HILARIOUS! INSIDE OUT 2 MOVIE REVIEW! Transcript

Chapters

0:00 - Getting Ready for the Movie Night
3:57 - Lost in the Streets
4:50 - Navigating the Aftermath of the Movie
6:27 - Reflecting on Movie-Going Experiences
7:59 - Exploring Sports and Team Dynamics
9:55 - Delving into the Depth of the Movie's Story
10:45 - Reflecting on Self-Perception Over Time
12:47 - Friendship Dynamics and Growing Up
14:06 - Transitioning Friendships in High School
18:14 - Sharing Laughter and Reactions
19:21 - Examining Emotions and Memories
22:18 - Hilarious Moments and Inside Jokes
23:47 - Dealing with Social Embarrassment and Mistakes
26:46 - Reflecting on Personal Growth and Voice Changes
28:49 - Humorous Banter and Friendship Moments
29:28 - Analyzing Personality Development and Movie Reflections
31:25 - Appreciating Functional Family Dynamics
32:38 - Imagining a Sequel in High School

Long Summary

In this lengthy and detailed conversation, we delve into a movie experience of watching "Inside Out 2" where the speaker and a companion share their humorous and sometimes awkward encounters at the theater. The speaker recounts the initial skepticism about the movie but is pleasantly surprised by the depth and complexity it offers. They discuss various aspects of the film, from the portrayal of emotions to the characters, highlighting the humor and insights it provides.

The speaker reflects on the significance of portraying a teenage girl's journey through emotions during adolescence, touching on themes like friendship, maturity, and parental relationships. They appreciate the nuanced portrayal of emotions and the challenges faced during puberty. The speaker also humorously discusses the struggle with voice cracks and nostalgia, adding personal anecdotes and comparisons to their own experiences.

The conversation extends to the end of the movie, discussing the impact of anxiety and the importance of accepting and navigating complex emotions. They appreciate the humor and thoughtful storytelling of the film, recommending it for its engaging and relatable portrayal of emotional growth. The speaker concludes with a desire for a potential sequel to explore the protagonist's high school years and dating experiences.

Transcript

[0:00] Getting Ready for the Movie Night

[0:00] All right looks like we're ready you're gonna hold this up what you're gonna hold this up oh yeah okay so go you go it's your show all right it's our show so we went to go and see a movie, called inside out two two sequel i barely remember anything from the first one i don't remember too much from the first one and i was not super keen on it for the first 10 minutes but hold on I also made somebody else in the theater not super keen on it in the first few minutes so, he had to use the washroom before we went in yeah so the guys that our seats were like g14 and 13 so I walk up I remembered that yeah and in the theater too so I walk up and we're there's the only two seats empty on that row so I obviously I walk past like four couples who don't seem very happy about me um one guy's just staring at me I'm pretty sure he's giving me like a death stare but stink eye yeah he doesn't like me because i'm like i don't know walking too close to him right and i sit down in the seat and the girl next to me also gives me a stink eye people just were not happy tonight okay well we came in just at the end of the uh preview it was some lion king live action it was right yeah pennsylvania okay oh you're right i've got a drinking.

[1:16] I'm just trying to... All right, let's see. You can use this as your ringtone if you want. Death of a child. Good morning. My iced tea. I just want my iced tea. Oh, my gosh. It doesn't even taste good. If you try not snorting it, it can actually be a little easier. I wasn't trying to snort it, actually. Okay, so go. Sorry. Get to your seat. Yeah, get to my seat. And then I see this guy walk in and shiny head and stuff. All right, can we switch to my perspective now? Yeah, go ahead. So I get in there. Now, you know what it's like when you're trying to find someone in a theater who's not waving at you. I was! I was waving at you! Anyway, so what happens is you wait for the preview. What the heck is this doing in the middle of the road? It's a pile on. Oh, Lord. These construction workers. What the heck? There's not even any construction. It's just this thing. They're just playing with us now. There's a pile on in the middle of the road. All right, so I'm standing there. Now, of course, I just come in at the end of the lion scene preview thing. And it's pitch black. So then it's totally pitch black, right? I'm waiting for him. Like, come on, give us some light. I mean, if you had glasses or something, it'd reflect off the screen. So what I'm hoping for, literally standing there, I'm like, please, for the love of all that's holy, for the love of Zeus, can we get a snow-capped mountain scene so that just get blinding white so that I can see? Yeah. Anyway, so I get kind of fixated because I think I see you.

