I am so glad the moral of the movie was not "I am a great person and all I need to do is believe that." We are complex people that are affected by outside forces and our own personal development.
True. I honestly feel if kids were taught lessons like this. That feelings are messy. That we fail. That you aren't going to be happy all the time. That you won't fulfil all your dreams. That love can come and go. It would all around do a lot for the mental health of people growing up to not think they are the center of the universe, they don't need to be amazing at everything and that we all make mistakes.
@@dextermorgan-u2zyes, I like that but at the same time, that (very slight) suggestion irks me because although you can choose to see the good side of things, you can’t always choose to feel joy. It also wouldn’t/doesn’t work with what the first movie taught, that you need other emotions than joy
I love that Joy "sends Sadness away" (to go call them back into the main room) this time around *because she believes in her* as a nice reversal of trying to have her stay away because she thinks she has no value. Their relationship is a highlight, even if they're separated for a good chunk of this one. Also, I know that everyone's tired of Pixar doing sequels, but this is the one series where I want them to keep making more as Riley ages. I think having her eventually be in the mom role, where the emotions are trying to help her parent, would be so interesting. Navigating a relationship, getting a job, etc. So many cool things to explore in this universe.
I've struggled with anxiety all of my life. Panic attacks and always having that over-analytical mind that causes crippling anxiety. Watching Pixar's creative interpretation and acknowledgement of anxiety and panic attacks literally brought me to tears. I've never experienced such a strong and personal emotional reaction to a movie like I did in that very moment. Pixar is truly an incredible studio.
When you see the Emotions' bedrooms... on the shelf behind JOY... is an Origami figure OF BINGBONG! :D So, Joy remembers him. He's not COMPLETELY forgotten. :')
This movie broke me. The part where she said, I am not enough, the part where anxiety loses it, and the next ten minutes after that, it all broke me, I related waaaay to much, like a lot of people do. I showed my husband, and it didn’t hit him as hard, bc he doesn’t deal with anxiety as much, so we sat and talked about it, and I explained how anxiety was such a perfect representation of how it actually feels, and the more he thought about the movie, the more he liked it. Such a gem.
I can’t relate. The design of that thing is absolutely hideous. It renders me incapable of being moved emotionally. It’s so disgusting it actually makes me angry.
Envy has 4 fingers so she can be continuously envious of not having 5 fingers. Also like her first line where she wished she was as tall as everyone else.
For me Envy was more like admiration.. Her behaviour wasn't obviously envious.. Envy is a negative emotion: I like what you have and I hate I don't have it (sometimes leading to "and I hate you for that") and here she's more like "I really like something someone else have" and that's just about that.
@@MyDevilishLullaby I think this franchise's point is that all emotions have both positive & negative sides. Someone could probably call what you're describing as jealousy, so it's just semantics.
@@Somerandomnobodyonyoutube Panic attacks have been done for years: Sopranos, Breaking Bad, Ted Lasso, Manchester By the Sea, The Bear, Barry, and many, many more.
I grew up most of my life with crippling panic attacks, but in a household that didn't recognize it, at a time where it was never on radar I went without knowing what was happening for so long. It wasn't until I saw Ted Lasso that I realized what was happening to me was a thing. Im glad kids will be able to grow up knowing these things are real and natural.
Such a worthy sequel. I love how it nails anxiety and especially panic attacks. I felt that in that whole sequence; it feels so visceral and inescapable.
When Joy said that growing up means you feel less joy, that was the moment I cried as that's exactly what happened to me! God, this movie is so good! It's definitely gonna win Best Animated film at the Oscars!
Bill & Mindy were also instrumental in developing their characters and the story for the first movie. To have such a low-ball offer in light of that was insulting.
You have to remember, though, that this was for voiceover work. Even though Fear and Disgust were on screen a bunch, that was the animators. If they don't make any noise, their actor-voices don't need to be there, so it _might_ be the difference between 100 minutes of recording versus 10 minutes. 🤷♂
@@iceman10129 No, of course not. I'm just saying that some portion of that multiple will be due to the amount of work. It's not all attributable to a different rate of pay.
Tiny bit of trivia that I noticed. The line that Envy says "Enhance 273 to 176" is taken directly from the original Bladerunner. (Yes, I've seen it that many times).
"Every emotion is good for Riley." "Not anxiety." Surprisingly, therapists will probably tell you that anxiety _does_ serve a purpose. It can get out of hand--which our modern, fast-paced world doesn't help--but it's often helpful to listen to what it's saying and remind yourself what things are within your control and which things aren't, like Joy does at the end of the film. That said, I'm on anti-anxiety medication myself, so...yeah, I get it. But if anxiety is just our brain's way of trying to tell us something's wrong, then maybe anxiety isn't the problem: maybe **waves vaguely at the world being on fire** it's just reacting to all that?
