Labyrinth * FIRST TIME WATCHING * reaction & commentary * Millennial Movie Monday

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  • Опубліковано 9 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,8 тис.

  • @Vestorimin
    @Vestorimin 3 роки тому +345

    Regarding Sarah: yes, she was a total brat at the beginning of the film. I feel like that was intentional; she was an entitled, overdramatic teenager who felt like everything was about her. The story was about her growth and improvement. She risked her life for her baby brother, she made friends, she had to get creative and overcome challenges like the masked ball sequence (surely some sort of wish-fulfillment fantasy for a teenage girl). At the end of the film she was more mature and less selfish.

    • @BDogg2023
      @BDogg2023 3 роки тому +6

      You’re not wrong, I just personally think it was done in a piss poor way.

    • @DarthTach
      @DarthTach 3 роки тому +27

      Well her biological Mother ran off to become a famous Dancer/Movie star and her Dad re-married and the kid is her Half-Brother. So she was used to being the center of attention for a long time.
      But yes this is basically a story of a teenager starting down the first steps of maturity and womanhood.

    • @AuspexAO
      @AuspexAO 3 роки тому +26

      I also think they intentionally made her very childish because this movie is a unique coming of age story. It's aim is not to turn Sarah into an adult (I think she's meant to be 14?) It's aim is to bring her out of that phase in a young person's life where they are the center of attention and the only thing that matters in the world. At the end, Sarah is still a kid inside, she still has her imagination and her joy. I just think they needed to make her as selfish and annoying as she was at the beginning to make a transition like that work.
      I think Jennifer Connelly reads a little old. When I was younger (I was less 10 or 11 when I saw this). I had a huge crush on her, but I thought she was the age of my 17 to 18 year old babysitters. Had she been that age, her behavior would have been disgusting.

    • @vincentlyon7448
      @vincentlyon7448 3 роки тому +5

      Yes, the actress was old for the part. They were not very clear about that. That is my only criticism of this film. I have watched it I don’t know how many times I think it was number six when I first saw the milk bottles at the goblin Kings doorstep. There’s always something visual going on in every part of the screen in every scene.

    • @oaf-77
      @oaf-77 3 роки тому +21

      She’s 15-16 which is exactly the right age for this story, simultaneously too old and too young.
      The unspoken relationship between her and Jareth is complex and confusing, which is exactly the right tone. I think this movie isn’t perfect, but it’s brilliant work of technique and imagination.

  • @paulcurlin2789
    @paulcurlin2789 3 роки тому +271

    "Why do I love his voice so much?" Because it is beautiful, iconic and sorely missed ♥

    • @AJ17_
      @AJ17_ 3 роки тому +10

      ALL. OF. THIS.

    • @jeanmarienadal7268
      @jeanmarienadal7268 3 роки тому

      Paul C.: I feel the same.Such powerfull voice & such GREAT memory.

    • @krose6451
      @krose6451 3 місяці тому +1

      Out loud I responded, "because he's David Bowie?" lol

    • @krose6451
      @krose6451 3 місяці тому

      Out loud I responded, "because he's David Bowie?" lol

  • @Cyberpunkninja92
    @Cyberpunkninja92 3 роки тому +121

    "Labyrinth" is about Jennifer Connelly's character progress. She is supposed to start out annoying and spoiled. She is caught up in drama and essentially avoiding social contact with her fantasies. If you rewatch this movie, notice everything in the background especially in her room. There is a ton of foreshadowing. She also always forgets the power line. "You have no power over me." (Meaning her fantasies have power over her at least until the end). She also screams about how unfair everything is at first but learns over the course of the movie that life is unfair and to accept it. The conflict with the hoarder is her own inability to let go of things as she grows up. She denies Toby her Lancelot at the beginning and give it to him in the end. This is a coming of age movie as she transitions from her childish ways into a more mature teen. The end reassures her that if she ever needs her fantasies that they will be there for her. BTW, Cheryl "Gates" McFadden (Beverly Crusher on Star Trek Next Gen) was the choreographer for this. Jim Henson did Kermit. Frank Oz is Yoda and Miss Piggy (also the guard returning the prison stuff in "The Blue Brothers). Both did more muppets than I care to list here.

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 3 роки тому +2

      McFadden also plays the wife of Jack Ryan seen at the very beginning of 'The Hunt for Red October' - like Alec Baldwin and the child playing his daughter she was also replaced for 'Patriot Games' and 'Clear and Present Danger'.

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 3 роки тому +3

      Also as you mentioned Frank Oz and Blues Brothers he is actually the prison warden in the sequel too.

    • @phousefilms
      @phousefilms 2 місяці тому

      I did like that imagery as the garbage lady piled all her toys on her, making her start to look like them.

  • @felpawgaming8767
    @felpawgaming8767 3 роки тому +24

    The one song that David Bowie sings her inside the masquerade ball was one of the most beautiful love songs from the '80s.

  • @ivyvandeshire
    @ivyvandeshire 3 роки тому +1475

    "I hope that baby got therapy after all that he saw" Toby Froud, the actor that played the baby, grew up to become a puppeteer and fabricator of goblins, trolls and any other creature you can think of. He's an actual 'Goblin King' now!

    • @daerdevvyl4314
      @daerdevvyl4314 3 роки тому +80

      That was great acting! I would have sworn he actually was a baby!

    • @dand9244
      @dand9244 3 роки тому +22

      hehe sounds like he really did need therapy

    • @esidhe
      @esidhe 3 роки тому +40

      @@dand9244 He followed in his parents’ footsteps.

    • @PurpleLugia
      @PurpleLugia 3 роки тому +81

      If I remember right, he was Brian Froud's son- Brian being the creature designer for Jim Henson projects including The Dark Crystal (Wikipedia says Brian was the conceptual designer for this movie too). Toby in turn helped in The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance. :)

    • @Cau_No
      @Cau_No 3 роки тому +56

      He's still working with the Henson Company with his father. They made the "Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance" series for Netflix.
      The Dark Crystal is the movie to finish this 'trilogy' of puppetry fantasy films from the 1980s.

  • @TabaquiJackal906
    @TabaquiJackal906 3 роки тому +276

    David Bowie's.....leggings....were a sexual awakening for many of us in the 80's. :D The other classic along this vein is 'Legend', which is absolutely delightful and might work for HallowBeans - Tim Curry as 'Darkness' (and a wee Tom Cruise!).

    • @DarthTach
      @DarthTach 3 роки тому +35

      Mia Sara in that Black Dress.......there is a reason I like Goth Girls.

    • @luludee1300
      @luludee1300 3 роки тому +16

      It's so true 😂 I didn't know what I was feeling about him, but I felt it! Damn, now that I think about it, he was the first sexy, mysterious lothario to seduce me....and at such a young age. Yikes!😱

    • @drknstrmynyte
      @drknstrmynyte 3 роки тому +11

      ..."along this vein" huhuhuhu yeah

    • @sarahs5571
      @sarahs5571 3 роки тому +19

      Oh my god... Tim Curry as Darkness! Both him and Bowie were my first couple of crushes when I was younger 😍

    • @EricaGamet
      @EricaGamet 3 роки тому +18

      I already loved Bowie, but this movie came out just as I graduated high school. For a hot second, Bowie's pants made me think maybe I wasn't gay. But that's just the power of Bowie!

  • @faeyh472
    @faeyh472 3 роки тому +323

    Ashleigh: “David Bowie’s pants are a little too tight to doing these close ups…”
    Me: LOL “Ashleigh, meet the Bowie Bulge!”

    • @erinsmith4416
      @erinsmith4416 3 роки тому +23

      Or as I call it "The David Wowie"

    • @HalSchirmer
      @HalSchirmer 3 роки тому +11

      Oh, you have no idea- The "contact juggling" with the crystal balls by Jareth was done by a "stunt juggler" who was pretty-much upside down and backwards, reaching-around Bowie to get the shot.

    • @Malfehzan
      @Malfehzan 3 роки тому +2

      @@HalSchirmer Michael Moshen, I would guess, given the year the movie came out.

    • @twilightman2816
      @twilightman2816 3 роки тому +8

      Major Tom to Ground Control: Tell my wife I love her very much.
      SHE "KNOWS"!!!!!!!!!!!!
      ua-cam.com/video/hNVsN6pUd0U/v-deo.html

    • @QuayNemSorr
      @QuayNemSorr 3 роки тому +15

      It was completely intentional. He wore a codpiece. Remember a part of growing up is coming to terms with your sexuality.

  • @wwciii
    @wwciii 3 роки тому +103

    This is what happens when you combine Terry Jones (from Monty Python), Jim Henson, George Lucas, and David Bowie. Incredible Talent.

    • @XS_Sanz
      @XS_Sanz 3 роки тому +3

      "directed by the creator of The Muppets, produced by the creator of Star Wars, and written by an original member of Monty Python, and its lead actor is one of most legendary solo artists in the history of Rock & Roll." quoted in TV Tropes.

