in the first World War since the Central Powers could have sank the Titanic, leading the United States to join the Entente Powers in the battlefield much sooner, with much less preparation time, and with the Central Powers still fighting close to their best. The U.S. joining the war later was likely key in the defeat of the Central Powers since everyone already involved had mostly tired themselves out then the U.S. jumped in and said "Sorry I'm late, let's kick some ass". If the U.S. had joined earlier as a result of civilian deaths at the hands of the Central Powers, the outcome of the war, and, by extention, the course of global history, could have been much different.
Video games provide a good example of differing events. Undertale, for example, could see you dying at most any point, and no matter when or where you die, the course of that universe remains mostly the same from our perspective, though killing certain characters and sparing others gets you a phone call from Sans that is tailored to the scenario you left behind once you beat the game in a neutral run. Ultimately, unless you manage to spare everyone and complete the true pacifist route, the alteration of history in any universe is localized entirely to the underground since Frisk probably has no existing family since they can choose to stay with Toriel at the end of the pacifist run.
@@raphaeldagamer Russia turned the tide to win WW2 not the US. This is the exact reason why Russia reached the Capital of Germany and concentration camps sooner
@@DaftPunkSkittle I was talking about World War 1, not 2. Credit where it's due, Russia joining in was crucial to allied victory in the second World War. Hitler was an idiot and chose to piss off the only single country with the means to actually beat back his forces, and he chose to try to fight them in the middle of a violent winter. If the cold and lack of provisions left any soldiers standing, the Russian soldiers were sure to finish them off.
The frogs also had an unspoken but yet nodded at aptitude for organized crime.
Also although i dont know how much thought they put into the time travel theme, but I really love how the whole motto and message of the movie is to "keep moving forward" through hardships and failures, but yet reflecting on past mistakes and physically traveling back in time is was caused the future to be saved. I remember loving this movie as a kid, and I'm seeing i need to rewatch it as an adult!
Young Goob is arguably the most adorable future antagonist ever.
Yeah, his twist is still surprising to me!
Yung goob is a fantastic name for a soundcloud rapper
The subtle small detail at the beginning of the film when the mother hears present Lewis slipping and runs off and then showing what happened in Lewis Pov at the end of the movie.
I absolutely loves this film
It's one of those time travel paradoxes like he was always there when he was born because there was always a slip.
But it's a cool attention to detail
Why is no one talking about Mildred?? When she picks Lewis up, she looks at him with so much love! Lewis wanted to meet his mother, and he sees his first mother figure there!
Which raises a lot of questions when he accidentally calls his future wife mom in that one scene
@@Darkwolfsbane no, it doesn't.
FR, I love how they didnt use the "awful orpahange lady" trope on her! She's an amazing woman, so kind!
The dinosaurs "I have little arms" quote is used so often in my house. Peak comedy
I don’t even have to be shown the footage. I just think of it and start laughing at the pure lunacy of it and how historical it is
One part of this movie I noticed that it doesn't seem others have, is at the beginning when lewis' birth mother leaves lewis on the top of the stairs, we hear someone slip and she looks behind her, and at the end when lewis is about to meet his mother, he walks away and slips creating the same noise and causing lewis' mom to look behind her. These little gems are why meet the robinsons is one of my favourite movies.
I also love the fact that at the beginning of the movie you can hear someone knocking on the orphanage door before Mildred opens it. In the end we find out that it was Lewis who knocked on the door. The attention to detail fascinates me, this movie is a gem.
It’s pretty cool how Disney was able to get Waluigi for this film.
Don't forget Evil Cappy as well!
They traded him with Sora in the future, we just didn't knew it
And real Yoshi
I love smash brothers
No Waluigi was his dad. Bowler hat guy is the child of waluigi and Doctor doofenshmirtz.
Another thing to love about this is how they explicitely celebrate the love between adoptive parents and children, which is so criminally rare on children's media. It's always "oh, who is my real father" and blood relationship that see a wonderful family start up from a couple deciding to adopt this kid is such a wonderful thing, because that is also the experience of a lot of children. I love, love too that the movie never shows the biological mother or why she gave Louis because it doesn't matter anyway. If she went as far to go to an orphanage to give up the baby, she had already decided she didn't want to be a mom and Louis either wouldn't have convinced her of doing anything no matter what he said or she would have resented him for convincing her of doing something she didn't want to.