I think George's dominant emotion would be embarrassment given how often he talks about bullying, second hand embarrassment, etc but it never really has the tinge of anxiety so much as a feeling of avoidance
When you "grow up" you feel less Joy. but when you really grow up, then the scene of Riley choosing an emotion happens: "Joy, Riley wants you." we get to choose our emotions.
i love how Anxiety is portrayed here: running around like a chicken with their head cut off to try and fix everything, it feels like a Tetris game that's quickly getting out of hand. But in the midst of the frenetic tornado, you're just paralyzed. and what i think is really cool is that this can apply to both the physical and mental state
This is an amazing movie. An excellent example of how movies can be both deeply meaningful and entertaining. And to do it with an animated, cartoon like movie that both children AND adults can enjoy and appreciate. It leaves you thinking about yourself. Why can't other movies, by other studios come close to this?
Another Easter egg people seem to miss is the scene where they're looking at family island. The binoculars they use are the binoculars from Toy Story. At least they look identical to me. Maybe it was unintentional.
Whoever thought of everything coming off across as sarcastic over the sar-chasm is a rock star, you can dine out over that one idea for the rest of your life
i searched why Bill Hader got recast and found this The reason Mindy Kaling and Bill Hader chose not to reprise their roles for Inside Out 2 was due to significant salary disagreements. The actors were initially offered $100,000 each for their roles in the sequel, with no additional bonuses.
Maybe if Joy hadn’t kept Riley’s sense of self from being more nuanced, she would’ve been able to handle her friends going to a different school without letting anxiety take over. Cognitive dissonance is a real pain!
To be fair to Joy, "Homework should be illegal…" probably came from a bad memory and a lot of the memories sent to the back had joy mixed in them. So she probably didn't realize the cherry picking would cause problems since she must have felt she was being fair.
This movie really spoke to me... esp when the "I'm not good enough" self manifested and Anxiety was in a panic attack whirlpool. When all yr bad decisions and mistakes come rushing back to remind you sometimes... excellent and worthy sequel!
My partner and I took out 9 year old to see this whem i came out and the moment the line about feeling less joy as you get older was said we both looked at each other and could rell how hard it hurt and real it felt for each other.
There's a moment you cut that I especially enjoyed when I saw this movie, probably because I'm fluent in Spanish. It's a pun that you won't get otherwise which makes it a curious choice for an Easter egg. Remember the part where Anxiety remembers that Riley has a Spanish test the next day and they need to study. Joy replies, "Oh! You're right! We totally-" And Anxiety says, "Olvidamos." Joy says, "What's that mean?" Anxiety replies, "Forgot." It looks, at first, like Anxiety is admitting that it slipped her mind, but an acquaintance with Spanish brings to light the fact that "Olvidamos" is the first-person, plural conjugation of the word "olvidar" which means "to forget." "Nosotros olvidamos" translates as "we forget" or "we forgot," depending on its context. So when Joy says, "What's that mean?" Anxiety's reply was not an admission that she didn't know. It was the _answer._ It means "forgot."
Gods these movies, this is the kind of movie that can actually crack a little bit of daylight into someone’s outlook, as a writer, it is some strong stuff. If you ask me, not just top tier Pixar, but top tier movie in general, and succeeds in vastly improving on the first. Mostly just because this age is more compelling than Riley’s in the first movie, but still. Thanks for a great reaction as always you two!
I just want to wish Simone and George the very best outside this UA-cam career. Wishing good health, mind and body, to the both of ya. Much love from the opposite side of the planet.
They NAILED anxiety. I’ve spoken to friends that have issues with it and they had second hand anxiety the entire movie because it way to close to home.
I actually think it's really beautiful that her mother's dominant emotion is sadness. Because it's more than being gloomy. Sadness is protective and vulnerable and what gives us empathy and therefore lifelong, deep friendships.
Whoever made this definitely pays attention to hockey. Riley skating around with the mouth guard chomped on one side is like half the NHLers on the ice today.
You guys should look up the extra scenes that were cut. There was a lot of really good stuff they couldn't include. Just seeing it is fascinating and more of that "wow, they nailed it!" feeling. Highly recommend.