    • @brigidtheirish
      @brigidtheirish 2 роки тому

      Also incredibly *trippy.* Awesome!

    • @stevensauer1944
      @stevensauer1944 2 роки тому +2

      Don't forget Brian Froud. Without him, it's a much different film.

  • @Psycopathicus
    @Psycopathicus 3 роки тому +218

    Actually, there's a funny story about that 'baby got therapy' scene. They needed a crying reaction from little Toby, and everyone was expecting that when he was surrounded by all those creepy little goblins, it would do the trick; they'd get the reaction, calm him down, etc. But, in fact, Toby loved the goblins, and wasn't scared at all - the reaction they ultimately got wasn't because he was frightened, it was because he was HUNGRY - it was time for his bottle, and they put off giving it to him just long enough for him to get frustrated and start crying.
    You should check out 'The Dark Crystal'. It's quite similar to this in terms of visual style, techniques, etc., but I feel it is slightly more 'adult' than 'Labyrinth' - as such, it might appeal to you more. (Plus, it's REALLY cool.)

    • @aaronchang9317
      @aaronchang9317 3 роки тому +33

      He wouldn't be scared of the goblins because his house was full of them! He grew up with his parents work half finished around the house.

    • @Psycopathicus
      @Psycopathicus 3 роки тому +15

      @@aaronchang9317 Good point. Plus, what little kid doesn't love fairies and such?

    • @TheJulianFletcher
      @TheJulianFletcher 3 роки тому +5

      Or Legend

    • @DanSolo0119
      @DanSolo0119 Рік тому +1

      I don't blame him. I don't think I would have been the least bit scared of them as a baby.

    • @laughingdoc1673
      @laughingdoc1673 Рік тому

      Mmmmm, mmmm, yes mmm. 😅 jk those big tall creatures freak me out.

  • @spideywebz5089
    @spideywebz5089 3 роки тому +168

    Since you mentioned "The Crotch", my husband thought I ought to amuse you and the rest of your followers with the true story of my Labyrinth reaction when my mother took me to see it for my 13th birthday:
    I was really excited to see the movie, as a Bowie fan since early childhood - and I was positively melting in my seat watching David strutting around as Jareth (I'm sorry, but I *loved* that wig. Still do). Naturally, at that age, I'd recently hit puberty so I was noticing men. Oh, I'm also autistic (this is an important part of the tale; you'll soon find out why).
    During the scene where you noticed the face in the rock (Bowie's face: it's hidden throughout the movie) my mother waited for the almost-whispered lines between accusing Hoggle of helping Sarah and threatening him with the Bog of Eternal Stench, before whispering to me "David Bowie's really good in this, isn't he?"
    So there I am, nearly 13 years old. Hormones everywhere, with my ovaries maturing at an accelerated rate for reasons of David Bowie in tight leggings. Autistic, with absolutely no filter. I'm sat there wishing I was Hoggle for just that split second, and now Mum is talking at me just as the knee bends and The Crotch does its thing with Hoggle's left eye.
    My response, in a silent auditorium, was a not-quite-shouted "Mum. You are supposed to be looking at his FACE!" And now, 35 years later, my Mum will still tell anybody who will listen about how I embarrassed her at the cinema when I caught her ogling The Crotch.

    • @darthgorbag
      @darthgorbag 2 роки тому +13

      OMG I just hurt myself laughing! Best story I've heard in a long time. Thank you for sharing.

    • @pyrettablaze86
      @pyrettablaze86 2 роки тому +14

      You can't not. That package is EPIC. IT DESERVES ITS OWN ZIPCODE 😅😍

    • @testfire3000
      @testfire3000 2 роки тому +8

      Hahahaha! What a fabulous story! I love it!

    • @itzakpoelzig330
      @itzakpoelzig330 Рік тому +1

      I don't know if you're still interested, but you can see David Bowie's bare butt in the vampire movie 'The Hunger' from 1983.

    • @sarahormerod6261
      @sarahormerod6261 9 місяців тому

      BRILLIANT!

  • @RemyJackson
    @RemyJackson 3 роки тому +298

    "Is this what it's like when you take drugs?"
    No, this is what it's like when Jim Henson takes drugs.
    You should watch the outtakes for this movie. David Bowie didn't actually rotate the crystal balls, but there was a guy hiding behind him, and it's his hand we see in the frame. Because he couldn't actually see his hand, he dropped them often. But David Bowie never gets annoyed or upset, he laughs it off take after take.
    I have to admit, being a Monkees fan growing up, I found it funny when you accidentally called him "Davy" because David Bowie's real name was David Jones, but he used the stage name David Bowie because there was already a musician named Davy Jones.

    • @rocketdave719
      @rocketdave719 3 роки тому +11

      I don't think Henson really took drugs, though. He did try dropping acid once, according to his biography, but even though he had several friends present to make sure he was okay in case he started seriously tripping, nothing happened.

    • @SierraSierraFoxtrot
      @SierraSierraFoxtrot 3 роки тому +2

      Outtakes and behind the scenes, amazing stuff.

    • @TxSonofLiberty
      @TxSonofLiberty 3 роки тому +2

      Davy Jones was also David Jones, funny coincidence there. David 'Davy' Thomas Jones vs David 'Bowie' Robert Jones... I think Bowie wins.

    • @crescentfreshbret
      @crescentfreshbret 3 роки тому +5

      @@rocketdave719 Yeah, when it came to Muppeteers and drugs, Richard Hunt and Jerry Nelson were the ones who were into that stuff. It said in that book that they would often sneak off to smoke a joint, and for all I know they may have done more than that.

    • @RemyJackson
      @RemyJackson 3 роки тому +11

      @@rocketdave719 I meant that as a joke, not to be taken seriously. In actuality, Jim Henson saw puppets as more than just children's entertainment, and sought to make movies aimed toward adults using puppets.

  • @labyfan1313
    @labyfan1313 3 роки тому +26

    My favourite movie of all time and there's so many questions to answer:
    - To note Sarah is played by Jennifer Connelly who won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress in A Beautiful Mind. She is married to Paul Bettany who plays Vision in the MCU.
    - there was actually a person standing behind David Bowie putting his arms through to do the crystal ball juggling, you can see how they did it in the behind the scenes special "Inside the Labyrinth". David kept laughing every time the juggler dropped the ball.
    - the baby is played by Toby Froud the son of puppeteer Brain Froud. He grew up to follow in his fathers footsteps continuing to work with puppets.
    - The question of one door leads to the centre of the Labyrinth and one door leads to certain death, Sarah got right, if works out if you think about it very slowly. I always figured if she just made it over the shaft of hands she would have been fine. Yes, who would ever choose down.
    - As a kid for the longest time I thought he said Ougliette, then when internet rolled around I learned it was actually oubliette which is usually a basement dungeon accessible only through a hatch in a high ceiling.
    - That statue of the face is David Bowie/Jareth's face. It his hidden 7 times in the Labyrinth, that one being the most obvious but you can see a list with pictures of the rest here: faroutmagazine.co.uk/david-bowie-7-hidden-faces-in-labyrinth-film/
    - Yes David Bowie is wearing a wig, but I don't know what you're talking about, Jareth/David Bowie is so sexy all the time.
    - That's the Junk Lady there are a many Junk People who live in the trash surrounding the Goblin City. She is working for Jareth, trying to distract Sarah from her mission to save Toby
    - the part where Jareth comes over the edge of the ledge was done by a stunt double with a hydraulic arm attached to his leg. You can also see how it's done in "Inside the Labyrinth"
    - The reason this reminds you of Monty Python is because Terry Jones one of the Monty Python members wrote the screenplay (with Jim Henson, George Lucas and others)
    - Frank Oz was the voice of Miss Piggy, Jim Henson was the voice of Kermit and the creator of the Muppets. Jim Henson's son Brian did the voice of Hoggle and was part of the team puppeteering his face.
    - No this was not David Bowie's music outlet. He was chosen by Jim Henson (there other choices were Sting and Michael Jackson) to do this film that was Henson's idea to do a coming of age story since he had daughter that age at the time. Bowie was asked to write some music for the film.
    Just to put my thought on this when I was a kid I never thought that Sarah was a selfish brat. I was completely on her side. I never understood until I got older that she was actually in the wrong and acting childish. lol

  • @justinadams2010
    @justinadams2010 3 роки тому +45

    Gates McFadden, aka Dr Crusher from Star Trek TNG, was the choreographer for this film.

    • @redsands1001
      @redsands1001 3 роки тому +4

      Cool

    • @Warlock_UK
      @Warlock_UK 3 роки тому +3

      And one of the Fireys was Danny John-Jules, the Cat from Red Dwarf. And one of the Blade movies.

    • @EricaGamet
      @EricaGamet 3 роки тому +2

      @@Warlock_UK Now THAT I didn't know! Also, I hated the Fireys then and I hate them still haha!