I think The Willobouys also has similar story. Elaborating the relationship between foster parents and children while focusing on the blood relationship isn't always good as it seems.
Nah dude 'cause I recently re-watched this movie and I was just SOBBING, it made me feel so many things. I was just crying at the Robinsons hyping my man after he failed to repair the PB&J machine. Absolute masterpiece, I remember it as one of my favorite movies as a child even when I didn't fully understand it at the time.
It's so good to have a children's film that doesn't have a narrative based around destiny in some form. Kids can get so discouraged when the media around them is full of Chosen Ones.
No, I usually Find that They Often think They're the Chosen One.
Which creates another Issue,
Over Confidence with a Lack of Morals
@@frank-2martialoffrankoslav151 Depends on the kid, I guess. Both extremes can happen when you teach people that greatness is some innate thing that you either have or don't.
Fun fact: Bowler Hat Guy was initially going to be played by Jim Carrey, but he turned down the role to star in the film, The Number 23, so the director, Stephen Anderson, stepped in to voice him, Grandpa Bud, and Cousin Tallulah!
Now that you mention it, he does feel quite jim carry like. But the voice actors does an excellent job.
@@glendarjj3991 Absolutely, my friend!
Tho, one more thing… 😕 That’s me to know and you to find out! 😉😂😂😂😂😂
Well now I’ll just see him as Jim Carrey from this point forward
Wow! Thanx for so many likes, guys! You rock! 🤘🎸😏👍
Shame, seeing as this is a much better movie than that dumb 23 one.
Not gonna lie, the design of the Time Machine is such a freaking masterpiece, the sounds, how Lewis repairs it, the colors, the look; I would love to see designs like that more.
The style of design is Art Deco.
@@officialpennsyjoe it’s technically more retrofuturism
@@tomdrawsstuffs6092 Retrofuturism is a theme rather than a design artstyle. You can make retrofuturism of almost any design of the past, like Steampunk (Victorian).
@@claudiobizama5603 let’s get more specific, then. this is 50s/60s space age retrofuturism.
Don't worry, you will see it with your own eyes in 40 years :)
keep moving forward
this movie gave me that mentality in life.I was 8 when i watched this movie,im 21 and still remember to keep moving forward despite failure.
16:38 The part where Goob stays in the closed orphanage almost his entire life while listening to Lewis' accomplishments via radio, and we see him gradually getting older and more dismantled, it hits so hard.😨
I always imagined "End of the Hall" from Little Nightmares II playing during that scene
@@Virtual_Jester same
Don't let it. Lewis' point was exactly that Goob focused so much on the bad stuff that he remained stuck in it.
The guy 28 now while I become a second Cornelius
@@evamkaushik5392There's nothing wrong with feeling bad for sympathetic characters who are suffering
This movie's ending never fails to make me tear up. The ending quote is honestly so inspiring and has lifted me up whenever I feel like giving up.
As well as the Rob Thomas song “Little Wonders” which is fantastic.
@@RYMAN1321 brings a beautiful moment
@@RYMAN1321 I was hoping someone would mention the song it’s so good
The villain guy is one of those villain designs that I absolutely ADORE because they're just so well executed EVERY. SINGLE. TIME.
big doof energy
Waluigi energy
And Robbie also!!! My fav one haha
He looks like Doofenshmirtz
@@sillyguyfred of course Robbie he is *number one*
As an adopted person, I latched onto this movie as a kid. I love its themes of failure and rejection, and still moving forward, as well as Lewis acknowledgment of his true family. I think everyone that is adopted can relate to both Lewis and Goob and their struggle to feel wanted. Its honestly I think the best movie aboit orphans.
Nothing makes me more happy when I see this movie be more appreciated.
It’s pretty good. Still feel bad for bowler hat guy/Goob. Best of the early 3D movies.
Eugh
Same
Apperrantly the bots think otherwise XD
I remember being 7 watching this and being blown away but also touched
“This is the era of Disney defined by its forgettability and mediocrity.”