[2:40] And so I go lurching up the aisle. To a black girl, I might add. Well, first of all. Apparently I look like a black girl. First of all, first of all, I just wanted to point out that I began to think things might be slightly awry when I saw that she had a drink and a very startled look on her face. And I think what was pepper spray? As I come lurching in, hey, how you doing? So anyway. I said it like that guy Chandler. Just before her father called 911, I guess I backed out of that row. And then finally what you did do was you managed to move a finger. No, no, no. A little tiny finger. The entire aisle I was on was laughing because I said, no, no, dad, next row. No, dad, I'm the white girl. You didn't hear. Right. I didn't hear. I said it like twice, and the guy next to me apparently stopped hating me. It was just straight up mocking me because he was laughing. That counts. I'm like, next row. And then did someone tell you, like, tap on your shoulder or something and tell you? Because that's what it looked like from my perspective. I didn't hear or see anything. I was in a blind chaos of the big giant nosed guy in the movie. Oh, we're going to do spoilers too, by the way. Obviously, it's spoilers. It's a movie review.

[3:57] Lost in the Streets

[3:58] Yeah, I thought the girl was, like, trying to say to you, because, like, further down the aisle. Oh, wait a minute. I'm so sorry. Don't say where we are. I just think I'm lost. We're on this street. Oh, yeah. I'll get you around. I got all thrown off by the pylon. It was all the fun. Let's go back. Do you want to get a GPS? No, no, no. I've got it from here. Okay. Don't worry about it. Don't worry about a thing. I will find our destination as easily as I found you in the bowel-inky depths of the theater. My anxiety receptor person's going. The bad teeth anxiety is up. All right. Well, wait, let's go down the train of thought here. So we go the wrong way. We get lost in an alleyway and then kidnappers get us. Exactly. And then we die due to the Spanish flu. No, but the most awful thing is human traffickers are like, he's too old and gamey.

[4:47] So we need to throw him back like a bad fish. That's the plan.

[4:50] Navigating the Aftermath of the Movie

[4:51] Exactly. All right. Then you go looking for me in the theater. So anyway we got there and i love it when this timing goes well we're not exposed to the bad movies that we see coming because when was the last time when was the last time you saw a preview that you liked or thought was oh it's gonna be a great movie i thought the watchers but then i watched a review of it and it said it was pretty crap so i just can't see no i can't see a movie about guys spending two hours checking the time like i can't do it i'm actually about to jump out the window where are we turn right ah there we go that feels about right.

[5:29] Oh, yes. There we go. That place is... We ate there once. I can't even say who it is. I remember that. That place sucked. Oh, I liked it. I literally was a foil. I'm just going to wait here until it opens. All right. It was just an inch in oil. Delightful. I felt very, very lubricated. All right. That's not something you want. Well, you wait until you're over 50, see? So, anyway, I don't remember much of the first movie, other than there was a comedian from the Jon Stewart show who plays the angry guy. And that joy reminds us of mom. Anyway, so that's about all I've got.

[6:04] So, and I was not expecting a massive amount from this movie, but I've got to tell you, I think this is one of the best movies I've seen and I can't even tell you how long. Because we've seen some duds, man. Yeah, man, the last, we've gone to a bunch of movies. We saw the Planet of the Apes one. Oh my gosh, I was dying. We were the only people in the entire theater. And that's not a good sign. There was nobody else there. Like, literally empty it. And I was, like, filming it. Like, what is this?