I got ridiculed a lot in middle school, so when other kids told that I was starting to smell bad, I chose not to believe them. Whoopsie... I agree with George, this movie hits hard. When Riley is sitting in the penalty box, being yanked back and forth between "I'm a good person" and "I'm not good enough!"...Man, that's a rough moment. I think it'll stay with me for a long time.
The new emotions feel very MUPPET-esque in style of their designs; Anxiety almost looks like a manic version of Red from FRAGGLE ROCK. Sadly, the making of INSIDE OUT 2 was also in the middle of the massive layoffs at PIXAR, which meant a ton of people didn't benefit from the massive financial success of it (now officially the highest grossing animated film in history)
Mine was definitely fear and anger lol I was scared to get close to anyone and was quite mean at times. I never really bullied anyone, but my anger made me quite unpleasant to be around. Plus struggling with my beliefs at the time didn’t help and didn’t feel like I could talk to anyone lol I luckily calmed down by the time high school rolled around but I got what I wanted I guess and had no one to interact with or be friends with. The senior boys liked to picked on me during this time to for some reason 0-0
So I went to see this with my extended family - my sister, my 8-year nephew, and my mum. All us adults unanimously concluded after we left the cinema that this is a film for grown-ups disguised as a kids' movie. Simply brilliant, and once again a sequel that is better than the original. I am not sure if they will make a third one, but this has been one of the most memorable feature animations over the past decade.
Fear, disgust, and riley have been changed voice wise. The original riley is in her 20s now, so they got a new 16 year old to play her, which i didnt realize cause they sound similar
@20:00 is a reference to the famous Mac commercial that ran in 1984 and referenced the book of the same name, showing a dystopian world controlled by a giant figure on screen shouting commands.
The pay disputes came down to them offering Amy Poehler $5M and the other returning cast were offered $100,000 (an insultingly low number for the caliber of these actors). Bill Hader and Mindy Kaling declined to return as a result.
They don't have much to do. The cast of emotions has expanded to 9/10 characters. Joy is still the lead and Anxiety the new foible. I can understand them not being paid lead actor money for a couple of voices lines. It was probably a weeks work.
I apologize in advance so much with you, Simone and George, because I love your videos (I really love them), but one thing that it's hard to handle to me is when (I'm not saying that it was, just that it seemed to me like it was) you treat the whole movie as an endless joke and you laugh at every scene, all the time. However, when you get full into the movie and live it inside yourself, you are wonderful. And I loved your reaction at infinity level because this movie touched my heart in countless ways (specially about the panic attacks). It's an awesome story about coming on age, friendship, family, the need to be accepted and the importance of the deepest question at all: "Who am I?". This is cinema! PS: Please, don't get mad with me by my words. They were not a critic to you.
Ia have a theory that envy has only 4 fingers because envy never has enough (you can always look at yourself and think that you have less than somebody else)
Definitely for me on a normal basis I think Joy was in charge but Anger and Sadness took over when riding the hormone roller coaster. If I had a choice i would throw my anxiety off a mountain
I’ve watched this twice in the theaters and that panic attack is so damn accurate. And that line about feeling less joy when you get older. Arrow to the heart. They did a great job on this movie
Why Bill and Mindy werent returning was because of pay distube. Apparently Poehler got 5mill and some backend deal, while they were offered 100k for their roles, and they felt it wasnt enough. Disney then upped the offer ( noone seem to know by how much ) and it still wasnt what they meant they were worth, and so they were replaced. Now the thing is, how many actually knew in the first one, just by the voice that it was Bill and Mindy? and in other animation movies how many actors could you/we identofy just by the voice, and would you miss them for a sequel, if you were honest. I can see that Bill and Mindy would like some more for their roles, since they were pretty weighty as well, but apparently nobody really knew ( from those who hadnt read about the dispute ) that they werent the same people, while Poehlers voice might be harder to swap out with someone else.
"What was your leading emotion through puberty?" After careful consideration, I would say mine was Joy and Ennui, both of them, stuck together by the handcuffs of ADHD.
As someone with an anxiety disorder rooted in an inferiority complex, from the moment Riley's sense of self becomes "I'm not good enough", until the end of her panic attack, I'm a mess of tears every time. Every time, no matter how many times I see it. Why can't Joy be the relatable one?! 😅
I think my dominant emotion during teenage years was...ennui? I didn't have anxiety and wasn't overtly emotional so joy, sadness or anger were definitely not in control.
We plan to watch this with our kids soon...my son is very literal sooooo I'm curious how much of this movie is going to just go over his head😂😂😂 It's gonna be fun😂😂😂
The imagination cubicle scene definitely felt personal from the animators side. Disney execs constantly trying to fix and prepare for every eventuality and the artists and storytellers stuck creating uninspired work to pacify them.