    • @drakocarrion
      @drakocarrion 3 роки тому +1

      @@Warlock_UK Danny John Jules was TWO of the firejacks.

    • @Warlock_UK
      @Warlock_UK 3 роки тому +1

      @@drakocarrion oh yeah!

  • @michaelweymouth1791
    @michaelweymouth1791 3 роки тому +14

    It took me a number of years of growing up, before I understood her lines at the end. "I need you, Hoggle. Every once in a while in my life, for no reason at all...I need you."
    Who else cherishes those giddy feels? As we get older, we go back. Memories.

  • @josealmeida2842
    @josealmeida2842 3 роки тому +83

    The baby not only went on to be a make up artist for “The Dark Crystal” TV series, but he did his own version of “Dance Magic Dance” in tribute to David Bowie when he passed away.

    • @tempsitch5632
      @tempsitch5632 3 роки тому +8

      Jennifer Connelly went on to have BOOBS !
      But seriously, I love Career Opportunities.

    • @blueamaranth9419
      @blueamaranth9419 3 роки тому +5

      @@tempsitch5632 And an OSCAR.

    • @tempsitch5632
      @tempsitch5632 3 роки тому +4

      @@blueamaranth9419 Lucky Oscar.

  • @cyberwolf_1013
    @cyberwolf_1013 3 роки тому +243

    Has Ashleigh watched The Dark Crystal yet? I really feel that is a must to compete after she's already done Neverending Story and Labyrinth. Those 3 are like the trio of dark puppeteering kids movies from the 80s.
    DARK CRYSTAL!

    • @oaf-77
      @oaf-77 3 роки тому +6

      I think maybe The Muppet Movie first.

    • @TheFloorface
      @TheFloorface 3 роки тому +8

      love the dark crystal. weirdly couldnt get into the netflix series though

    • @deadbynightupbylunch
      @deadbynightupbylunch 3 роки тому +10

      @@TheFloorface I loved it. I was crushed when they announced they cancelled it after only 1 season.

    • @SAVikingSA
      @SAVikingSA 3 роки тому +12

      Dark Crystal is a must. An absolute must. It's genius.

    • @teedawg11
      @teedawg11 3 роки тому +2

      As far as Dark Crystal the movie there were no live actors / actresses .Classic Henson magic.

  • @douglascampbell9809
    @douglascampbell9809 3 роки тому +163

    Oubliette is a secret dungeon with access only through a trapdoor in its ceiling commonly found in castles during medieval times..
    It was used to hold political and other kinds of prisoners and was built particularly narrow and dark to increase the psychological damage.

    • @ShawnRavenfire
      @ShawnRavenfire 3 роки тому +3

      I heard that some historians think they might have only been used as storage spaces.

    • @Malfehzan
      @Malfehzan 3 роки тому +23

      (Disregarding whether they really were a thing or just legends)... « Oubliette » is of french origin built on the verb « Oublier » (to forget)... People you throw down there aren't supposed to come out any day soon or late.

    • @luludee1300
      @luludee1300 3 роки тому +11

      @@Malfehzan Yes 👍, Hoggle was not being facetious when he said it's a place you put someone to forget about them.

    • @oaf-77
      @oaf-77 3 роки тому +5

      It’s where they put prisoners they want forgotten forever

    • @samswords9993
      @samswords9993 3 роки тому +6

      I believe it comes from the French word for "forget".

  • @aarien_of_aurolyth
    @aarien_of_aurolyth 3 роки тому +100

    Ashleigh: "This scene makes me uncomfortable"
    Everyone: "Yes."
    Those Fireys can burn in childhood trauma hell.

    • @insaned4666
      @insaned4666 3 роки тому +5

      They were always my favorite!! To each their own ….

    • @mangerinegirl
      @mangerinegirl 3 роки тому +3

      I don’t get why everyone hates those guys! They crack me up every time haha.

    • @MelloraFraggle
      @MelloraFraggle 3 роки тому +1

      I loved em when I was a kid

    • @bibitch
      @bibitch 3 роки тому +1

      I love the Fireys! Chilly down is a bop!

    • @johntumahab323
      @johntumahab323 3 роки тому +1

      Like many children's films of the 80s, this movie emotionally scarred me for years and I was too terrified to watch most of it. But...the Fireys were one exception.

  • @Ed-qo4oz
    @Ed-qo4oz 3 роки тому +16

    The girls transition from self centered to being more mature and humble was always a good story for this movie, plus look around her room at the beginning and you’ll see the majority of the characters as toys or decorations

  • @stevenschmidt3464
    @stevenschmidt3464 3 роки тому +10

    Just watched this movie recently and realized it is all about growing up and leaving childhood. Escaping the desire to always stay in a childlike state of mind. Which is why she says at the end that she will need them. She is saying that no matter what in her life she will still need to have that imagination of the world and never forget who she was. Very fun movie

  • @DanJackson1977
    @DanJackson1977 3 роки тому +95

    I feel privileged to have grown up during Jim Henson's heyday. Between Sesame Street, the Muppet Show (and movies), Fraggle Rock, and his films like this and Dark Crystal that pushed the boundaries... he and Frank Oz and the rest of his crew practically raised a generation.. and I weep for future generations that cant appreciate the creativity and humanity of his art.

    • @craftyladybug411
      @craftyladybug411 3 роки тому +1

      Frank Oz was amazing I’ve seen so many of his movies!

    • @DanJackson1977
      @DanJackson1977 3 роки тому +4

      @@craftyladybug411 he still is.. he ain't dead yet 🤣 he was great in Knives Out.. and as much as I didnt care for the movie.. it was good to have his Yoda back in Last Jedi

    • @SadPeterPan1977
      @SadPeterPan1977 3 роки тому +6

      Also The Storyteller with John Hurt.

    • @veronicagross7458
      @veronicagross7458 3 роки тому +3

      I just downloaded for myself the complete season of the Story Teller. For many years I thought I just imagined that show, so glad I found it... Jim Henson at his best.

    • @alexlail7481
      @alexlail7481 3 роки тому +3

      Jim Henson had an eye for detail that is rare, but shared with many of the producers/ directors/ filmmakers that are considered all time greats. His other great talent was finding people who understand or at least trusted the direction he was going because he consistently pushed the boundaries of his art and technology available. And as a result we have this and many other great works of art

  • @Hiraghm
    @Hiraghm 3 роки тому +17

    35 year old CGI, you gotta give them a break. In 1986, it would take a supercomputer the size of a room a week to render one frame of that owl.

  • @rkstevenson5448
    @rkstevenson5448 3 роки тому +317

    "A choose-your-own-adventure game with something different behind every door would be so much fun."
    D&D. You're describing D&D.

  • @emmaclarke2007
    @emmaclarke2007 3 роки тому +189

    Funny enough, Terry Jones from Monty Python wrote the screenplay for this movie, so your kind of right about this movie having a Monty Python feel.

    • @Spottedfeather
      @Spottedfeather 3 роки тому +1

      That's weird, considering that nothing in the movie is funny...

    • @lucywillis4535
      @lucywillis4535 3 роки тому +9

      The scene with the worm is pure Monty python.....

    • @MrTristy22
      @MrTristy22 3 роки тому +9

      @@lucywillis4535 As is the scene with those talking columns: ("Oh please. I haven't said in such a long time.")

    • @alyshaharper8730
      @alyshaharper8730 3 роки тому +1

      Didn't Eric Idle also do some design work for the helping hands?

  • @DesiSJ
    @DesiSJ 3 роки тому +93

    For kids growing up in the 80s, this, Neverending story and Dark Crystal were THE movies for the world of Magic. This was my Harry Potter on a smaller scale. Its one of my favorites from my childhood that I feel like actually aged well. Also...David Bowie was one of my first ever crushes because of this movie. A whole generation feels that way lol

    • @j.s.2281
      @j.s.2281 2 роки тому +2

      I grew up in the 90s and this movie was the bomb. I heard it wasn't as popular at first and became more loved over time.

    • @DaDunge
      @DaDunge 2 роки тому +1

      Yeah I grew up in the 90s and these was very much my movies.

    • @SubZeroJill
      @SubZeroJill 2 роки тому +1

      same! Jareth was my first crush too :p

    • @brianh9358
      @brianh9358 2 роки тому +2

      Throw Willow in there also. :)

    • @bignumbers
      @bignumbers 2 роки тому +2

      Dark Crystal was a masterpiece. The recent series defied my expectations by being pretty amazing too.

  • @rachelmaley2218
    @rachelmaley2218 3 роки тому +30

    The big shaggy creature's name is Ludo (LOO-Doe), and he's a rock singer. (Think about it - you'll get it.)

  • @Spindler2007
    @Spindler2007 3 роки тому +69

    It's amazing that the late Terry Jones from Monty Python did the screenplay for Labyrinth.
    The door knocker with the handle in his mouth kind of looks like him too.