[6:27] Reflecting on Movie-Going Experiences

[6:27] No, I actually think it was full of people of ghosts. Of people who died watching it. And died happy. I nearly died watching it. Died happy that they didn't have to watch the end. So, the general premise of the movie is that there are these emotions in this girl, Riley. And each one of the emotions has a sort of characteristic, obviously, a personality or a particular... The core five, joy, anger, fear, sad, and disgust. Discuss, right? Yeah. Right.

[6:56] So anyway, so then, okay, so it's very much a, wait, am I going on? Straight. Straight, yeah. No, no, it's fine. I know, right, right, right. So it's, at the beginning, I was like, okay, this feels like a rehash. Like, what are they going to do that's different? Because, you know, these conflicts between the emotions and like the idea in general, and I've talked about it on my show. My emotions are constant. Yeah, like, no, that your emotions can sometimes be in conflict, but in general, they're all there to help. And you shouldn't repress any of the emotions. You should accept them, but moderate them, right? So, you know, like for... No! Yes. So that's the range.

[7:38] So I was like, at the beginning, I was like, okay, this feels like a bit of a rehash because she's got these friends and she plays hockey and blah, blah, blah. All right. And I don't particularly care about the sports stuff because the sports stuff is always kind of annoying to me. I think if you're playing sports, it's different, but... What do you mean, if you're playing sports? Like when you're watching sports.

[7:59] Exploring Sports and Team Dynamics

[7:59] Yeah, yeah, yeah. No, I like sports. I just don't... The problem is the sports team stuff. It's all like, oh, I want this team to win. And it's like, but if you were on the other side, you'd want the other team to win. It's not good versus evil. It's just, I don't know, luck and competence versus luck and competence. It's so and i've never particularly found the sports stuff too um gripping right right so i was like okay so there's going to be some sports team but then there was a blinking light and the entire movie changed for me i remember i saw this in the trailer the construction team and i saw i thought it was a really bad character design anxiety when i saw in the trailer but as the show progressed i thought it was it got a lot better or it really fit it i thought i thought I thought it was just they were going a bit overboard with some of the new emotions, like exaggerating too many traits. But I changed my mind. Well, I mean, you're used to such moderate emotions in your family, so I can understand. Yeah, I don't know. Mom, what can I tell you, Mom?

[8:54] Mom, it's either cleaning or nothing. I will actually say that I was really moved by this in a way that I haven't been since Tangled. What? No, Tangled I found very moving when Flynn Rider went through his death scene.

[9:11] Anyway. Flynn Rider dies? Yeah, and then she brings him back. Oh, more spoilers. Then she brings him back with her hair. Come on, if someone hasn't seen Tangled, I think it's too late. Right, right.

[9:23] So anyway, the characters are all trying to sleep, and there's this restlessness, and then there's this little button that's flashing, and it's called? Puberty. Now, I hope myself to go through puberty someday. Maybe one day. I'm just a very, very unhealthy child. There's always hope. But I would, so when the puberty thing happened and I realized what they made the sequel for, which is not to retread the original, but to, you know, a whole new phase, a whole new chapter, a whole new complexity. I was like, okay, I'm settling in for a solid story here.

[9:55] Delving into the Depth of the Movie's Story

[9:56] And I, boy, was I ever not disappointed by how good the story was and how clever and how funny and how insightful it was. They really did a good job on, I think. Humor was great. And the complexity in depth was amazing. Video game characters. Okay, let's go with my bit. Okay. So the fact that everything is being replaced, and it's true because I remember when I was a kid, my emotions were more simple. And then when you hit puberty, your emotions get much more nuanced, complex, and you get new stuff. And so I thought that they just modeled that really well in the show. When I was a kid, I had a very warped perception of myself and reality, kind of, just like the world as a whole. And I think... That was partly from the simplicity, but I think when I got older, I got more of like a third person perspective view on things.

[10:45] Reflecting on Self-Perception Over Time

[10:46] Can you break that out a bit more? No. Okay. No, I mean. Excellent. Well explained. I'm baffled. Okay. I mean, like, it just didn't really, like, I only saw things from my perspective when I was younger. So, like, there wasn't much.