🤔 I'm having a hard time drawing the dividing lines between Fear, Anxiety, and Disgust here... Disgust used to be the one concerned about social status, but one of the big differences between Anxiety and Fear is that Anxiety is usually about social situations. For a while I thought the defining trait of Anxiety was that her concerns were all hypothetical whereas Fear was worried about present physical dangers, but Fear also worries about the future and plans ahead (thus his parachute), so that's not it...
I watch a lot of movies and have never truly related to a character until this movie….unfortunately that character was Anxiety! I may have said “oh no” out loud in the theater when Anxiety pulled out the console to go through potential scenarios of what could go wrong. I truly felt seen in that moment.😢😂
The only thing that makes this film not a 100% for me is that she gets on the team despite being put in the penalty box. If the coach didn't think she was ready before that, then that would probably have make her more certain she was right. I think it would have been more satisfying for the narrative outside her head *and* the one inside, if after the game and everything's resolved she herself had gone to the coach and said something like "I don't think I'm ready yet, but I will be next year". Maybe even throw in a line about something like needing to learn to control her emotions. Rather than a "her dream comes true" moment, it could have been more a "she's growing up" thing.
i mean as the other girls kind of alluded to, the scrimmage wasn't /actually/ the try-out for the team. the try-out was actually when riley entered high school and the fact she gets in isn't a "dreams come true" moment, it's meant to show that riley has grown and learned the lesson (hence also the 'if you dont make it in, you can try again' bit before hand). it's about her facing the anxiety of the situation, not just about her dreams of making the team.
I am so glad the moral of the movie was not "I am a great person and all I need to do is believe that." We are complex people that are affected by outside forces and our own personal development.
the moral of the movie was also: "Joy, Riley wants you." we get to choose our emotions.
True. I honestly feel if kids were taught lessons like this. That feelings are messy. That we fail. That you aren't going to be happy all the time. That you won't fulfil all your dreams. That love can come and go.
It would all around do a lot for the mental health of people growing up to not think they are the center of the universe, they don't need to be amazing at everything and that we all make mistakes.
@@dextermorgan-u2zyes, I like that but at the same time, that (very slight) suggestion irks me because although you can choose to see the good side of things, you can’t always choose to feel joy. It also wouldn’t/doesn’t work with what the first movie taught, that you need other emotions than joy
I love that Joy "sends Sadness away" (to go call them back into the main room) this time around *because she believes in her* as a nice reversal of trying to have her stay away because she thinks she has no value. Their relationship is a highlight, even if they're separated for a good chunk of this one.
Also, I know that everyone's tired of Pixar doing sequels, but this is the one series where I want them to keep making more as Riley ages. I think having her eventually be in the mom role, where the emotions are trying to help her parent, would be so interesting. Navigating a relationship, getting a job, etc. So many cool things to explore in this universe.
That sounds a cool premise.
What makes me sad is eventually the very last Inside and Out will be Riley on her deathbed ☹️💯
I've struggled with anxiety all of my life. Panic attacks and always having that over-analytical mind that causes crippling anxiety. Watching Pixar's creative interpretation and acknowledgement of anxiety and panic attacks literally brought me to tears. I've never experienced such a strong and personal emotional reaction to a movie like I did in that very moment. Pixar is truly an incredible studio.
When you see the Emotions' bedrooms... on the shelf behind JOY... is an Origami figure OF BINGBONG! :D So, Joy remembers him. He's not COMPLETELY forgotten. :')
Riley may have forgotten him, but her Joy didn't.
Riley touching the bench to come down from her panic attack is an all time great moment in movies.
This movie broke me. The part where she said, I am not enough, the part where anxiety loses it, and the next ten minutes after that, it all broke me, I related waaaay to much, like a lot of people do. I showed my husband, and it didn’t hit him as hard, bc he doesn’t deal with anxiety as much, so we sat and talked about it, and I explained how anxiety was such a perfect representation of how it actually feels, and the more he thought about the movie, the more he liked it. Such a gem.
Need a hug?
I can’t relate. The design of that thing is absolutely hideous. It renders me incapable of being moved emotionally. It’s so disgusting it actually makes me angry.
@@Darth-Lesbian skill issue.
Envy has 4 fingers so she can be continuously envious of not having 5 fingers. Also like her first line where she wished she was as tall as everyone else.
Came to say this! xD
And she has extra-large eyes so she can stare at everyone else.