    • @doughbafett
      @doughbafett 3 роки тому +4

      He wrote the original script. But it was heavily re-written during pre-production. Even George Lucas did a draft of it. The final shooting script bore little resemblance to what Jones wrote.

    • @Spindler2007
      @Spindler2007 3 роки тому

      @@doughbafett good point

    • @sexysadie2901
      @sexysadie2901 3 роки тому +3

      @@doughbafett But you still can see a lot of Jones in the film.

  • @gerstelb
    @gerstelb 3 роки тому +85

    8:50 “Oubliette” is a real word. It’s a medieval form of prison cell - a deep hole with an opening at the top sometimes covered with a grate of some kind. It really is “someplace you put someone to forget about them” - think of the word “oblivion.”

    • @MetalHeadReacts
      @MetalHeadReacts 3 роки тому +9

      The word Oubliette originates from the French word Oublier meaning "To forget" so essentially it's a place to put people to forget about them.

    • @mordicus420
      @mordicus420 3 роки тому +2

      @@MetalHeadReacts exactement 😉👍

    • @wyterabitt2149
      @wyterabitt2149 3 роки тому +5

      @@MetalHeadReacts From Latin all the way to the start.

    • @Papabear4564
      @Papabear4564 3 роки тому +4

      it was also referred to as a forgetting room, they even put jagged stones into the floor of the room so you couldn't sleep... an awful way to break someone

    • @lisathuban8969
      @lisathuban8969 3 роки тому +1

      I've seen one, from the top, in person. Very frightening, even though you know you won't go in it.

  • @trekkiexb5
    @trekkiexb5 3 роки тому +61

    The stairway scene is based off of M.C. Escher. FYI: most of the movie's elements are in her room in the beginning. THe Hobble bookend, Escher print, etc.

    • @alexlail7481
      @alexlail7481 3 роки тому +7

      Yes, it would be well worth a rewatch for her to realize all the references that are hidden in her room. 1986 Easter eggs abound! Especially the Escher print above here bed.

    • @crystalfairy912
      @crystalfairy912 3 роки тому +6

      “The Hobble bookend” *IT’S HOGGLE*

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 3 роки тому +2

      @@crystalfairy912 He did say it often enough 😅

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 3 роки тому

      @@alexlail7481 Escher's heyday goes back a loooooong time into the 1900s.
      Certainly long before the 80s, albeit he was not appreciated by the mainstream until around this time.

    • @alexlail7481
      @alexlail7481 3 роки тому +1

      @@mnomadvfx yes Escher's art was created long before the 80's. He was born around the turn of the century...
      I was really referencing the aspects the movie included...but his heyday was essentially post WWII into the 60s for creation. My personal favorite is 'Drawing Hands' which is from just after the war. But I like most of his works

  • @gmchris3752
    @gmchris3752 3 роки тому +63

    As an adult, one of the things that elevates this film is realizing that it's all a metaphor for her growing up. Jareth and his bulge were about sexual maturity, the hoarder was about clinging to the trappings of childhood, etc., etc. The crazy-scary red guys MIGHT be about the bodily changes of puberty, or just Jim Henson's fever dream.
    On a connected note, have you seen the classic muppet films or the Muppet Show? They are great, and NOT kid's shows.

    • @jculver1674
      @jculver1674 3 роки тому +4

      The Bog of Eternal Stench might be a metaphor for the overall yuckiness of puberty.

    • @brigidtheirish
      @brigidtheirish 2 роки тому

      Are you sure the entire movie wasn't Jim Henson's fever dream?

  • @theman4884
    @theman4884 3 роки тому +54

    The "stairs going every which way" are based on a drawing by M.C. Escher.

    • @PhilBagels
      @PhilBagels 3 роки тому +10

      Which she has a print of in her bedroom.
      Sarah, that is. Not Ashleigh.

    • @The3rdGunman
      @The3rdGunman 3 роки тому

      They did it in Inception too

  • @Billis75
    @Billis75 3 роки тому +132

    The CG owl is a big deal as far as evolution of computer generated effects on film. It wasn't the first, but an important step on the way towards more intense CG.

    • @carm3d
      @carm3d 3 роки тому +2

      Yeah little me was blown away by it.

    • @petemk73
      @petemk73 3 роки тому +4

      The first cg animated character, obviously, was in young sherlock Holmes. Not Tron.

    • @oaf-77
      @oaf-77 3 роки тому +1

      @@petemk73 Young Sherlock Holmes is a great movie. It’s like goonies meets temple of doom.
      I watch it as a double feature with ‘Mr. Holmes’ (2015)

    • @SadPeterPan1977
      @SadPeterPan1977 3 роки тому +2

      @@petemk73 Tron was a better film though.

    • @stevenr6397
      @stevenr6397 3 роки тому +2

      if i remember correctly it was actually the first attempt at a real photo realistic creature, previously CG animation had been fantasy creations that were obviously an effect, like the one is young sherlock holmes which incedently was after Tron so the first cgi CHARACTER would be the 'Master Control Program' from tron though he was just a head!😂 the walking window was however the first cgi character to move around a real world enviroment!

  • @wiredtardis
    @wiredtardis 3 роки тому +89

    As far as Sarah's character goes, you have to see the finer details of her room to get a better understanding of where she's coming from with her angst. If you look closely, you can see clippings of her mom's success as an actress and coupled with a very David Bowie looking guy after she left her marriage behind. With the insecurities of a child left behind by a parent, you can better empathize and understand the story's subtext. I always felt that it was closer to a Wizard of Oz than a Never-Ending Story in that regard.
    I think when this millennial should check back after a few years to see if any of this has grown on her, despite what she says here.

    • @spideywebz5089
      @spideywebz5089 3 роки тому +8

      Plus Hoggle, Sir Didymus, a Fiery and the Escher painting are all there.

    • @aaronchang9317
      @aaronchang9317 3 роки тому +10

      She's also only 14! She had a major growth spurt between casting and filming and was meant to look a lot younger than she does in the movie.

    • @nikkipittman761
      @nikkipittman761 3 роки тому +5

      Her mother leaving her behind, her stepmother expecting her to be Free Childcare without bothering to ask (truly an elder daughter's lament all around), giving the baby her things without asking, and no one taking her passions seriously... Sarah definitely needs perspective, but her frustrations as a young teenager in that situation are very understandable!

  • @jgrado3
    @jgrado3 3 роки тому +103

    The Goblin King is such an interesting character. David Bowie described him as reluctantly inherited the job and the goblins have (without his permission) kidnapped this random child and he spends the movie trying to solve the issue as best he can. The baby just happens to belong to the girl he’s in love with.

    • @littlekong7685
      @littlekong7685 3 роки тому +37

      There is a cool fan theory that the Goblin King was a half/mortal half fae who fell in love with a girl named Sarah. He built an empty kingdom for the both of them, but she refused to join him because she had a little brother to care for when her parents died. He went back to make his kingdom even better, but for him a few days had passed, but for her it was a lifetime. He returned to her gone, but not understanding mortal lives he sought her out, thinking she was hiding. He found another Sarah with a little brother and decided to steal the baby to lure her in as a game. If she won his maze, she got the baby back, if she lost, he kept the baby and it eventually became a Goblin (hence the name, and hence the song you remind me of the babe, because it was, once).
      Over time some Sarah's escaped with their siblings, others did not, and the story grew with each attempt, as did the Goblin horde, the goblin city to house them, and the maze grew ever larger.
      Each time Jareth wanting only more time with his beloved Sarah and so making the labyrinth longer each time so as to spend that much more time with her as this was his only chance to be with her, so he would make it last.
      Hoggle and the rest have seen so many Sarah's (Hence the "of course you are" comment, why did he ask? They are ALWAYS Sarah).
      Jareth doesn't WANT to be the Goblin king, he wants to be King with his Queen Sarah, but if all she wants to do is play these silly little game,s then so be it.
      This is all from posts over the years on the movie creating lore and backstory.

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 3 роки тому +1

      @@littlekong7685 "Hoggle and the rest have seen so many Sarah's (Hence the "of course you are" comment, why did he ask? They are ALWAYS Sarah). "
      The problem with that statement is that I heard it in another film in the mid 80s.
      Highlander.
      "Hi, my name's Candy...."
      "Of course you are......"
      It doesn't necessarily mean anything depending on the context - sort of like a less crib sounding "yo momma" thing.

    • @brandypreslar3791
      @brandypreslar3791 2 роки тому +3

      @@littlekong7685 that fan theory needs to be made into a fanfiction story. it sounds very interesting.

    • @kassard1
      @kassard1 2 роки тому +1

      @@littlekong7685 I love this fan theory 😍 so heartwrenching and dark.

  • @katdenning6535
    @katdenning6535 3 роки тому +33

    This movie is like an onion, so many layers every time I watch it. The junkyard scene is one of my favorites because it’s the turning point in her journey. The labyrinth is her internal struggle and self realization story.