[11:02] I don't know if the word is out thinking, which is not really the word I'm looking for. Oh, like an out group thinking, like thinking of the other person and whether you fit in and stuff like that. Yeah. I didn't really think, you know, whether I fit in or cared about stuff like that. But I think as I got older, and this is probably kind of what they were saying in the movie, although I think they may have overdone it a little bit, which we'll get to later, but there was definitely a bit of like, as I got older, I think I have a bit more of a third person perspective on things now. And I can see things more objectively rather than just like from myself. Right. And of course, when you were younger, you didn't as much care about socializing now. Of course, your peer group is very important. And that's exactly right, because your peer group is your future and your parents are your past so i think that that movie and i just so she gets all of these they just come in and wreck the simple like five button xbox controller for emotions didn't even need to like what was the point well they needed to replace the simple controls with the more complex ones right yeah but like they just started destroying stuff well that's puberty man what can i tell you my skin was destroyed and then so then i thought it was very interesting thing that the simple emotions get bottled up and thrown into a vault. I love how anxiety was like, that's such a great idea. Just like, you can't bottle us up. Good idea. That was really funny. And so, and the more complex and socially paranoid emotions, they kind of kick in, right? And, and it's very powerful.

[12:31] And so I thought that was great. The fact that she woke up with, I mean, she woke up with a pimple. It never left. It's just one of those pimples that doesn't leave. Oh, yeah. I had one of those through the Australia tour, immortalized forever. So I thought she woke up with a pimple and then?

[12:47] Friendship Dynamics and Growing Up

[12:48] Um the emotions right the the high and low and up and down emotions that everything you just touch it a little bit and it's like yeah i thought that was very funny and well done and i also liked of course how they jumped into other people's emotions as well like the mom's like oh here's the next 10 years i love when they do that that was that was one of the funniest things i think they did more in the first yeah the first movie but that was still cool so i thought that they They really got well, the past and the future, right? So her friends are moving away. I can't remember the names. It was the black girl and the Hispanic girl, right? I think Asian. Asian. So her friends were moving away. So she had to find new friends. I mean, that's an absolute, right? You have to find new friends when your friends are moving away. Yeah. She didn't have to be so hostile about it. But when anxiety was like, no, we need new friends. This is our next four years. I thought, yeah, this is great. And I was kind of irritated at the other emotions or characters, whatever you want to call them.

[13:50] Because I was like, no, forget the old friends. Honestly, you're not going to see them again after this next three days. So say your goodbyes. Maybe don't be harsh about it. You know what everybody says, oh, we'll still be able to hang out. No, you won't. It doesn't happen. But that's like the people who break up and are like, we can still be friends.

[14:06] Transitioning Friendships in High School

[14:07] You can be friendly to each other. but you can't really just you can't be friends because stuff's gonna hang out right because friends tell each other about their dates and it's like if you broke up with someone you're gonna say hey i met this new girl she's great so i thought that um the puberty thing was like the angle that was needed and then she's like oh well they're my old friends and her old friends were kind of goofy and immature and that's part of just you don't want to get stuck in a social group that keeps you stuck from moving forward in life and her friends were jeopardizing that because the older girls were cooler and the younger friends were making all these goofy faces and so on which can be fun but you don't want that to interfere with the forward moving of your social group when you hit high school and i mean i don't have too much experience because i didn't do middle school and i only got to high school when i joined like the homeschooling community but when i hit high school you definitely can't you have to move on from your childhood it's just how it has to work because when you join you're like the youngest kid there especially for me my birthday is like the end of the year yeah um i know earlier i think i was the obvious kid in my entire group uh your friend group i mean now no i was when i first joined oh yeah all of high school i was like the youngest kid so you really have to.

[15:20] Go ahead and kind of boost like boost your maturity almost you do now if you've sorry because all the kids are and even even if you're not the youngest maybe you're the oldest In your grade, there's still three grades ahead of you where there's older kids. You really have to boost your maturity. That's what I'm saying. And everyone is drawn to the older kids because they're cooler. And if you have friends that you've had for like five or seven years, you just have a younger mindset with them. And it's kind of hard to move forward.