For me Envy was more like admiration.. Her behaviour wasn't obviously envious.. Envy is a negative emotion: I like what you have and I hate I don't have it (sometimes leading to "and I hate you for that") and here she's more like "I really like something someone else have" and that's just about that.
@@MyDevilishLullaby I think this franchise's point is that all emotions have both positive & negative sides. Someone could probably call what you're describing as jealousy, so it's just semantics.
I've been through more than my fair share of panic attacks, and this is easily the most hauntingly accurate portrayal of what they feel like
@@MrGBH idk if puss in boots the last wish was the first to set this new trend, but im glad movies are covering it more
@@Somerandomnobodyonyoutube Panic attacks have been done for years: Sopranos, Breaking Bad, Ted Lasso, Manchester By the Sea, The Bear, Barry, and many, many more.
@@reynaldolorenzo8409 oh... Well i probably would have noticed if i watched any of those shows XD
I grew up most of my life with crippling panic attacks, but in a household that didn't recognize it, at a time where it was never on radar I went without knowing what was happening for so long. It wasn't until I saw Ted Lasso that I realized what was happening to me was a thing. Im glad kids will be able to grow up knowing these things are real and natural.
Pixar giving us therapy, one film at a time.
That’s what films like this should be for. We need it. Especially when we don’t get it from real life sources.
Such a worthy sequel. I love how it nails anxiety and especially panic attacks. I felt that in that whole sequence; it feels so visceral and inescapable.
Knowings George’s PURE HATRED for second hand embarrassment I had to click on this reaction immediately 😭
Your emotions don't always work how their suppose to work during this time, which is why joy and anger specifically aren't acting correctly
When Joy said that growing up means you feel less joy, that was the moment I cried as that's exactly what happened to me! God, this movie is so good! It's definitely gonna win Best Animated film at the Oscars!
It reminds me of the line in “The Breakfast Club” when Allison said, “When you grow up, your heart dies.”
@@mattslupek7988 Damn! That's just as sad!!!
Bill and Mindy were offered 5% of what Amy Poehler was given for her role.
I know Joy is sort of the main character, but not by 95% so I get it!
Bill & Mindy were also instrumental in developing their characters and the story for the first movie. To have such a low-ball offer in light of that was insulting.
You have to remember, though, that this was for voiceover work. Even though Fear and Disgust were on screen a bunch, that was the animators. If they don't make any noise, their actor-voices don't need to be there, so it _might_ be the difference between 100 minutes of recording versus 10 minutes. 🤷♂
@@bigdream_dreambig do you think Joy has 95% more lines?
@@Metamorfeus Lewis Black and Phyllis Smith didn't seem to mind, they got the same offer.
@@iceman10129 No, of course not. I'm just saying that some portion of that multiple will be due to the amount of work. It's not all attributable to a different rate of pay.
Tiny bit of trivia that I noticed.
The line that Envy says "Enhance 273 to 176" is taken directly from the original Bladerunner.
(Yes, I've seen it that many times).
@@simonoleary9264 *Disgust
21:06 you cannot hide sadness, that's why she still glows even if she's covered by a blanket.
An interesting interpretation but I think it's just the glow of Ennui's phonescreen
Riley hid her sadness from her parents in the first movie though.
So cute that anxiety only showed up at 13!
"Every emotion is good for Riley." "Not anxiety."
Surprisingly, therapists will probably tell you that anxiety _does_ serve a purpose. It can get out of hand--which our modern, fast-paced world doesn't help--but it's often helpful to listen to what it's saying and remind yourself what things are within your control and which things aren't, like Joy does at the end of the film.
That said, I'm on anti-anxiety medication myself, so...yeah, I get it. But if anxiety is just our brain's way of trying to tell us something's wrong, then maybe anxiety isn't the problem: maybe **waves vaguely at the world being on fire** it's just reacting to all that?
I took my kids to watch this and immediately started crying on “I’m not good enough” That one hit too close to home
I think George's dominant emotion would be embarrassment given how often he talks about bullying, second hand embarrassment, etc but it never really has the tinge of anxiety so much as a feeling of avoidance
When you "grow up" you feel less Joy. but when you really grow up, then the scene of Riley choosing an emotion happens: "Joy, Riley wants you." we get to choose our emotions.
Joy: as you grow older the less joy you feel...
Me: how dare you bring reality into a film! 😂
when you grow up you feel less joy. When you mature, you choose joy.
i love how Anxiety is portrayed here: running around like a chicken with their head cut off to try and fix everything, it feels like a Tetris game that's quickly getting out of hand. But in the midst of the frenetic tornado, you're just paralyzed. and what i think is really cool is that this can apply to both the physical and mental state
That representation was great. She's all over the place, yet somehow completely frozen.