    • @susanowen1709
      @susanowen1709 3 роки тому

      Yes, you've hit the nail on the head here. This whole movie is a coming-of-age story, and the junkyard scene is where Sarah stops seeing the world through the self-centered eyes of a child, and takes that first real step into adulthood. (And by self-centered, I don't mean stuck up or narcissistic; I mean it takes a while for children to develop empathy, to understand that other people have the same needs and feelings and world-inside-their-heads that they do.) IMHO this scene is the true climax of the movie; the whole "rescue Toby" storyline was really a metaphor for becoming a grown-up. Toby could never have been rescued if Sarah had not had this awakening.

  • @gutz1981
    @gutz1981 3 роки тому +60

    "WOW, How did they do this?" THAT is what I miss about the 80s. Like a puzzle that needed to be solved, you had to use your imagination. Now its like "Oh CGI, interesting." It will never be the same.

    • @Corn_Pone_Flicks
      @Corn_Pone_Flicks 3 роки тому +1

      Of course, this film used CGI too, but it didn't quite work. Nowadays it's much better, and practical effects still exist, as well. It's just a bigger tool box to play with.

    • @sanityisrelative
      @sanityisrelative 3 роки тому

      iirc they shot it backwards. They had Bowie lying back on a board and lowered him back then reversed the footage so it looks like he's rising.

    •  3 роки тому

      @@Corn_Pone_Flicks a bigger tool box but contemporaries aren't using it, hence the decline in quality.

    • @boboboy8189
      @boboboy8189 3 роки тому

      I love this movie because of genius practical FX and Jennifer Connelly is so 🔥

    • @Aurochhunter
      @Aurochhunter 3 роки тому

      @gutz1981 Ikr, I asked the same thing years back when I first saw this, according to my cousin, they used "special glue."

  • @TheZapan99
    @TheZapan99 3 роки тому +43

    When Bowie manipulates the crystal ball, in reality he keeps his right arm behind his back and we see professional magician Michael Moschen juggling blind in his back with his arm out. Michael invented the brand new discipline of contact juggling just for Labyrinth.

    • @mudageki
      @mudageki 3 роки тому +1

      Was that the challenge from Penn Teller?

    • @DanSolo0119
      @DanSolo0119 Рік тому +1

      You could say he was the King's "right hand man".

  • @Nostalgio
    @Nostalgio 3 роки тому +32

    “So Frank Oz was Kermit the Frog, right? He’s done a lot of voices.”
    *Miss Piggy has entered the chat* 🐷

    • @laurabryannan
      @laurabryannan 3 роки тому +4

      Frank Oz did not voice Kermit. Kermit was voiced by Jim Henson.

    • @brahamwardrober6774
      @brahamwardrober6774 3 роки тому +1

      😅

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 3 роки тому

      Poor Jim Henson - he literally was responsible for all of this and gets so little love because he wasn't Yoda's voice.
      He's like the Jack Kirby of Muppets - with Frank Oz still alive people just seem to forget he existed at all 😭

  • @harmonicpies
    @harmonicpies 3 роки тому +26

    This movie is so batshit crazy, overlaid with David Bowie’s transcendent coolness, that I have already hit the like button before the play button. I have no earthly idea how you’re going to react to this one, but I love that it will be an honest one.

  • @duffelbag1127
    @duffelbag1127 3 роки тому +11

    I first saw this movie as a kid in the 80s. Bowie did a great job on the soundtrack. “Underground,” “As the world falls down,” and “within you“ I get stuck in my head from time to time. They have an underrated catchiness.

  • @chicageauxt1ger110
    @chicageauxt1ger110 3 роки тому +22

    The creator of the Muppets Jim Henson voiced Kermit the Frog.
    Frank Oz voices Miss Piggy, Fozzie the Bear, Animal (and Yoda from Star Wars) :)

  • @bryanegelhoffsanimationtec257
    @bryanegelhoffsanimationtec257 3 роки тому +33

    This is one of my brother's favorite movies.
    Right up there with The Dark Crystal.
    And, "I wish the Goblins would come and take you away, right now, that's not hard is it", my brother quoted that a lot as a kid.

  • @GoodEyeSniper74
    @GoodEyeSniper74 3 роки тому +85

    Not to cast any shade on you Ashleigh (I love your channel), but I feel like a lot of people who do reactions don't see that quite often the main character is supposed to be unlikeable to begin with, so they can undertake "the hero's journey", and come out the other side better people for it. For me, that makes for better characters, and Labyrinth is a great example of this.

    • @richardrobbin2225
      @richardrobbin2225 3 роки тому +13

      Tosche station??
      power converters??

    • @itsmefool8056
      @itsmefool8056 3 роки тому +7

      That's how movies back then where made nowadays all the movies are basically the same garbage just churned out for people with short attention spans👍

    • @kaisokusekkendou1498
      @kaisokusekkendou1498 3 роки тому

      Didn't help that it was either over-the-top for what looks like a 17 yr old.. Or bad casting for what should have been a 12-13 yr old.
      Good actress, did well in this movie, and a younger kid would have looked even more uncomfortable being that a lot of this was quite handsey.
      "Fixing this" would work better to have toned down the overdramatic start, than finding a younger actress to make the overly self centered behavior work.

    • @sexysadie2901
      @sexysadie2901 3 роки тому +6

      @@kaisokusekkendou1498 She was 14, and Sarah was supposed to be 14. A younger actress wouldn't do, Sarah must be a teenager who doesn't want to grow.

    • @oaf-77
      @oaf-77 3 роки тому +1

      Labyrinth is basically a more psychological reimagining of Wizard of Oz.

  • @TheMarvelousM
    @TheMarvelousM 2 роки тому +1

    7:06 Interesting you say this, because according to IMDb, the baby actor Toby Froud wasn't the least bit scared by any of the puppets and animatronics used. The shot of one of the goblins making silly noises & faces to make Toby laugh was a genuine reaction, & was inspired by many instances where they needed him to be silent & actually used some puppets off-camera to lull him. They had to wait until he was tired and wanted to nap after filming the musical number to get him to start crying.
    Also, this movie is as ridiculous as it is because it's written by Terry Jones (Monty Python), Produced by George Lucas (Star Wars) & Directed by Jim Henson (Muppets).

  • @poolhall9632
    @poolhall9632 3 роки тому +51

    Oubliette - from the French “to forget”
    Usually a cell or hole in the ground where someone was left to die. These were commonly tied into castle’s human waste dumps etc.

    • @kassimccaughey1065
      @kassimccaughey1065 3 роки тому +5

      This movie is why I remembered that in French class lol

    • @kattahj
      @kattahj 3 роки тому +5

      My mind was blown when I found out those were real!

    • @poolhall9632
      @poolhall9632 3 роки тому +6

      @@kattahj I saw a real one at Warwick castle in England when I was about 10 years old. The thought of that type of death has haunted me since.

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 3 роки тому +5

      @@poolhall9632 There's one at Cardiff Castle too, definitely not a great way to die.

    • @SarahlabyrinthLHC
      @SarahlabyrinthLHC 2 роки тому +3

      @@poolhall9632 I saw that one too - horrific. Probably not even big enough to sit up in. And in total darkness.

  • @SneakyCustard
    @SneakyCustard 3 роки тому +36

    Gaaah Labyrinth, my all-time fave WTF movie. I rented this VHS when I was 7 and I basically drove my mom insane because I would insist on rechecking it out every week for an entire summer. There was just something so magical about this movie that has stuck with me to today.
    Also, fun fact, Prince Charles thought the Bog of Eternal Stench was the funniest thing ever. He was the only one at the London premiere who laughed lol

    • @panowa8319
      @panowa8319 3 роки тому +1

      Kind of like when the first STAR WARS film came out, I too was a kid who could not get enough of. Lost track of how many times I went and saw it, and it too drove my mother up the wall. She wanted to see something else, while I wanted to see STAR WARS.

  • @jenkzkh
    @jenkzkh 3 роки тому +31

    "is his pants supposed to be snake print?"
    Ignores hoggle's face next to buldge 🤣🤣

  • @rockhound1021
    @rockhound1021 3 роки тому +97

    I'll recommend "Little Shop of Horror" for Hallow-Beans. I'd love to see your reaction to Steve Martin's song.

  • @ruggiebuggie3195
    @ruggiebuggie3195 Рік тому +1

    I love that they did the “fantasy creature gets annoyed and starts talking like a normal guy when someone throws him off” joke as early as this with the stone heads in the wall.

  • @danielg6566
    @danielg6566 3 роки тому +1

    Oubliette - a place you put someone to forget about them.
    Years after watching this movie I learned some French. The moment I learned the verb oublier means to forget, the scene where she falls into the oubliette flashed into my mind.