[15:48] So, you know, I've sort of gone through a process every, I don't know, eight to ten years. I basically shrug off friendships and get – I'm like a snake with a skin. Yeah. I get new ones. So I thought that that challenge of, you know, wanting to please your parents, which I know is every child's obsession. Like you want to please your parents and you want to be friends with your friends, but there's also cool new friends. I would say one thing I have not noticed in a lot of, like really any teenager I know, is the want to please their parents.

[16:20] Maybe it's more like not want to disappoint their parents or not want to upset them too much. Usually during, that's I think more childhood. But what I've seen at least a lot with teenagers is... Parents play no part in their calculations whatsoever. Parents play a big part. They want to be like revolutionary. Oh, rebelling. So they want to be if their parents say oh well I don't want you to become I don't know a writer or something like that then the kids will be that's one thing I'm going to become as a writer yeah so the kids will start writing I mean that's what you did you became a philosopher and your mom said like don't think yeah yeah yeah I mean like you must understand no that's different that's different it's totally different back in my day back in your day the dinosaurs were very different back in my day back in your day there's a quick little thing I wanted to mention oh no my history class was teaching the 1980s, now but it wasn't under ancient history um it was right after right it's like the mesopotamian emperor and then guys with funny hair and this thing wasn't even it's not even like it was written this year i think the the course was made like maybe five or ten years ago we don't really have to go into the details i mean half a century wow the backstory yeah it is really funny and they were teaching 1980s imagine like 1960 i'm kidding well no it's funny because i was i was on the i I was doing a call, a private call the other day, and somebody was like, yeah, my mom's 52, and I'm like, 52, that's kind of, oh. Oh.

[17:45] So, the puberty thing I thought was great. Now, I thought, I mean, there was lots of great funny bits. The vault stuff? Absolutely the best. I clearly have a thing for vaults. I love Fallout. And I felt this movie was revolting.

[17:59] Oh, that was the sound of your soul leaving your nose. I just got stabbed. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. Snapping would be quicker, wouldn't it? It hurt less. The stomach with the acid. That's right. It'd still be better than this. All right, go on.

[18:14] Sharing Laughter and Reactions

[18:14] I thought it, I honestly just thought it was, I loved it. Oh, look at that moon.

[18:20] It's behind the cloud there, right? Oh. Do you see? Wow, that's bright. It's a big cloud and it's just streaming over the top, right? Yeah. That's lovely. Sorry, go ahead. No, I thought it was so funny when they go in and this is a video game character. I thought it was from Legend of Zelda, like the older ones, because I don't know the game too well. I know enough about it. I mean, hey, I know every lore about everything because that's me. I don't. But I know a bit about Legend of Zelda and I've seen some of the characters who are just like, yo! And I'm like, nah, they don't have purple hair. Great. Where do I go from here? Turn right. Yes I'm leading us astray, aren't I? Alright Eh I believe you Worst comes to Yeah, turn right I'm sorry, left Look at that moon I meant left What? Left? No, really? Yeah, I meant left I meant left I really feel like I should know this I may I may I may have over-relied On GPS a tiny bit So we are going the right way Okay, Alright, so Like a lot faster, 20 kilometers faster.

[19:21] Examining Emotions and Memories

[19:22] No, I just, we're going to finish the review before. No. So, okay, so we, so the video game character was hilarious. Did you notice? Of course you did, right? He was even pixelated. Yeah, I did. Brilliant. That's what I thought about the graphics. And when he ran into the wall.