It’s true now that I’m grown up, but, as a 2000s kids who grew up watching most of those movies, I digress.
you mean disagree
@@thefunnyest more like I mildly disagree.
@@snowhunter7536 same
i love brother bear too and treasure planet is my absolute favourite disney movie
@@raywa5821 Bolt and Meet The Robinsons are my childhood favorites.
In the original ending outlines, Lewis and Bowler Hat Guy went back to the baseball game *together* to wake Goob up. They watch him be carried off on his teammates' shoulders and Lewis asked why didn't Bowler Hat Guy just do this in the first place.
Bowler Hat Guy admitted he didn't know and then he faded away.
I'm not sure which ending I prefer.
I think I like the ending they went with. It leaves more to the audience to guess what happened to him, if that changed his future and he faded away or that he was destined to become the Bowler Hat Guy anyway.
@@greenmushroom2587 Turns out, I was wrong.
Lewis didn't ask Bowler Hat Guy why he didn't do this in the first place--but they do reconcile and then he banishes DORIS.
ua-cam.com/video/f6bmG_YDcHA/v-deo.html
I really like that ending, but I think the ending they went with works a little better because it's a recognition that Lewis caused Goob pain and that he should try to correct that.
The final cut had better flow and better resolution with Bowler Hat Guy. The alt ending was rushed and way on the nose, they really needed to let the face-turn of BHG to sink in. Doris actually tries to put up a fight when Lewis comes to stop them, instead of just sitting there and letting it happen (3rd Law of Robotics). Lewis personally helps little Goob wake up in time, fixing something that was kinda his fault to begin with.
he fucking dies no matter wat, since louis woked him up
Two years after this review I still cannot get over this movie, literally one of the best I've ever seen.
Specifically the scene where the news reporter says "you have a bright future ahead of you" and he just looks at Lucille, Bud, and young Franny with the biggest smile and says "Yeah." Because he's already seen what that future will be and he's looking forward to it. OML thats when the waterworks started, I love Meet the Robinsons with my whole heart.
Tiny detail I noticed. Just before Lewis leaves for the fair, Mildred tells Lewis that he's got another adoption meeting. During the end, Lucille mentions her ride isn't there yet. I believe they were going to be the next couple who were going to interview Lewis.
tru 0:
Wow! Holy shoot! 😱😲 I did not think about that until now! 😃😃😃 You, sir, r a genius! 🧠👓
True though, also I like to add that Mildred said that this couple would be the 'one' for Lewis and considering that Lucille is a scientist herself and Bud is quite the eccentric guy, I find it quite possible they were the couple for that interview
Oh, I never thought about that!
The way this movie makes you rewatch to catch all the details is amazing
I think what makes the "liar revealed" part work in this one is that Wilbur was doing a selfish and cruel thing, and its treated as such. He's called out for it, rather than "OH BUT HE HAD REALLY GOOD INTENTIONS!!!" he's shown to be wrong for misleading Lewis the entire time. Its not like "OH BUT I CAN SEE WHY HES DOING IT".
Also, I do wish you mentioned that Goob outright says he wants to move on past the baseball game, and that's what his coach told him to do, but the Bowler Hat Guy tells him to keep it pent up and fester instead. It continues the message of taking ones failures and moving forward, since Goob was ready to do such but is sabotaged in a way by himself, which leads to his self sabotaging personality coming to fruition.
What the heck Wilbur trying to do?
@@blugaledoh2669 he was really just bringing Lewis to the future to fix his motivation, but Lewis wanted to see his mom using the time machine. This caused it to break, and Lewis being smarter was the only one who could fix it without Wilbur letting his family know it was broken. Wilbur knew letting Lewis see his mom might erase his timeline, so he said he would take him but tells the family robot he is lying to Lewis, who later finds out. Wilbur of course, by the end stays true to his initial promise.
@@StagFiesta I am not sure how to feel about that.
In your original comment, you make it seem like Wilbur is just being cruel and selfish (well I supposed he was), but doesn't have any good cause.
@@blugaledoh2669 His "good" cause for lying is to avoid getting in trouble with his parents if Antler didn't explain it well enough.