  • @TheGn0x
    @TheGn0x 3 роки тому +13

    the CGI owl was the "first realistic cgi animal" to be seen on the big screen. we've come along way since!

  • @emilytatseos4641
    @emilytatseos4641 3 роки тому +16

    Growing up in the 80's I watched this movie all the time! Muppets were everything! And this movie had a fantastic soundtrack!!! I love this movie just as much now as I did when I was a kid.

  • @nationaltrails9585
    @nationaltrails9585 3 роки тому +17

    Yep, the "You remind of a ..." routine appears in "The Bachelor and the Bobby Soxer" from 1947 as others have written. The movie stars Cary Grant, Myrna Loy, Rudy Vallee and Shirley Temple in the Bobby Soxer role. Sidney Sheldon won a screenplay Oscar for it (he created "I Dream of Jeannie" among other projects). TBATBS, definitely worth a watch.

  • @spiderfingers86
    @spiderfingers86 3 роки тому +1

    Written and written by Jim Henson starring Jennifer Connelly as Sarah, a teenager whose parents just simply don't understand her. So when she is told to babysit her infant brother she makes a wish for the goblins to take him away...which they. When she is confronted by the Goblin King Jareth she immediately feels remorse and wants him back. But first she must go through a massive labyrinth filled with various puzzles. In addition she must struggle with discovering herself

  • @AtlantaTerry
    @AtlantaTerry 3 роки тому +1

    Ashleigh, you were right about the Monty Python feeling this film has.
    From the film's IMDb Trivia webpage:
    Monty Python member Terry Jones wrote the first draft of the script. Jim Henson then let others re-write Jones' draft. At the end of that process, Henson went back to Jones, saying the script had lost its humor, and asked Jones to put the jokes back in. Jones then tried to pull it back to his original version, but had to retain some of the different directions the script had taken by that point. Jones' biggest problem with the final draft was that the center of the labyrinth was shown before Sarah got there.

  • @YourXavier
    @YourXavier 3 роки тому +23

    Speaking of movies that keep getting recommended (by me, at least), I highly recommend Willow (1988)

    • @vincentlyon7448
      @vincentlyon7448 3 роки тому +1

      If only to see an early Val Kilmer film (well, not as early as real genius)

  • @ghosthead84
    @ghosthead84 3 роки тому +26

    One of the writers was Terry Jones, one of the Monty Python crew, so yeah Python vibes are intentional. If you want a pure Jim Henson, high concept, experience then "The Dark Crystal" is called for.

  • @DamonNomad82
    @DamonNomad82 3 роки тому +15

    8:46 The word used was "oubliette", which means a sort of "dungeon under the regular dungeon", which was used to house prisoners the owner of the dungeon wanted to keep in especially miserable conditions. They were usually at the bottom of a deep shaft, and could only be accessed from a trapdoor in the ceiling. Some of them were too small for the prisoner to lie down in, or, in extreme cases, even sit down in. Needless to say, they weren't the sort of place one would want to be stuck in for any length of time.

    • @kaisokusekkendou1498
      @kaisokusekkendou1498 3 роки тому +6

      Built off the french word for "Forget".
      So to toss someone into the Oubliette is to throw them into the "Forget-them hole".
      Some pretty dark meaning there.

  • @puppyash9656
    @puppyash9656 2 роки тому +1

    Frank Oz was not the voice of Kermit. He was the voice of (amongst other muppet characters) Miss Piggy and Yoda in Star Wars.
    Kermit was voiced by Jim Henson, the creator of the Muppets, and it was his crew that made the characters and puppeteering for this movie.
    The script was indeed written by a Python, namely Terry Jones (Brians mother in LIfe of Brian and Sir Bedevere in Holy Grail).

  • @RockRedGenesis
    @RockRedGenesis 3 роки тому +8

    This film, Neverending Story and Dark Crystal. Three films that were a huge part of my childhood. Loved these films!

  • @SmallFryAmI92
    @SmallFryAmI92 3 роки тому +19

    I feel like most people who love this movie, grew up with it, and people who didn’t grow up with it but see it later in life are like meh…it’s alright.
    I’m personally a Jim Henson fan so all the crazy whimsical movies were staples for me growing up and I still love to this day

    • @ArchoniusXXVII
      @ArchoniusXXVII 3 роки тому +2

      I was 11 when it came out and I’m in the “meh” category. I liked Dark Crystal, Neverending Story, Time Bandits though.

    • @alyshaharper8730
      @alyshaharper8730 3 роки тому +1

      That's me and my husband, I love it and my husband is just like "meh."

  • @lukemaier182
    @lukemaier182 3 роки тому +31

    You are very judicious Ashleigh! And very honest, I agree completely! One request is that this movie doesn't taint the possibility of you watching 'The Dark Crystal' in the future. Wonderful to see you as always, and looking forward to Friday's opening of HALLOBEANS!! ✌✌

  • @indianabill5740
    @indianabill5740 3 роки тому +9

    "Trust the worm!"
    I tell my wife that all the time.

  • @FerretJohn
    @FerretJohn 3 роки тому +1

    Sarah was played by 15 year old Jennifer Connelly, this was one of her first movie roles and the one that got her really noticed. Since this she has been in a LOT of great films, among them The Rocketeer, Dark City, Ang Lee's Hulk, Dark Water, The Day the Earth Stood Still, and the upcoming Top Gun: Maverick

    • @veronicagross7458
      @veronicagross7458 Рік тому

      I remember it was very shocking to me to watch her in Requiem for a dream...

  • @ZachsMind
    @ZachsMind 3 роки тому +1

    Frank Oz was Fozzie the Bear. Jim Henson was Kermit the Frog, and when Mr. Henson passed away the burden fell to others to carry like Steve Whitmire and Matt Vogel. Frank Oz also did the voice of Yoda for the Star Wars franchise. Between the two gentlemen they inhabited a great deal of characters for both Sesame Street and The Muppet Show franchise of movies and tv shows, as well as Dark Crystal and other projects. I also highly recommend Emmet Otter's Jug Band Christmas for Jingle Beans 2021 if you didn't watch it last year.

  • @ArtbyamaranthwiseBlogspot15
    @ArtbyamaranthwiseBlogspot15 3 роки тому +18

    Think of Sarah's journey as her learning that she needs to grow up, but she's also not quite ready to do so. The two scenes that really encapsulate this are the ballroom, which is very dramatic and romantic and involves people acting more adult (don't get me started on the one person fondling the other's very phallic-shaped nose) which frightens her because she's not ready for that yet, which is quickly followed by the hoarder trying to convince her to stay in her room by giving her all of her baby things, her cute toys, her little slippers, and telling her this is where you want to be, right? In order to continue on her journey she has to accept where she is in her life right now, and take control both of herself and of the maze.
    Honestly there are so many levels that I could write an entire essay on this movie.

    • @EditDeath
      @EditDeath 3 роки тому +1

      Heard this before, though I've heard Jareth representing Sarah's first teenage crush as part of it. Why else have him played by David Bowie constantly playing with his glass balls while wearing tights that draw the eye to his crotch?

    • @ArtbyamaranthwiseBlogspot15
      @ArtbyamaranthwiseBlogspot15 3 роки тому

      @@EditDeath oh totally. Like I said, I could write an essay 😂

    • @crystalfairy912
      @crystalfairy912 3 роки тому +1

      Teenage years are a weird place to be in life. The masquerade shows she’s too young for such adult things, while her bedroom shows she’s too old for such childish things. Part of why she gives Toby Lancelot and puts some things away, but tells her friends she’ll still need them. This is my favorite coming of age story in film!

  • @therealmanos
    @therealmanos 3 роки тому +60

    Welcome to the film that every geeky woman in their 20's and 30's knows by heart. This is a millennial Wizard Of Oz. My wife loves this film so much we used the song As The World Falls Down for our first dance at our wedding.

    • @christi776
      @christi776 3 роки тому +1

      I wanna use that song too!

    • @veronicagross7458
      @veronicagross7458 3 роки тому +1

      It`s a beautiful song for that! congrats!

    • @jrthefreshmaker
      @jrthefreshmaker 3 роки тому +2

      As The World Falls Down

    • @BoudiccasGhost
      @BoudiccasGhost 3 роки тому +4

      47...watch it at least once a year, and still listens to the soundtrack all the time! 😍

    • @pappajudas9267
      @pappajudas9267 3 роки тому +2

      How many people were aware that doctor Beverly Crusher of the USS Enterprise was the choreographer for the ballroom scene

  • @jeremyhulka3582
    @jeremyhulka3582 3 роки тому +15

    I feel like an appreciation for this movie comes from seeing it through the eyes of my 11 year old self the first time I saw it. My appreciation grew when I got to introduce it to my children. Nostalgia plays a big part.