[19:39] Rolled into it? No, ran into it. When he was trying to exit the door, he. Oh yeah, he glitched, right? He did like a full skate three glitch thing, right? It's like having a crush on a video game character, which is what Riley had. Yeah, yeah. It's literally the most stereotypical, like, 18-year-old thing I've ever heard in my life. I am a fighter with a hard, terrible history. I thought it was, yeah, really well done. I cannot believe I'm a hero. Yeah, and I loved it. You almost died when he did that, because we went bowling the other day. So when he does the roll, and he just rolls right past the cops, And they're like, what is he doing? I am a brave warrior with a weak attack. I thought that was it. It goes beyond your comprehension. Yeah, yeah. I think that was just brilliant. I love that. That was honestly, I think they could have made a whole movie about it and I would have watched it. I was desperate for him to come back. I know. He should have come back at the end. Especially the giant sword that he looks too weak to wield was just fantastic. The like, teen ab lines. Like, they went around his back. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. I like that. He's like a ringworm. He should have been Riley Salvation at the end, like when anxiety was going crazy.

[20:48] I am a hero. I can calm you with my roll attack. I shall attack. Yeah, I thought that was really, and we never did find out her deep dark secret. No. I thought the dog was funny because, you know, like talking to the audience and then you see a sad shadow against the wall. Like all of the jokes were so good. Yeah, all the jokes were just so, so good and thoughtful. And man, they must have just racked their brains. Other jokes that sound like a one-note joke but were really good. So there was the sarcasm. Yeah, like that was great. Then the fact that they call across, you look like the greatest construction worker. You look like the greatest. Hold on, hold on. This sarcasm is a teenager. Yeah, please. Go ahead, go ahead. You look like the greatest construction worker ever. Yeah, yeah. Excellent. I just felt myself die a little. Me too, actually. I think I need to stop. You did too much. I feel worse than the Gen A brain rot. I liked the brainstorm with all the ideas. That was really good. That was really good. That was funny. I liked the idea, you know, just sort of philosophically speaking, I liked the idea that when she's going to get the coach's book, that morality has something to do with sadness, like you're sad at what you've lowered yourself to or what you've become or something like that. That's rage. What am I doing? Right, right. No, I mean, because for some people that is what morality comes to. Yeah.

[22:13] Can you do me a favor with the GPS, Tiny? We can't. Yeah, you sure?

[22:18] Hilarious Moments and Inside Jokes

[22:18] Yeah. All right, you were right yesterday. I'm sure you're right today. All right. Yeah.

[22:24] So... We'll just... I think, yeah, well, you know what? We'll just run out of gas and just sleep there. Oh, look. Oh, I know. I know. All right. I do not know what that was. Now, I thought that the storm of anxiety and, you know, like you can't define who she is, like all of that kind of stuff, I thought so good. Yeah, so good. Trust me, it's not just teenager. No, I know, but I did that when I was your grade. I'd be like, I love your pants. And then inside, I'm like, those pants are ugly. Oh, like with other people? Right, right. Was that with just mom or just kidding? No, I was with my friends. You know, thinking back, they're cool pants, but I just kind of blurted it out because I wanted her to like me. And it was like, I mean, we're okay friends. The part that gave me like absolutely existential spinal column agony was the fact that she blurted out she was from the wrong place and had to live with it for the next four years.

[23:23] Yep. I'm from any town. any place or whatever she said. Right. So that to me is, I don't know if it's a British thing or something, but that to me is like a worse than nightmare. No, sorry. I'm actually from Mississippi. I'm not from Michigan. I just said that because I was nervous. No, she didn't say it. The other girl misheard and thought it was Michigan. She didn't say she was from. Oh, she didn't say she was from Michigan. The other girl misheard it or got it, missed it.

[23:47] Dealing with Social Embarrassment and Mistakes

[23:47] So it's kind of like a, that there's this sort of joke in the corporate world that, you know, somebody misinterpreted your name as Bob like four years ago and you just it's way too late yeah just you just have to change your name or like that woman who's like she made a mistake in boarding her flight now she's in Poland starting a new life like she can't go back yeah it's just it's happened yeah so I very much understand where where that agony comes from and it's like for me it's like do it now because it just gets worse from here sorry go ahead my agony right now I have like.