George asked what our main emotion was during puberty. Is Confusion an emotion? 😂
That’s probably fear…as confusion leads to fears
At least you know yours lol, I've no idea what mine is
Sexual frustration?
Haven't got an anxiety attack for several years and this movie just brought back a brief anxiety attack with that scene.
This is an amazing movie. An excellent example of how movies can be both deeply meaningful and entertaining. And to do it with an animated, cartoon like movie that both children AND adults can enjoy and appreciate. It leaves you thinking about yourself. Why can't other movies, by other studios come close to this?
Another Easter egg people seem to miss is the scene where they're looking at family island. The binoculars they use are the binoculars from Toy Story. At least they look identical to me. Maybe it was unintentional.
Whoever thought of everything coming off across as sarcastic over the sar-chasm is a rock star, you can dine out over that one idea for the rest of your life
One of the best sequels of all time. Been awhile since an animated movie made me cry. 10/10
i searched why Bill Hader got recast and found this
The reason Mindy Kaling and Bill Hader chose not to reprise their roles for Inside Out 2 was due to significant salary disagreements. The actors were initially offered $100,000 each for their roles in the sequel, with no additional bonuses.
Maybe if Joy hadn’t kept Riley’s sense of self from being more nuanced, she would’ve been able to handle her friends going to a different school without letting anxiety take over. Cognitive dissonance is a real pain!
To be fair to Joy, "Homework should be illegal…" probably came from a bad memory and a lot of the memories sent to the back had joy mixed in them. So she probably didn't realize the cherry picking would cause problems since she must have felt she was being fair.
This movie really spoke to me... esp when the "I'm not good enough" self manifested and Anxiety was in a panic attack whirlpool. When all yr bad decisions and mistakes come rushing back to remind you sometimes... excellent and worthy sequel!
Inside Out is the best film Pixar ever made. The sequel was never going to be as good but it’s a solid 7. Anxiety was too irritating
nah this one is better than the first.
My partner and I took out 9 year old to see this whem i came out and the moment the line about feeling less joy as you get older was said we both looked at each other and could rell how hard it hurt and real it felt for each other.
There's a moment you cut that I especially enjoyed when I saw this movie, probably because I'm fluent in Spanish. It's a pun that you won't get otherwise which makes it a curious choice for an Easter egg.
Remember the part where Anxiety remembers that Riley has a Spanish test the next day and they need to study.
Joy replies, "Oh! You're right! We totally-"
And Anxiety says, "Olvidamos."
Joy says, "What's that mean?"
Anxiety replies, "Forgot."
It looks, at first, like Anxiety is admitting that it slipped her mind, but an acquaintance with Spanish brings to light the fact that "Olvidamos" is the first-person, plural conjugation of the word "olvidar" which means "to forget." "Nosotros olvidamos" translates as "we forget" or "we forgot," depending on its context.
So when Joy says, "What's that mean?" Anxiety's reply was not an admission that she didn't know. It was the _answer._ It means "forgot."
Gods these movies, this is the kind of movie that can actually crack a little bit of daylight into someone’s outlook, as a writer, it is some strong stuff. If you ask me, not just top tier Pixar, but top tier movie in general, and succeeds in vastly improving on the first. Mostly just because this age is more compelling than Riley’s in the first movie, but still. Thanks for a great reaction as always you two!
2:24 - Binoculars are Lenny from Toy Story.
I just want to wish Simone and George the very best outside this UA-cam career. Wishing good health, mind and body, to the both of ya. Much love from the opposite side of the planet.
They NAILED anxiety. I’ve spoken to friends that have issues with it and they had second hand anxiety the entire movie because it way to close to home.
I used to suffer from panic attacks. This movie brought me right back to it (in a good way). They absolutely nailed it.
She is lucky to have joy run the emotions. If you look at other people’s minds (like her parents) Anger or Sadness is usually in control.
I actually think it's really beautiful that her mother's dominant emotion is sadness. Because it's more than being gloomy. Sadness is protective and vulnerable and what gives us empathy and therefore lifelong, deep friendships.
Whoever made this definitely pays attention to hockey. Riley skating around with the mouth guard chomped on one side is like half the NHLers on the ice today.
And the skating animations are abseloutly spot on, movement wise
As a severely ADHD kid, my emotion was a squirrel. Yes, a squirrel is an emotion.
The panic attack scene was too realistically done. I felt every single second of it
You guys should look up the extra scenes that were cut. There was a lot of really good stuff they couldn't include. Just seeing it is fascinating and more of that "wow, they nailed it!" feeling. Highly recommend.
