FIRST TIME WATCHING *INSIDE OUT*

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Published 2024-01-25

All Comments (21)
  • @kanekikai8491
    I think the only reason joy didn’t send up the memory near the beginning is that she’s afraid that the other emotions would change it like sadness
  • I think this movie was really about how all emotions are needed. 'Toxic Positivity' was a big theme too, especially with Joy always wanting Riley to be happy. Sure, happiness is good, but the other emotions are just as important. This also ties into the 'duo core memories' at the end, as Riley becomes older, she becomes more complicated. Also, the sequel got a trailer some time ago.
  • @hariimau9946
    ayo finding out that you‘re a dad just made my entire day
  • @rafaelmatos5851
    You know, the lead emotion says everything about a person's main personality trait. Riley's lead emotion is Joy, what makes sense, since Riley is normally a very happy girl. Not just that, but you can see that her emotions all fight over the control of the console, representing how a kid's emotions run wild, while an adult has more control. Her mother's lead emotion is Sadness to show that she is a very compassive and empathic person. Meanwhile, her father's lead emotion is Anger to show his more strict side, seen also the more militaristic style his mind has, where the other emotions address Anger as "sir", as if he is a general.
  • @silvertail7131
    I've always interpreted sadness's unique effect on past memories to be a sort of nostalgia. Reflecting on past happiness can make you sad. If the cause of the change was different, it's possible other emotions would change them... Like, a terrible hockey accident might lead to fear changing the memories of past play, a betrayal might give this to anger or disgust, who similarly might feel compelled to touch the memories
  • Ngl the scene towards the end when Riley is crying with her parents because she misses Minnesota never fails to make me cry, and I don’t usually cry during movies, but it hits especially hard for me because I was going through a rough time moving somewhere new where I didn’t have any friends đŸ˜„
  • This movie did a great job of making Joy look like the good guy and slowly peeling back the layers to show that they were all there for a reason and each of them provide a different type of motivation.
  • @lemonboi5833
    The scene where bing bong fades away will always be the saddest part in this movie for me 😭 36:21
  • @elbruces
    If you're a parent, watch this show with your kid. It creates a language that you can use to draw them out. "When you did that, what emotion did you think was in control? When that happened, what color was that memory ball?" These are hard to explain for a kid, but this show gives them the ability to describe where they're at and how they feel.
  • @Pochitaman30
    Sadness: you remember the funny movie where the dog dies John: we dont do that here
  • Your commentary was PRISTINE! You really were understanding the undertones of what they were trying to get across. A few extra tid bits: +Mom's commanding emotion (like joy was with Riley) was sadness and Dad's was Anger- a commentary about Men and Woman's stereotypical way of dealing with life (not saying its true) +We all have imaginary friends that seemed so real to us when we are children that fade away until we know that we did... but we cant remember them anymore +The controller grows as Riley grows. The move starts and its tiny, then she hits childhood and theres space for more than one emotion, now shes in preteens where all of the 5 emotions can have a space +lastly- just like all Pixar movies there are tooooons of easter eggs to their other movies! so glad you liked this! Cant wait for number 2!
  • This movie was very emotional for me. It showed just how much sadness is needed. (And other emotions too.) This is a great childhood movie of mine.
  • @allaboutzii9305
    This movie and watching Bluey have honestly made me and my husband more cooperative and understanding parents. Our daughter is turning four soon and helping her regulate and understand her emotions has been rewarding in comparison to how our guardians raised us. Not only kids but us parents have been benefiting from films/shows like these and i love it ❀
  • @anthea.m35
    Yup number 2 is about puberty and when new emotions appear!
  • @BobTheism
    Great movie! Great message as well that it's not only ok to be sad sometimes, it's necessary. The emotions becoming unable to use the controls is also a really, really good simplified explanation for depression, hits very close to home.
  • @pokiandi5228
    INSIDE OUT 2 IN CINEMA IN 11 DAYS I'M SO EXCITED!! The first movie was a big part of my childhood, my mom even says it's the nicest movie she's ever watched✌
  • @Br0nto5aurus
    24:12 "what do you do?" Hopefully try to respond to your kid, not with your own emotions, but with understanding. Kids don't act out because they want to be bad kids. They want to fulfil their needs. Often overlooked needs by parents are play and attention, because they aren't as urgent as food and water. And parents often attempt to punish acting out for attention with less attention or negative attention, and it usually doesn't stop the acting out, because the need is for positive attention and interaction with a caregiver. Once your kid can talk, you can teach him that it's okay to say something like, "can you pay attention to me please?" (usually "look at me!" as a toddler, but that need doesn't go away after toddlerhood) and when to say it. I wish I had a way to say, "I'm struggling with my patience right now," or some kind of code word arranged a head of time, when I was little and my mom would get caught chatting with someone at the supermarket. It probably would've gotten my mom out of conversations she wasn't interested in, too. Whatever the situation, if you stay calm and think before you speak, you're far more likely to feel like you were successful after the interaction. If you get worked up and throw out words or punishments you don't mean, you've lost no matter what the kid did. "I need to think it over and discuss this with your mother. We'll talk later", was my "wait till your father gets home." It allowed my parents to discuss and consider an appropriate punishment that was as close to whatever I did as possible.