He goes to the past to motivate Lewis because he is tired of failure, right? Good motivation. Then Lewis wants to go back in time to see his mother because he thinks he can convince her to keep him. Good intentions, probably doomed to fail and only make his life worse.
Then they break the time machine when Lewis tries to go back to the past, which was an accident. Wilbur knows he has to bring Lewis back to his own time, so he need to fix the time machine, but since he can't do it himself, he either needs to tell his parents he took it and then broke it, or have Lewis fix it. Lewis won't fix it unless Wilbur promises to take him to see his mom, so Wilbur lies to get Lewis to fix the time machine without letting Wilbur's parents find out
@@dig8634 Yeah but you literally asking him to commit suicide.
"I've got a big head, and tiny little arms" was quoted a lot around my house. I really forgot where that came from but this is a charming movie. As someone who was... at least partly adopted, I have always loved movies with the theme of adoption. The family you make is more precious than the superficial blood that brings you into this world. Your family should love you - but the people YOU choose to love and who choose to love you - those are the people who are worth something.
It gets quoted a lot in my house 2
my sister and I were obsessed with that quote for years after watching the movie, we don't use it that often now. Guess a re-watch is needed
Me and my older brother were obsessed with that quote for a while
If it's not too personal, I'm curious what you mean by "at least partly adopted"
@@timhess8249 my dad is my biological father, but my mom went through the trouble of adopting me. (There's a long story but suffice it to say that my biological mom didn't want to raise kids)
14:40 As a kid, I was blown away by both major twists/reveals in the movie. I DO see how they are just a wee bit predictable to almost anyone over the age of like.. 12, though. 😆
I'm honestly surprised that Schaffrillas didn't talk about how great the soundtrack is. Like, "Little Wonders" and "The Future Has Arrived" are genuinely some of the most uplifting songs I've ever listened to in my life.
Another Believer is another top tier song
@@Jayquinator-X T H A N K Y O U- BOTH OF YOU- The soundtrack is amazing!
@@Jayquinator-X Another Believer is the only Disney song I include in my playlists for real
Little Wonders makes me tear up EVERY time it starts in this movie.
I discovered this film through a Little Witch Academia AMV set to Little Wonders. I thought there was no way the scene could live Up to the expectations the song set for me. I was so wrong. This is what cinema is supposed to be.
I love the part near the end where child Lewis asks adult Cornelius if his future will still look the same and Cornelius tells him that (paraphrased) “it’s up to you” because I feel like that reinforces the themes of the movie so well and also keeps the movie from feeling like everything is inevitable/meant to be, despite there being time travel in the movie. Everything can change; it just depends on you. You get to shape the future that you want to see. Lewis always had the ability to make that future for himself, but it wasn’t until he saw that could that he felt empowered to actually push himself to make that reality a possibility for himself.
👑👑👑👑 W comment
It's actually proven to not be inevitable or meant to be, because of the dark future where Doris took over everything.
So it really is up to Lewis if he wants the good future to be as he saw it.
Kind of like Back to the Future; the future is whatever you make it.
One thing that confused me was why Doris was trying so hard to kill Louis. Wouldn't destroying your creators past self cause the same result of it never being invented?
Maybe I’m looking too far into this, but isn’t Doris meant to be a manifestation of the dark side of Lewis’ failures? As in, it doesn’t care about logic or reason, as it’s all worthless and meaningless in the end? In that case, it makes sense that it would be trying to kill Lewis. We could also say this perhaps alludes to the theme of suicidal ideation but I highly doubt Disney would go THAT far, even when considering how heavy other themes of this movie are.
Maybe a take on Taking you with me ?
i figure it, a robot, can't understand that kind of circular self-destructive logic
Yeah it's a paradox
Kill Louis? What?? No that wasn't the plan at all
This movie is amazing and gets better with every viewing. There is just so much to unpack, and the depth is there. The final scene with Goob changing his check list at the end and not taking a handout is one of the best villain ending I have ever seen. It's very much a I screwed up and I need to figure this out on my own.
I’ve always thought of “Meet the Robinsons” as a spiritual successor to “Robots” not because both movies were inspired by the illustrative works of William Joyce, nor how Rodney and Lewis are inventors that each aspire goals worth fulfilling.