[24:18] My tea too fast it clearly failed and now and apparently part of it through your eardrum now i'm gonna be hiccuping for the rest of this recording excellent excellent yeah can we talk about voice cracks they could have done something with that i have been plagued by voice cracks okay like my entire last like three years they haven't gotten really milking my voice cracks are worse than my male teenage friends i thought you were just yodeling they mock me for my voice cracks It should be the other way around. I will say that sometimes I will provoke you to great passion just to listen to the yodels. Yeah, and when I want to do it, I can't. That's the issue. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's involuntary, definitely. Yeah, it's involuntary. Definitely. And I'll try and say something serious, and my voice just goes, and it's like, okay. So when I was, I liked this girl when I was about your age, and I had, you know, my voice is sort of somewhat deepish, but I really wanted to sound mature. Sure, so I spent the whole morning walking down here.

[25:17] And basically, I think the guy thought that God was calling. I'd like to speak to Kathy, please. Are you my conscience? So anyway, but because I... Bro, thanks, Kathy. I have some shady friends. That's right. Are you a drug dealer? Does she owe you money? No, I'm from the sewers. That's right. I'm from the future. I live off plankton. What? I don't know. Of whales? Excellent excellent i was thinking like brain eating amoeba what okay i'm not brain eating amoeba was that amoeba amoeba okay anyway so i was working on my deep barry white voice the whole time but but then it cracked it just happened the whole like from like absolute depths to absolute heights in instantaneously i did this you know like girl i don't know i have of like not an there's like some girls I know that just have a high pitched voice. I'm just not one of those. Other girl at bowling. Oh my gosh, yeah, okay, helium. But just a lot of girls. I've definitely got the deepest voice out of the girls I know, which is not a bad thing, but when I was probably a year ago, I thought, oh, well, maybe I should talk in a higher pitch voice. Oh, did you try that? I did. Do you know what happened? You cracked more? Constantly. Oh, that's why there was a beluga flopping down the street, as you were calling out to it in some fashion. I was talking.

[26:46] Reflecting on Personal Growth and Voice Changes

[26:47] You reversed Elizabeth Holmes. Honestly. But I was talking like this kind of in a higher-pitched voice. Hi, I'm Preffy. That wasn't like this. I was like this. But it was kind of like, you know, I sounded like those freaking aesthetic TikTok 20-year-olds who kind of like went to college for an art degree and realized their life is over. And now they make TikToks about their crocheting and their drinks and their life at the Twitter thing before they got fired. So I realized that this wasn't going to be my life and I had to revert to my old normal voice. You can't do that your whole life. And it gives you a sore throat. No, it's like relaxing. But I must say that it really doesn't match your personality too well. It'd be like me not having an hysterian person-like voice. Be careful, I'm behind. I fought. So I thought, and to be honest, I thought it was quite moving at the end when they're trying to control the anxiety and she's basically having a panic attack, right? Yeah. And I just thought it was really good. The gentleness, they really... Because the movie's kind of manic, obviously. And the stillness. I like it when Fia says, I preferred it in the jar. I wish I was back in the jar or something. Like, they gave each character... Oh, that's me when I go to, like, if I've ever heard an event that's really lame. Like, I should have stayed in the writing.

[28:09] Yeah. So I thought it was really good. I thought the ending... Oh, gosh. Okay, it was very clear what happened because she smiled and she looked excited.

[28:20] But you were like, you were like, the ending, they didn't tell us. And I heard the people next to you that gave me the stink guy laugh. Oh, yeah, because I had the guy who was just the murmurer. Oh, yeah, don't do that. Oh, no, that's a bad idea. Oh, that was funny. You have a different version. I got side titles. What you do is when something happens, you go... Well, also, I grip your leg when there's something embarrassing to the point where you lose blood flow. I genuinely have, like, a cold.

