The Lion King
Hamlet - for kids!!
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The Lion King
Hamlet - for kids!!
A little off the topic of deeper meanings, but I didn't like the way hunchback of notre dame botched the entire ending of the novel it was based off of. In case you haven't read it, Quasimodo dies in the novel, but Disney decided not to have him die beside the woman he loved but could never have, and instead made a shitty sequel. Mike Eisner is a moron
At 10/9/08 02:48 PM, caedes08 wrote: A little off the topic of deeper meanings, but... Mike Eisner is a moron
Welcome to Newgrounds. I think you'll fit in just fine.
At 10/9/08 09:17 AM, videogamer0810 wrote:At 10/9/08 02:10 AM, TheNossinator wrote: The Lion King.You're fucking insane. It's obvious that the deeper meaning is "Lion Incest"
Apparently it's a 'circle of life' thing.
Simba and Nala were half-siblings.
Honestly I've been wondering whether that was true or not, considering Mufasa was the only adult dude there... turns out I was right.
weird...
There's a deeper meaning in Lion King too, which is: If your father is King and you're next in line to receive the throne, don't trust your uncle. A useful lesson.
If you think I'm lying, do some research on Uganda's King Oyo Nyimba.
i always thought that Disney movies had a secret dirty scene =P
At 10/9/08 02:11 AM, fli wrote:At 10/9/08 02:07 AM, fli wrote: My blog on my reaction to watching Wall-E.Oh wait...
Yes, children's movie... but, man, did that leave some kind of impression on me.
I'm not sure if Wall E is a Disney Movie, or Pixar... or whatever...
Disney now owns pixar
At 10/10/08 10:47 AM, Sensationalism wrote: Actually, that's not necessarily true. They are either half-siblings or cousins, depending on whether Serafina mated with Mufasa or Taka (Scar).
I never really thought about that. Either way around it's kind of creepy.
Another Disney movie I never really gave much thought to that could have more meaning to it than what it was given was certainly Winnie the Pooh. I know it doesn't look like much of a meaning and it's basically nothing more than a children's book, but if you can analyze so much in Politics and other things then why can't you analyze Winnie the Pooh?
Alladin tells good teenagers to take off their clothes according to youtube.
Now that's deep.
I think James Bond is one of Disney's finest movies
Has anyone noticed how relevant 1982's Tron has become in recent years?
Formerly PuddinN64 - BBS, Icon, and Portal Mod
"Your friends love you anyway" - Check out Guinea Something Good!
One Disney movie with a deep message is Anastasia. It shows that communism is bad.
I don't know, lol.
Bestiality? The beast with the princess chic, sounds hot.
At 10/9/08 02:16 AM, Redface wrote:At 10/9/08 01:44 AM, The-Great-One wrote: Two I can think of are Beauty and the Beast and The Hunchback of Notre Dame.What? Oh please. Unless shitty second-grade morals like "beauty is only skin deep" is considered "deep".
Where are the Disney movies that show Man's constant struggle to learn of himself? Or the effect of Capitalism on American culture?
Actually, there are a lot of issues concerning domestic violence (how women often return to their abusers because they believe they can "change" them). Thankfully for Belle, the Beast had more incentive to change because of the 18th birthday rose.
The Black Hole
The ending when the villian goes to hell while getting it on with his robot
"As the old saying goes...what was it again?"
Toy Story and Monsters Inc are ones that come to mind. But the deepest one is The Little Mermaid, because of the boner.
lol
At 4/6/09 09:01 PM, Butt-Blast wrote: One Disney movie with a deep message is Anastasia. It shows that communism is bad.
Uh, not to burst your bubble or anything, but Anastasia wasn't a Disney movie. It was made by 20th Century Fox's animation studio. Said studio was shut down after making two movies; Anastasia and Titan A.E..
At 10/9/08 01:44 AM, The-Great-One wrote:
Two I can think of are Beauty and the Beast and The Hunchback of Notre Dame.