Rather, it’s their simple, yet profoundly optimistic morals people like me will remember them for.
Is William Joyce the same author of Leafmen (the book epic was based off of) and Rise of the Guardians?
@@kittykittybangbang9367 You bet!
@@HD_Segal William Joyce is such a great author, it's a shame that Epic and Rise of the Guardians failed. They deserved better.
@@kittykittybangbang9367 There’s definitely a pattern with animated Joyce adaptations in which they usually fly under the radar for over a decade before each movie gradually develops an online following.
@@HD_Segal Ikr, but I don't think I've ever seen people talk about Epic that much. Which sucks because it had really great animation.
Fun fact: In the Latin American translation of this movie, they took the liberty to make the "How does Cornelius look like?" relatable by changing it to Jose Luis Rodríguez, El Puma, a Latin singer from the 80s. AND THEY ALSO CHANGED THE PHOTO. It's just so well done
Ohh, so that's who they were referencing?? My argentinian ass never understood that reference lmaoo
@@Otra_Chica_de_Internet as milenial Colombian i didn't too but the fact that they changed it for a random latin reference i didn't even get made it even Hilarious imho
Epico
Same with the Italian version, they referenced Giovanni Muciaccia, the host of a very popular (and good) children's crafts programme (who also ended up voicing Cornelius). I remember laughing a lot at that joke as a kid, as it was one of the few "celebrities" I was actually able to recognise
In the german version its Thomas Gottschalk who also voiced Cornelius, just wow!
This movie meant so much to me as a kid because I was adopted at an age before I could ever even begin to remember my mom. For a long time, I wanted to know and meet who my parents were, but my foster parents didn't know them, and my brothers always told me it was for the best I didn't. This movie really helped me to realize that I should just move forward and focus on what's in front of me.
A few years ago, I did actually meet my mom and she is a nice lady, but she has a range of mental problems. On top of that, my dad was not only abusive, but a schizophrenic too; always thought she was cheating or that his kids (my brothers) were talking to police about him. When I was 3 months old, she decided to give all her children (4 sons including me) away to DCFS and have us protected from our father. My oldest brother only told me all of this after a night of drinking on his birthday.
Anyways, yeah Meet the Robinsons was a pretty good film that meant quite a bit to me as a child, just thought I'd share.
Damm, thats rough, but also the perfect disney hero backstory
Damn that some story.
I'm adopted too and it meant a lot to me too.
The ending gets me every time. Especially with the song playing over as Lewis gets to go home with his new adoptive parents
The dynamic between Wilbur and Lewis is so friggin sweet and wholesome to watch, especially when Lewis figures out that he's Wilbur's father. That moment at the end where they have to say goodbye hits me in the feels every time.
GenZ would call that fruity
I like when he grabs him by the ear and scolds him saying "I am your father and you have to listen to me! >:(" perfect blend of childish and parental lol
@@simoart2446 sir that is his father. There is a word for that, it's called incest and is generally discouraged
@@simoart2446 have you seen anyone call that "fruity"
"Keep moving forward" was my graduation quote, but the one that comes to mind most often is "You failed! And it was awesome!" That one line and that scene overall has gotten me through so much in my career and life. And the family reminds me of the family in You Can't Take it With You with all their passions and quirks. Love this film.
this is so deep, I'm considering using it as my grad quote. "You failed! And it was awesome!" this is good. Thank you.
I was looking for this comment. “Keep moving forward” is one of my favorite sayings and can help with a lot in hard times
I'm so-I'm so reborn, I'm movin' forward
Keep movin' forward, keep movin' forward
Your analyses are my absolute comfort videos, they just make me all warm and fuzzy inside.
And yeah, i have them on in the background when i play minecraft and other games. I watch them over and over :)
I remember how different this movie was after seeing it in theaters. I've never forgotten how blown away I was by Goob turning out to be Bowler Hat Guy!
