It seems like puss in boots is wearing boots, this must mean his feet is dirty, and needs to take a bath. But not only that, he is also wearing a hat. Symbolizing that his hair is stinky, and hasnt been using shampoo lately.
True but if you get power hungry in a way that makes you blind to the dangers around you. Let's just say you might not be around to regret that mistake.
There's a lesson that we can learn from Jack Horner in the movie: Big Jack Horner represents people that seek meaningless things for selfish needs, which are often the cause of their own downfall, which is exactly what happens to him in the end.
I dont understand that line, i mean he constantly admits he knows hes a psycopathic villian that loves destruction and he knows how everyone sees him as. So i dont get why hes so confused as to why he got the bad ending
No, I think they just knew that Jack would realistically take the opportunity to kill everyone else, and the scene really just needed to focus on Puss and Death.
If jack was there, to end the jokes they could've just had Death kill him and make the scene much more serious. Nah, glad he was thrown into that bag lol
@@supercamborg4218 I love how jack was one of those villains that couldn’t be redeemed at the end even with all the effort the big and perrito put into trying to make him change and stop
@@dragonsvideos6737 Good thing Perrito use his cuteness just to stall Jack. Cause even someone like Perrito can figured out that Jack is irredeemable even after that cute stare
@@goldonawheelchair6582 its sans and yes a megalomaniac is one who don't believe in death and thanks to the soul power of determination there's no such fear of death meaning jack never had determination but still didn't fear death as when he wishes for all magic in the world of course an immortality spell would be at his disposal
@@lukeroberson2115tbf There was an old (easily debunked) theory that all "Jack"s from early nursery rhymes were based off the same boy. It would be pretty amusing if Jack Horner had experienced every Jack-based adventure in his own greedy and twisted way.
@@lukeroberson2115plus, the first Puss in Boots movie had Jack and Jill as murderous outlaws and the primary antagonists for the whole thing, until the real big bad is revealed anyway
it was simply a device to keep the two plot lines separated and not have two villains clashing. they took the B plot and shoved it in a bag, brought out the A plot, resolved it, then, pulled the B plot back out and resolved it, without being too intrusive or jarring
People just can't let things have a deeper meaning can they? How boring do you have to be to say " um actually the reason is to keep the plots separated and not have the villains fight" like shut up and stop being so boring
This is why I really wanted to get a moment where Death came back to collect Jack. Imagine, all the crystals falling in slow motion as we hear that iconic whistle one last time, with Jack finally feeling the fear he lacked for the rest of the movie as he sees Death staring him down the same way he stared down Puss. It would have been perfect.
That can happen many times in great shows or movies where the writers and director can include extra storytelling without even realising it, but when it’s so good that the intentional and incidental aren’t that easy to distinguish, that’s how you know you did a good job.
To me it feels like the setting for a video game. Imagine fighting Jack as the final boss until you knock him in his granny bag, then phase 2 starts when he eats the magic snacks. While Death is the secret unlockable hardmode-only boss in between phases.
Don't take this video as gospel. This is just how one guy interpreted it. In reality, it was most likely a nice way to keep the two antagonists out of the spotlight at the same time.
@@Lord_Poyoalso I feel like I need to know these kind of things because when I was little I always felt dead and kept feeling death inside of me but now sometimes but most of the time I feel so alive
@@subject28xi mean...yall really dont like it when people find an extra bit of meaning that further adds on to the symbolisms and messages already in the movie? Cmon, its just fun to find extra good meaning even if the creator didnt realize they connected their story even further in such a cool way that doesnt damage anything
Also one thing that people fail to bring up with the last wish. Do you guys ever noticed that Puss never tries to hook up or flirt with any other woman or female cat besides Kitty. This is actually shows how much leaving her at the alter affected him and that she is his one true love (romantic wise). Because in all other movies with Puss he's a real ladies man.
Pov English teacher death was fighting puss in boots and everyone else saw death because they were in the vicinity jack horner was in the bag thus not in vicinity
Just imagine the writers for this story, actually just didn't realize they did this so they see this video and are just going with it, so they won't be embarrassed 😂
It’s a good example of where this film has so much good visual storytelling that it’s hard to tell what moments were international and which were incidental, and that’s something I really love about it.
@@mrdestroyer106 not really. Obviously death was after puss, but death also shows up when someone dies, after all, he said he witnessed all of puss’ deaths. And Jack did die soooo
As one of my favorite basic quotes from a video game says (It’s the Viking pilots for StarCraft 2) “No one lives forever” it’s referenced to how deadly the Viking shop is due to its transformation that kills the pilot if they don’t move fast enough to avoid being crushed
This sounds like the kind of thing you'd present your English teacher when they want an essay on a random movie scene. Sometimes the prop master just had a blue door in storage that they used because it worked good enough.
Everyone got their wish too, kitty could trust Puss, Puss is content and happy, Perrito got his sweater, Goldi found her family, and Jack already had all the magic in the world
If you also notice during the fight, the only characters who recognized Death was Kitty Softpaws(seemingly as she didn't seem confused seeing Death) and Puss(duh). Even Perrito asks "who is that?" And even the Goldilocks family. Well, it's said that cats have 9 lives so obviously both cats have encountered him and lived again. It would make sense for Kitty Softpaws to see him too because Puss is the only one who, according to the apex predator himself, "laughs in the face of death". That was also why Puss never noticed him
I just watched the movie an hour ago and this was something my brother ended up pointing out, Jack was so blinded he never realized or cared that death was basically right beside him, waiting for the right moment
Someone suggested that it's possible that Death has ways of appearing in multiple places at the same time. Jack may have encountered him and we just didn't see it on-screen
This feels like the biggest stretch someone could ever come up with. It's like someone saying the sky is blue, and then someone trying to extrapolate their entire life's story from them seeing a blue sky.
Although I really enjoyed the film and am mostly satisfied with it, I do think it might have been a nice touch if they either made Jack see Death just before the Star swallowed him or show Death's arms or sickles grabbing Jack's legs as the Star swallowed him, or if not any of that, show Death's whistle play out one last time while the Star was swallowing him to symbolise that Jack sealed his doom and would meet Death off-screen.