  • @LadyOndyne
    @LadyOndyne 2 роки тому +1

    I believe the "hoarders" are the humans that faced the Labyrinth for their babies but got stucked in their memories. The hag is practically burying her in objects that hold memories, but in the end, the memories count, the rest is trash; she has to let go of her childish behavior, grown up and save Toby.
    This movie is about that transition from child to grown up. That's why Hoogle says "If you need us..." because there are times in our adulthood that we reminicence and enjoy being little kids again.
    With references of The Goblin Market, Snow white, Rumplestinskin, Wizard of Oz, Don Quijote, Alice in Wonderland...this movie is so full of details it deserves her own explainatory dissertation!!!! XD
    (sorry for my bad english is not my native language)

  • @shawnlewis3632
    @shawnlewis3632 3 роки тому +1

    You should watch it again and keep an eye on details outside of the actual main characters. Every main character is actually something in her bedroom or in the house. Even the dog that Sir Didimus is riding is her own dog, Lancelot.
    She is a Teenager that hates having to stay at home on the weekend to babysit her brother. She passes the time by weaving a fantastic tale in her mind using props in her house (particularly her bedroom) to satisfy her feelings of oppression and could even be interpreted as even telling her brother the tale to get him to sleep. Heh, I bet the Bog of Eternal Stench was when she changed his diaper.
    This movie is for more nuanced than you expect if you give it a chance.

  • @Johnny_Socko
    @Johnny_Socko 3 роки тому +12

    "Is this what it's like to be on drugs?"
    Labyrinth: Yes

  • @chapstick2667
    @chapstick2667 3 роки тому +38

    I just realized after watching the labyrinth a trillion times and throughout my childhood the rock that has a face is David bowie’s face 😯
    Also, if you were to observe Sarah’s bedroom, everything you see in the labyrinth is in her bedroom. So clearly, the world is all made up from her imagination. You’ll also find a photo of her and David Bowie, which in my opinion she had envisioned Bowie as the goblin king, cause maybe she is a fan girl, and like a lot of young girls..they tend to fantasize about their celebrity crush 🤷🏼‍♀️ maybe?
    It seems as if this film is based on a girl’s imagination with her weird fantasy of her recent celebrity crush playing the villain, cause what teenage girl doesn’t like to fantasize about attractive fellas as the enemy they’re up against? Lol. Jareth also has a fascination towards Sarah. He even tells her that if she were to lose, her baby brother will become one of his goblins and she will be his goblin queen..eh? love this movie tho✌🏻

    • @woodgatejack
      @woodgatejack 3 роки тому +7

      You may also notice that Bowie is with a dark-haired woman in the pictures- Sarah's mother.

    • @granadosvm
      @granadosvm 3 роки тому +7

      That's why in the last confrontation, David Bowie (Jareth) sings "every thing I've done, I've done for you". This world was created just for her.

    • @woodgatejack
      @woodgatejack 3 роки тому +8

      There are many secret images of Bowie scattered throughout the Labyrinth.

    • @caseyh8386
      @caseyh8386 3 роки тому +10

      It's about her moving on from childhood. Everything in her bedroom is from when her mum was there and that's why at the end she puts most of it away symbolising that she's ready to grow up ☺ (but not too much, there's still time for an impromptu bedroom party apparently lol) x

    • @sexysadie2901
      @sexysadie2901 3 роки тому +11

      She's not a fan, her mother ran away with a fellow actor, that's the guy in the pictures (played by Bowie).

  • @vacantalleyways
    @vacantalleyways 3 роки тому +30

    As a kid I could not understand why she didn't say with him at the end because I just thought Bowie was so beautiful 😂

    • @pamelawilliams3144
      @pamelawilliams3144 3 роки тому +3

      I still don't understand.

    • @sexysadie2901
      @sexysadie2901 3 роки тому +1

      @@pamelawilliams3144 Me neither.

    • @oaf-77
      @oaf-77 3 роки тому +4

      I thought making the villain sad and beautiful was an amazing choice

    • @dahobdahob
      @dahobdahob 3 роки тому +2

      @@oaf-77 that's the nature of the fae

    • @oaf-77
      @oaf-77 3 роки тому +2

      @@dahobdahob exactly. So few movies really capture that. Also I like the subtext that Jareth himself is trapped by his own nature.

  • @hank_430
    @hank_430 8 місяців тому +1

    Fun fact: the owl in the beginning credits was THE FIRST fully computer rendered animal in a film…and it happened in this 80s cult classic w/ puppets and David effing Bowie! Hell yeah 🤘🏻Jim Henson 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 Was always pushing what could be done!

  •  3 роки тому +24

    13:45 “Why is this scene taking so long?” 😂 Because the children's audience want to enjoy their puppets' show and costumed characters for the longer times over the dramatic pieces 🥳.

  • @JaapZeldenrust
    @JaapZeldenrust 3 роки тому +10

    8:50 It's an "oubliette", from the French "oublier", which means "to forget". It's a type of prison, specifically a prison for people you never want to think about again.

    • @user-be1it9zi8v
      @user-be1it9zi8v 3 роки тому

      I wonder if that is the root of Obliterate

    • @JaapZeldenrust
      @JaapZeldenrust 3 роки тому

      @@user-be1it9zi8v They both derive from the same Latin root, but they took different paths through the development of language.

  • @cory6266
    @cory6266 3 роки тому +47

    Labyrinth drinking game, do a shot every time THE PACKAGE is on screen.

  • @chainletter1170
    @chainletter1170 3 роки тому +31

    Great movie to watch would be Willow.

    • @theman4884
      @theman4884 3 роки тому +8

      Willow is one of the best in this genre. Maybe I should add it to my list of movies I think ashleigh would like.

    • @lukemaier182
      @lukemaier182 3 роки тому +7

      Willow would be a great! One of my all time favorites! Love the Brownies!

  • @deadcatthinks6725
    @deadcatthinks6725 2 роки тому +2

    Love the milk bottles on the castle doorstep.

  • @jacknapier8201
    @jacknapier8201 2 роки тому +1

    What do you think is the most impressive puppet work in this movie?
    The general work of the goblins with almost two never alike?
    The work on Hoggle, letting a human actor help the performance?
    The micro-work on little stuff like the worm?
    The innovation and primitive green screen of the red beings?
    Concealing that Amazonian boa constrictor in David's pants?

  • @TheViceCitySaint
    @TheViceCitySaint 3 роки тому +18

    I love the scene when Sarah is in the maze and comes up on the red and blue door guards. One that always tells the truth, and one that always lies. A really simple solution to find out which one is which, is go up to either one and ask them what color their shield is. Then you find out who tells the truth, then you ask them which door to choose. 😂

    • @KnightsaysNi
      @KnightsaysNi 3 роки тому +1

      I think you can only ask them one question though, so you have to phrase it very carefully.

    • @TxSonofLiberty
      @TxSonofLiberty 3 роки тому +1

      @@KnightsaysNi Which Door would the other guard say is the good door? The honest one will say the liars door, the liar will say the liars door, you don't take that door.

    • @TheViceCitySaint
      @TheViceCitySaint 3 роки тому +4

      I think that the funniest thing is, her analyzation of the situation was correct. She was right. But it ended up still being wrong, simply because the labyrinth is not meant to be fair or logical. 😂

    • @ChemicalCrash
      @ChemicalCrash 3 роки тому

      What if the lying door says that it doesn’t know because it is color blind? This is how my brain works…

    • @shkacatou
      @shkacatou 3 роки тому +1

      Right side door says one of the doors leads to the castle. She asks Left side door what right side door would answer if she asks right side door if the left door leads to the castle. Left door says right would say yes.
      Right side door is the liar. He lied at the start - neither door leads to the castle (and probably neither leads to*certain* death).
      Whichever door she'd asked about, the answer would have been the same. She was trying to solve the riddle based on false information.

  • @arbrummage
    @arbrummage 3 роки тому +26

    I absolutely love your channel my young friend. Your reactions make me smile and your movie choices make me nostalgic for my youth. Just as an FYI, Frank Oz voiced Miss Piggy and Yoda, Jim Henson(the creator of the muppets) voiced Kermit. You were super close. As an old fossil that grew up watching the muppets on TV and saw Star Wars in the theater as a 4 year old child, I am required by law to be picky :)

    • @TxSonofLiberty
      @TxSonofLiberty 3 роки тому +2

      Came to say almost this exact thing. Differences, I was going to include Frank Oz also did Fozzie Bear, Grover, Animal, Bert, Cookie Monstwr, and Sam Eagle, among many others. I am slightly younger than you (Saw Star Wars for my first birthday), but have most of the same obligations by law.

  • @markjone671
    @markjone671 3 роки тому +17

    The Never Ending Story meets Monty Python was a pretty good guess as Labyrinth was one of a number of fondly remembered family orientated fantasy films from the 1980's, which are all pretty similar in style and the script for Labyrinth was devised and co-written by Terry Jones who is one of the Monty Python team.