Amk
Damn these bots are horrific
So was I ChloroPhobeTarantino
i think the point of all the random filler robinsons was to show lewis they value everyone for their own unique interests and personalities. since we know lewis and franny both grow up as kids w special interests who werent accepted for it, this is the most important part of the movie for communicating what lewis is going to experience. its everything hes ever wanted. people who celebrate his strangeness and support him in failure. this house is such a safe space for the random creatures and people that inhabit it, truly such an amazing display of the found family concept. lewis is arguably the most 'normal' of all the robinsons extended family but i think he needed to see the whole family to really understand they WONT judge him and they WONT just cast him aside. if youre living with random twins who live in tree pots, an octopus, singing frogs, and a super hero pizza deliverer, a young inventor is absolutely welcomed.
that brings us to the question: How many neurodivergent characters are there in the movie?
wait nevermind that's sounds too Twitter-ish. Or maybe I'm judging myself too much.
@@masicbemester you could say just about everyone under that roof, although the robot, octopus, and Wilbur are likely not.
"I have no future. Nobody wants me."
"But, nobody believes me. They all think I'm crazy."
Yup, they'd grow up to have an aversion to judgment and estrangement.
Bowler Hat Guy is totally a hilarious villain. He's right up there with Hades, Yzma and Dr. Doofenshmirtz as the funniest Disney villains ever!
The backstory is as funny and depressing as Doofenshmirtz
Prince John from Robin Hood: Am I NOT a joke to you?
Dr. Drakken: Am i a joke to you?
Goob became my 6th favorite character ever because of his monologue at the beginning while he's helping Louis build his machine. Absolute comedy gold.
Out of all the Disney movies, this was the only one that used Walt’s famous quote “keep moving forward”
At this point, it's probably more known for the film that walt himself. As a kid I definitely associated the line with the movie.
I don't know why the video says walt was fucked up, he was a man from the 50's, different personality.
@@magdavillafuerte505 I mean just because that’s what was popular to be scummy at the time doesn’t really make it right lol
@@LKD7997 he wasn't racist, he just made racist jokes.
@@magdavillafuerte505 yeah Ima assume you’re trolling lol
I actually think the never ending list of Robinsons we have to meet serves a specific purpose. So far, we've seen Lewis be very focused on inventing and acting like a pseudo grown up with the solum, lonely task of finding family. We end up finding out that he has an endless list of people who, not only love him, but also let him have that youthful and quirky energy he missed out on in his childhood. Maybe 4 or 5 people could've been sufficient (as mentioned in the video) but I don't think this would have been fulfilling enough for Lewis after all he's been through.
Okay, I'm ngl, I almost cried when he showed the ending with Louis and his mom, and his interaction with Wilbur. 10/10 movie 😭
11/10 for me
Another cool note: Louis stopped himself from meeting his birth mother when she saw her hugging his past self. Earlier he said "my real mother is the only person who ever wanted me" but the movie even acknowledges that he has no way of actually knowing that. What Louis wanted most wasn't knowing his birth mother's identity, it was knowing he was wanted by someone. By seeing how sad the woman was to let go of her baby, he had closure. He knew that he had been wanted in the past and could fully except the family that wanted him in the future.
"Keep moving forward" is a line that stuck to me ever since I've seen this movie and even when sometimes I forget about who said it, I still remember this quote that motivates me to get up again when I feel myself slipping. One of the few instances I'll ever appreciate Disney is because of this movie
Me too ! I was struggling in college & kept feeling like a faliure but this quote reminded me to try & try again. Its because of my struggles that I remembered this impactful quote & then the movie that embodies it.
Walt Disney was a 50's man, i don't think we can judge him the same way we criticize someone from the present day.
@@magdavillafuerte505 I was talking about Disney, the company, as a whole. Not Walt
@@stolastheowlman8389 ok
I like the original ending they had for Goob
In a deleted scene, Louis takes Goob to the day of the game to wake himself up, and he thanks Louis and disappears. Then Doris is just by herself and Louis goes "I'm not gonna invent you" and she just pops out of existence.
That is a nice ending, but I think that the ending they chose best reflects the lesson of the movie. You can't and shouldn't change the past, instead, let it go and keep moving forward.