My dominant emotion during puberty was what you would call…the boredom
I got ridiculed a lot in middle school, so when other kids told that I was starting to smell bad, I chose not to believe them. Whoopsie...
I agree with George, this movie hits hard. When Riley is sitting in the penalty box, being yanked back and forth between "I'm a good person" and "I'm not good enough!"...Man, that's a rough moment. I think it'll stay with me for a long time.
The new emotions feel very MUPPET-esque in style of their designs; Anxiety almost looks like a manic version of Red from FRAGGLE ROCK.
Sadly, the making of INSIDE OUT 2 was also in the middle of the massive layoffs at PIXAR, which meant a ton of people didn't benefit from the massive financial success of it (now officially the highest grossing animated film in history)
In the first film, Riley needs to feel Sadness. In the second film, Riley wants to feel Joy.
envy probably only has four fingers so she can envy having a fifth.
Mine was definitely fear and anger lol
I was scared to get close to anyone and was quite mean at times. I never really bullied anyone, but my anger made me quite unpleasant to be around. Plus struggling with my beliefs at the time didn’t help and didn’t feel like I could talk to anyone lol
I luckily calmed down by the time high school rolled around but I got what I wanted I guess and had no one to interact with or be friends with. The senior boys liked to picked on me during this time to for some reason 0-0
Emberrassment is my favorite character! HE IS ADORABLE! 😍💖
I love you guys. Thanks for being real! I felt seen a lot by this movie and watching you watch it was very moving.❤
'A Crime of Passion Fruit ' is S tier Simone
So I went to see this with my extended family - my sister, my 8-year nephew, and my mum. All us adults unanimously concluded after we left the cinema that this is a film for grown-ups disguised as a kids' movie. Simply brilliant, and once again a sequel that is better than the original. I am not sure if they will make a third one, but this has been one of the most memorable feature animations over the past decade.
Most of the top tier Pixar films are just that. They're adult films that can entertain kids.
Fear, disgust, and riley have been changed voice wise. The original riley is in her 20s now, so they got a new 16 year old to play her, which i didnt realize cause they sound similar
Joy has a pic of Bing Bong on her shelf. Missed that Easter egg too possibly!
Anxiety is my favorite character!
@20:00 is a reference to the famous Mac commercial that ran in 1984 and referenced the book of the same name, showing a dystopian world controlled by a giant figure on screen shouting commands.
Two of my favourite movie reactors reacting to one of my new top five favourite Pixar films? I clicked right away!
As a person with GAD this movie...that anxiety it's just to real.
Saaaammmmmeeeeee. Tears every time I watch it.
I've been waiting for this reaction!!!!
Thank you both! And Be Well to everybody here.
17:52 It's the TripleDent Gum Song.
The pay disputes came down to them offering Amy Poehler $5M and the other returning cast were offered $100,000 (an insultingly low number for the caliber of these actors). Bill Hader and Mindy Kaling declined to return as a result.
They don't have much to do. The cast of emotions has expanded to 9/10 characters. Joy is still the lead and Anxiety the new foible.
I can understand them not being paid lead actor money for a couple of voices lines. It was probably a weeks work.
Simone's constant look of pain for most of the film was cracking me up. Second-hand embarrassment is real!
This movie didn't make me cry like Inside Out but it made me so anxious and I've never really been an anxious person.
Sarchasm, n.: the divide between a person using sarcasm and a person who doesn't understand it.
"totem fist" just killed me!!! Thanks Georges!
I expected this movie to be disappointing but it's SO GOOD AAAAA, I swear to god, how much anxiety *I* had during the panic scene was insane lol
I apologize in advance so much with you, Simone and George, because I love your videos (I really love them), but one thing that it's hard to handle to me is when (I'm not saying that it was, just that it seemed to me like it was) you treat the whole movie as an endless joke and you laugh at every scene, all the time. However, when you get full into the movie and live it inside yourself, you are wonderful. And I loved your reaction at infinity level because this movie touched my heart in countless ways (specially about the panic attacks). It's an awesome story about coming on age, friendship, family, the need to be accepted and the importance of the deepest question at all: "Who am I?". This is cinema!
PS: Please, don't get mad with me by my words. They were not a critic to you.
Ia have a theory that envy has only 4 fingers because envy never has enough (you can always look at yourself and think that you have less than somebody else)
Definitely for me on a normal basis I think Joy was in charge but Anger and Sadness took over when riding the hormone roller coaster. If I had a choice i would throw my anxiety off a mountain
Yes! Anger is right: punt Anxiety right into the dump!