    • @jlew13jl
      @jlew13jl 3 роки тому +2

      How did I not know the legend Terry Jones(RIP) helped write this???

  • @ianwestc
    @ianwestc 3 роки тому +1

    Before you go hating too much on the computer-generated owls, this was 1986 and I think these were the _first_ ever computer animated animals in a motion picture. A little low-res and low-frame rate today, but it was super-cutting edge 35 years ago!

  • @hellsbunniestv584
    @hellsbunniestv584 3 роки тому +2

    The baby was the child of the puppet makers and now he is one of the best puppet makers, in the word. :D

    • @hellsbunniestv584
      @hellsbunniestv584 3 роки тому +1

      The interesting thing is that there's a comic, made by the creator. It's about the origin of Bowie's character. He was taken as a baby and his mother didn't rescue him in time. As such he became the Goblin King. So when Sarah is in the ball, in the snow globe, Bowie's mother is in there too as that's when she was overcome and reunited with her husband, who's die. She failed as she got to be with her dead husband and when Sarah was there, one of the people dancing, was Jarad's mother, who couldn't leave her husband and by which, made him Goblin King.

  • @metheus108
    @metheus108 3 роки тому +32

    Jumped on this one so quickly! I saw this in the theater with my family as a young teen and we all loved it after growing up with the Muppets and other Henson productions. Can definitely say Jennifer Connelly was one of my first movie/tv crushes. Thanks for this one!
    edit: Frank Oz was Miss Piggy and Fozzy the Bear. Jim Henson was Kermit the Frog and had the puppeteering company.

    • @samswords9993
      @samswords9993 3 роки тому +1

      Yup! Certainly had a brief crush on Jennifer Connelly, or at least on the character.

    • @gixxerNZ
      @gixxerNZ 3 роки тому +2

      I was 14 when this came out, I loved the movie (and still do) and had such a huge crush on JC.

  • @jillbristol3999
    @jillbristol3999 3 роки тому +11

    This movie is one I have watched a billion times. The music is great, the puppets are awesome, and it is full of quotable lines. I think this movie will always be special to those of us who were kids in the 80's. 🙂

    • @mangerinegirl
      @mangerinegirl 3 роки тому +1

      I still quote it all the time. Many of the lines just work!

    • @quackbock1018
      @quackbock1018 3 роки тому +3

      its mine and my fathers favorite movie. we went and saw it in theaters for the 30th anniversary

  • @oscarrios6048
    @oscarrios6048 3 роки тому +23

    A perfect Segue into Hallow beans would be
    “Pans Labyrinth”

    • @Mr.Sequiro
      @Mr.Sequiro 3 роки тому +1

      lmao

    • @taoist32
      @taoist32 3 роки тому +3

      *Segue. Segway is a 2 wheel electric scooter. Lol

  • @HemlockRidge
    @HemlockRidge 3 роки тому +9

    The stairs are based upon M.C. Escher's art. His paintings are called "Relativity", and "House of Stairs".

  • @claytonbishop4021
    @claytonbishop4021 5 місяців тому +1

    Before Jennifer Connelly was cast to play Sarah, there were many young actresses audition for this role and here are their names if you all wanted to know, just imagine if she was in this movie...
    Helena Bonham Carter, Jane Krakowski, Yasmine Bleeth, Sarah Jessica Parker, Marisa Tomei, Laura Dern, Ally Sheedy, Maddie Corman and Mia Sara. And for the Jareth role, at first they wanted his character to be a puppet creature but Jim Henson decided to be a live actor to rule as the Goblin King. Many singers were considering to play the role like Sting, Prince, Mick Jagger and Michael Jackson before choosing David Bowie.

  • @chrisherb3300
    @chrisherb3300 3 роки тому +19

    Haha, for 80s standards these figures were meant to be relatively cute, now you know why there's so much horror heads in my generation and that's why I can't wait for Hallobeanz! 😁

    • @wardenm
      @wardenm 3 роки тому +2

      That's actually intentional to some degree. Henson famously said that it's important for kids to be a big scared sometimes in small doses. That way they can learn to process those feelings and how to handle them safely. Familiar fears like the dark, swamps, animals... that's why they were so prevalent at the time. They were easy for kids to identify with and learn that it's okay to be scared, but if they believed in themselves they'd be fine, etc etc etc.

  • @Clownboy15
    @Clownboy15 3 роки тому +29

    @AshleighBurton… I promised ya a love story dealing with “Labyrinth” last week, this is it:
    On a Facebook comment thread I met a woman named Erin, who kept replying back to me. I was enjoying our back-and-forth so I checked her profile. Turns out SHE was also a Labyrinth fan! So I sent her a friend request and she accepted. Weeks go by, we share cat pictures to each other (we both loved cats) and chat every now and then. Then in September 14th, 2016, they were going to show Labyrinth in theaters for its 30th anniversary! I asked if she’d like to join me and she said yes! I go to pick her up and she wanted me to meet her mother who turned out to be a former clown in the company I work for! Not only that but the evening went so well that we planned another date for that Saturday because a friend of hers was having a yard sale and a friend of mine was having one as well. Turned out it was the same friend! Fast forward two years and I took Erin to the Norfolk Comedy Festival at the Push Comedy Theater in Norfolk, VA. That evening they had none other than “Lost’s” Terry O’Quinn performing! Erin was a huge Lost fan and this was her surprise for our anniversary. We met him after the show and he couldn’t have been cooler. Erin was gushing at dinner and said he’d be invited to our wedding when it happens. That’s when I pulled the ring out and said, “Then you’ll be needing this!” She said yes!
    Now Erin was a very sick woman. She was on dialysis and had a myriad of other issues. Think Shelby from “Steel Magnolias,” same issues. Because of this we couldn’t get married until after her transplant and all. But I was cool with that, we have the rest of our lives. This past August I lost Erin after complications from sepsis developed after surgery. She had been in the hospital all summer. Her body just couldn’t take it anymore. I was there holding her hand when she passed on. She was the kindest, gentlest, sweetest person I had ever known and I miss her terribly. But I want people to know of the woman I loved. That way she’ll live forever.
    A couple of weeks after we saw the 35th anniversary showing of Labyrinth. My friends and family all came in a celebration of Erin’s life.

    • @testfire3000
      @testfire3000 2 роки тому +2

      That is a heartbreaking sweet story my friend. Treasure the memories.

  • @rikky6ixx
    @rikky6ixx 3 роки тому +13

    Mystical Magical Maze. Never a more accurate sum up 😂

  • @shawkorror
    @shawkorror 2 роки тому +1

    All a metaphor for growing up, leaving behind childish selfishness, the complaints that the world is unfair, material things like toys or whining about responsibility...but not leaving behind the wonder, the love of friendship and in the end realising that your destiny is your own. With the usual dash of "threatening/alluring maturity" that all good cautionary/fairy tales have.

  • @ScientificallyStupid
    @ScientificallyStupid 3 роки тому +7

    "I like him, he's my favorite character so far"- sums up my feelings about the worm, as well. I would have had a mighty hard time resisting his invitation, although there wouldn't be much of a movie if Sarah had just gone inside and met the missus. (I always wondered how she, gigantic compared to the worm, would get "inside")

  • @richard_n
    @richard_n 3 роки тому +50

    This movie was squarely aimed at teenage girls. This movie was almost a right of passage for girls in the 80s. This movie was my little sister's favorite for decades. You would have appreciated it so much more if you were seeing it as a kid.

    • @llamallama1509
      @llamallama1509 3 роки тому +11

      It may have been aimed at teenage girls but they missed and hit me when I was a young boy. I love this movie.

    • @moderusprime
      @moderusprime 3 роки тому +6

      This movie was aimed at children.

    • @mikgus
      @mikgus 3 роки тому +3

      @@llamallama1509 Same here, loved this movie when i was a kid.

    • @carm3d
      @carm3d 3 роки тому +1

      I heard the theme of the movie was about a child growing into a young adult.. Putting childish things away. Though the ending kind of betrays that.

    • @richard_n
      @richard_n 3 роки тому +4

      @@carm3d I think it's about the importance of holding on to your childhood while being an adult

  • @BufordT
    @BufordT 3 роки тому +18

    You can see all of the characters foreshadowed in her room at the beginning of the movie, including pictures of David Bowie.

  • @Accolonian
    @Accolonian 3 роки тому +4

    Also, Jennifer Connelly was my first celebrity crush and to be honest, she still is. I mean, you would be hard pressed to find anyone who has stayed so consistently beautiful for 35 years.

    • @Mitsu2040
      @Mitsu2040 3 роки тому +1

      her eyes are beautiful

  • @alexanderhay7358
    @alexanderhay7358 2 роки тому +1

    Again, rewatching my favorite reviews, that owl is the goblin king

  • @gaulstonedog4633
    @gaulstonedog4633 2 роки тому

    Ok you rock....the first reaction I've seen for this movie. Gonna have to become a patreon member now.