I just watched the Hunchback of Notre Dame last night; such a sad movie D:
At 4/6/09 10:19 PM, TimeLordX wrote:At 4/6/09 09:01 PM, Butt-Blast wrote: One Disney movie with a deep message is Anastasia. It shows that communism is bad.Uh, not to burst your bubble or anything, but Anastasia wasn't a Disney movie. It was made by 20th Century Fox's animation studio. Said studio was shut down after making two movies; Anastasia and Titan A.E..
LIAR LIAR!! *covers ears* na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na.
At 4/6/09 09:01 PM, Butt-Blast wrote: One Disney movie with a deep message is Anastasia. It shows that communism is bad.
Speaking of Anastasia, I just happened to find it on Hulu. What a coincidence.
Also staying on topic, you could see in Robin Hood that the stealing of money from the wealthy for distribution to the poor is beneficial to the community. It shows that taking enough money from the wealth to make the poor content will not ruin their finances and is very fair. It shows that welfare is unnecessary and that vigilantism is a much better way support the unfortunate.
Now Robin Hood better be a Disney Movie or do you assholes have to ruin childhood again!!!
At 10/9/08 01:49 AM, sirspamalot wrote: Bambi.
it showed children the concept of death
Death is sad.. No shit.
At 10/9/08 06:06 AM, Phobotech wrote:At 10/9/08 06:01 AM, Phobotech wrote: The Song of the South = Racial TensionsProof and proof.
I saw that clip many years ago, on a VHS my dad rented and showed me... Now if, as Wikipedia says, it was never released on video in America, how the Hell can that be? I'm starting to wonder how I was able to see it, and if Wikipedia isn't covering up an American release.
Toy Story, Monster Inc. and Wall-E, well that are the 3 movies which actually cross my mind when thinking of a deeper meaning.
I especially liked Monster Inc. for some reason...
At 4/9/09 07:26 PM, SoulMaster71 wrote:At 10/9/08 06:06 AM, Phobotech wrote:I saw that clip many years ago, on a VHS my dad rented and showed me... Now if, as Wikipedia says, it was never released on video in America, how the Hell can that be? I'm starting to wonder how I was able to see it, and if Wikipedia isn't covering up an American release.At 10/9/08 06:01 AM, Phobotech wrote: The Song of the South = Racial TensionsProof and proof.
It is in fact true that this film was never released in the US on video, but it was released in other countries that are not so sensitive. My aunt got a VHS copy from someone who converted it from a Japanese laserdisk version.
At 4/9/09 07:42 PM, Butt-Blast wrote: It is in fact true that this film was never released in the US on video, but it was released in other countries that are not so sensitive. My aunt got a VHS copy from someone who converted it from a Japanese laserdisk version.
So you're saying that the local video rental place, replaced so long ago after the nearby Blockbuster drove it out of business with greater selection, was a bootlegger? That's... Incredible, that such a small place would circumvent censorship like that. And it makes Blockbuster seem even more heinous.
At 4/9/09 07:53 PM, SoulMaster71 wrote:At 4/9/09 07:42 PM, Butt-Blast wrote: It is in fact true that this film was never released in the US on video, but it was released in other countries that are not so sensitive. My aunt got a VHS copy from someone who converted it from a Japanese laserdisk version.So you're saying that the local video rental place, replaced so long ago after the nearby Blockbuster drove it out of business with greater selection, was a bootlegger? That's... Incredible, that such a small place would circumvent censorship like that. And it makes Blockbuster seem even more heinous.
No, it was officially released by Disney outside the US. My aunt works at Sony and had connections to get the English version from Japan.
At 10/9/08 01:44 AM, The-Great-One wrote: Two I can think of are Beauty and the Beast and The Hunchback of Notre Dame.
That just prooves their unorigonal.
Bolt actually comes to mind. It shows that life, just life, is worth living.
Bedknobs and brooms sticks we learnt...
im fact im not too sure what we learnt....
Shit happens when germans are about?
At 10/9/08 01:49 AM, sirspamalot wrote: Bambi.
it showed children the concept of death
I'm still traumatized after having seen that movie and the Lion King.
"Dad, we'll always be together right?"