I’ve watched this twice in the theaters and that panic attack is so damn accurate. And that line about feeling less joy when you get older. Arrow to the heart. They did a great job on this movie
Finding Nemo has been my favorite Pixar movie since I first saw it as a wee child, I may have found a movie that finally topped it.
I love you guys so much for this reaction
Why Bill and Mindy werent returning was because of pay distube.
Apparently Poehler got 5mill and some backend deal, while they were offered 100k for their roles, and they felt it wasnt enough. Disney then upped the offer ( noone seem to know by how much ) and it still wasnt what they meant they were worth, and so they were replaced.
Now the thing is, how many actually knew in the first one, just by the voice that it was Bill and Mindy? and in other animation movies how many actors could you/we identofy just by the voice, and would you miss them for a sequel, if you were honest.
I can see that Bill and Mindy would like some more for their roles, since they were pretty weighty as well, but apparently nobody really knew ( from those who hadnt read about the dispute ) that they werent the same people, while Poehlers voice might be harder to swap out with someone else.
"What was your leading emotion through puberty?" After careful consideration, I would say mine was Joy and Ennui, both of them, stuck together by the handcuffs of ADHD.
As someone with an anxiety disorder rooted in an inferiority complex, from the moment Riley's sense of self becomes "I'm not good enough", until the end of her panic attack, I'm a mess of tears every time. Every time, no matter how many times I see it. Why can't Joy be the relatable one?! 😅
My favourite Letterboxd review for this: “that probably felt good as fuck for pouchy”
I think my dominant emotion during teenage years was...ennui? I didn't have anxiety and wasn't overtly emotional so joy, sadness or anger were definitely not in control.
My main emotion was (and probably still is) fear. I'd tell you why, but i'm too scared 😱
We plan to watch this with our kids soon...my son is very literal sooooo I'm curious how much of this movie is going to just go over his head😂😂😂
It's gonna be fun😂😂😂
The imagination cubicle scene definitely felt personal from the animators side. Disney execs constantly trying to fix and prepare for every eventuality and the artists and storytellers stuck creating uninspired work to pacify them.
I'd love to see you react to BOJACK HORSEMAN.
No one arguing yet about the difference between a panic attack and an anxiety attack? Shame..
🤔 I'm having a hard time drawing the dividing lines between Fear, Anxiety, and Disgust here... Disgust used to be the one concerned about social status, but one of the big differences between Anxiety and Fear is that Anxiety is usually about social situations. For a while I thought the defining trait of Anxiety was that her concerns were all hypothetical whereas Fear was worried about present physical dangers, but Fear also worries about the future and plans ahead (thus his parachute), so that's not it...
Fear probably plans ahead for his own sake but when it comes to Riley he probably has a more specific role.
My favorites from Riley's emotions are Joy, Disgust and Envy 💛💚🌈
One of best films of this year
Fear is voiced by Tony Hale in this one
Speaking of animated films, I'm hoping you still haven't watched "Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron (2002)". I think you'll gonna love it.
The panic attack hit hard
my most dominating emotion was definitely anxiety, lol...
Flip flopping between superiority and inferiority was my usual state in puberty. Inferiority + victimhhood = endless lakes of tears.
I request a reaction to The 'Burbs if you've not seen it before. It's got a young Tom Hanks in it and it's very funny.
22:08 BOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
that was clever, though
I watch a lot of movies and have never truly related to a character until this movie….unfortunately that character was Anxiety! I may have said “oh no” out loud in the theater when Anxiety pulled out the console to go through potential scenarios of what could go wrong. I truly felt seen in that moment.😢😂
I love this sequel!
The only thing that makes this film not a 100% for me is that she gets on the team despite being put in the penalty box. If the coach didn't think she was ready before that, then that would probably have make her more certain she was right. I think it would have been more satisfying for the narrative outside her head *and* the one inside, if after the game and everything's resolved she herself had gone to the coach and said something like "I don't think I'm ready yet, but I will be next year". Maybe even throw in a line about something like needing to learn to control her emotions. Rather than a "her dream comes true" moment, it could have been more a "she's growing up" thing.
i mean as the other girls kind of alluded to, the scrimmage wasn't /actually/ the try-out for the team. the try-out was actually when riley entered high school and the fact she gets in isn't a "dreams come true" moment, it's meant to show that riley has grown and learned the lesson (hence also the 'if you dont make it in, you can try again' bit before hand). it's about her facing the anxiety of the situation, not just about her dreams of making the team.