@@acroissant3721 that’s a good point
@@acroissant3721 actually, you know what would be better? Instead of changing the baseball game, maybe Louis would go to Goob after the game and tells him to just let it go, and not focus on the past so much. *Edit: and also apologize for keeping him up all night and try to make it up for him.* Or maybe stop the bowler hat guy from talking to Goob somehow idk
@@nameredacted6897 Well it would come of as rude if he loses the game because he keeped him up all night, just for him to say get other it.
@@spidergirl6730 that’s also a good point. Not sure how to change the outcome so Goob wouldn’t be evil without also contradicting the message
“-Hey Goob, cool binder. -They all hated me”
me at 9 y/o: haha silly Goob, they dont hate you
me now: This really portrays the deep emotional scarring Goob experienced from that moment as he can no longer see people genuinely being happy towards him, instead believing that it’s all a front to hide resentment
I thought I was the only one who noticed that
@Trav you…you didn’t pay attention to the video? Are you joking ? :0
Yeah. Getting the crap beat out of you for something that wasn't your fault can screw you up. By people you thought were your friends. Teammates.
25:11
“Ermm.. Mister Robinson… Where are we??”
“Umm it seems we’re in. Skibidi toiler”
The fact that the Robinson's future isn't immediately erased after Lewis's science fair disaster is very much consistent with the themes of failure and "moving forward" (just as Goob's baseball disaster wouldn't have been the end for him had he adapted a forward-thinking mindset), and the last few scenes of the movie pretty much confirm that in the most subtle yet satisfying way. Neat stuff.
Maybe the disaster was what caused the Robinson family to get to where it was in the future, and would have been erased if Doris has never sabotaged him
Props for the Zelda OoT End Credits music
You know that's probably why the science fair incident wasn't erased with the time travel shenanigans, it was always part of the story, just as failure is part of success, but we must *keep moving forward* .
Idk, I just like to think about it like that.
Tbh I think as someone who was adopted, along with my brother, this movie was a big learning experience for us. I used to be really caught up on the “what if’s” that came along with adoption and always wondered why I was given up. But after this movie it kind of puts things into perspective and is honestly a really good learning tool
I'm also adopted.
It's my favorite movie ever.
It helped me decide that maybe I didn't care about meeting my biological mom after all.
I think you misunderstood the part where Lewis interacts with his future wife before going back to his timeline.
It's not supposed to be "weird", as you put it. You might actually be the first person I've seen to even put it in this light, which is ironically weird in itself.
But anyways, all she says is "Remember one thing: I am always right. Even when I'm wrong, I'm right."
What this scene conveys is that on a surface level, it seems like the tired joke "women are always 'right'" but it's actually Fran giving Lewis a hint on how to communicate with her younger self when they finally meet.
She's been told by everyone around her that she was "crazy" and that her inventions were never going to work, she's similar to Lewis in that way and he does not only what his future family says in "keep moving forward" but also does what Future Fran told him while simultaneously returning the favor to her.
Daamn, now that you put it in that perspective you are right, i love all the details in this movie
Yeah I don't find that part weird at all, it's quite wholesome and funny. There is one weird interaction I'd say and that's when Lewis called her "mom", but its pretty brief
@@magicalgirl4 yeah, but he didn't know it was his wife so it's not his fault.
And honestly, Back to the Future was WAY weirder in that regard because they actually had a blood relative hitting on the main character (yes, I know she didn't know it was her son), which these movies put together tell me that your ancestors will try to bang you but not your future spouse aaaannnndddd I don't know how to feel about that...
😐
Very well said. I also thought "why he thinks it's weird?"
@@i_will_not_elaborate agreed, in BTTF it’s so much worse. At least on a first watch through of MTR it’s cute how he calls him mom, because she’s a mom to Wilbur and at that point he’d feel like they’re brothers of some sort (especially since he never got to call anyone mom), but then on rewatch it’s sort of weird bc you know that he’s her future husband
The "keep moving forward" theme hits me like a brick in retrospect. I loved this movie as a kid, and I'm watching this video because I've been on a big nostalgia kick due to not being able to recover from something that happened in my late childhood.
god, that really hurts.
The ending still makes me cry honestly. It has that quick kind of humor that reminded me of the best of Hoodwinked, but also a very strong emotional core