[28:49] Humorous Banter and Friendship Moments

[28:49] Three toes fell off for lack of blood flow. Only three. Only three. It's a progress, I would say. No, so, actually, you know what? Excuse me. No, I think it's probably best I don't continue that thought. All right. So, is it fair for the guy who wrote the novel The Present to complain that the ending was not fleshed out? Let me tell you. When you don't even find out. Yeah. We were like, come on, you can't do this. You're like, yeah, I can. I'm like, but don't because that sucks. And you were like, no. I'm like, okay. So, maybe. Maybe we shouldn't do that. Yeah. Okay. Delete. Delete.

[29:28] Analyzing Personality Development and Movie Reflections

[29:28] Quick edit. it delete delete delete all right uh so i i would highly recommend this i think there's a lot of stuff to talk about i i also liked how the personality wasn't just one thing or the other thing but then became a complexity of things where you have yes i'm courageous yes sometimes i'm a fraidy cat like all the things that are just part of life no i thought that was really good and how the joy at the beginning i remember thinking this at the beginning like when she was saying well just take all the bad memories and we'll just flush them away to the unconscious or whatever And I'm like, I don't think that's right. No, it's right. Is this right? That's right. Otherwise, you're up at night. Well, it's all right. You're still in the middle of the movie, personality-wise. But no, so when... Excuse me. I'm like, what do you mean middle of the movie? I'm in my junior year now. Yeah. She's like barely a freshman. Yeah, that's true. That was so me with the music taste, though.

[30:19] You can't say anything about the music taste, right? I can't say anything about my music taste. And there was also some negative comment about her father's ancient rock and roll. That was just appalling. Oh, don't even get me started on the whole argument I had with people about the Beatles the other day. Oh, yeah, that was something. That was mean. Not on your part, but yeah. I was saying, like, people listen to Beatles. No, they don't. You? Like who? You?

[30:42] Or, like, people who wish they were born in 1974? So I, uh, I thought that when she, when joy also realized when joy also realized that she'd been controlling Riley's personality by flushing the bad memories.

[30:59] And also when they're on those memories, I couldn't help but thinking of that little touch game we played on the planes from time to time. Because like, what was it? Magnet balls or something? Yeah, yeah. It was really, that was pretty kind of neat. So I thought it was very clever, very funny. And they really do create a vivid world. I like the fact that the father went back to the game. Every time. Every time. Yeah, sounds about right. So I thought it was really, really well done. And also, I just like to see a functional family, you know, because that's kind of rare these days.

[31:25] Appreciating Functional Family Dynamics

[31:26] Like everyone has this, I don't know, weirdness and darkness and stuff like that so i thought it was just a really secret it's not functional huh that's the big secret yes so i thought it was just really good and uh really clever very funny i really really i had a big smile on my face throughout like half the movie me too i was like looking at myself and i'm thinking wow i'm smiling what the heck and then i like stopped smiling wait i did spend a fair amount of the movie though glaring at you didn't yes because every time something happened it was literally right two inches away from my nostril so no i thought it was a great great movie and i really recommend i want them to make a.

[32:06] Tricol a third one a tricol uh trilogy a tricol okay um where they have her as like a senior in high school oh yeah i want to know the dating and the boys that's what i want i was expecting directing boys when i first saw the photo of riley on or not riley of that girl she liked or wanted not liked but like wanted to be friends with um on the thing i thought it was a guy oh yeah and i was like oh there we go but no so what they need to do is they need to make a.

[32:38] Imagining a Sequel in High School

[32:38] Triquel nuclear no i'm kidding a tree um where she's like later in high school when the dating comes in and then like it's more school stuff and like i just need i needed to be around long enough for nostalgia to come back because that was a great running joke i don't understand, why nostalgia comes in when they're in their 20s i have nostalgia when i was like 12 okay nostalgia comes in early my turn i had this i had nostalgia before i had boredom, i will survive oh i don't know what's going on i just have it suck and this is why i don't drink anything in the theaters because people will give me cpr or not in the way that i like sorry what sorry appropriate all right so i would highly recommend the movie and i will say this is my dying words apparently go see inside out to inside out oh you know what my inside is now out on the on the windshield medical bills yeah yeah freedom a.com slash donate thanks everyone bye.

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