Vol 1 ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-NMWuHCUhJGU.html Vol 2 ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-kjZBJNSbsVY.html Vol 3 ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-ArjEhghIeb4.html Vol 4 ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-mDMIw-OMBwc.html Also removing me, my Pan from the thumbnail for about 2 weeks. And then puting pan back in the thumbnail for this video. Vids seem to do better without my face on it. u_u EDIT: Turns out it doesn't
It's REALLY depressing that Cartoon Network doesn't have as many theatrical movies as Nickelodeon. But they just don't have the smarts, or experience as they do. Which is a shame because if they did, they could've given us ALOT of great movies, but that didn't happen. All they have to show for it is one good film that deserved more recognition than it got, ('Powerpuff Girls Movie') and one movie that didn't need to be made. (Teen Titans Go)
RebelTaxi How would you feel about a Diddy Kong Racing sequel that added characters from My Hero Academia, Little Witch Academia, Kirby, The Amazing World of Gumball, Persona 5, Family Guy, Crash Bandicoot and RWBY with Haruko from FLCL, Hat Kid, Popuko and Pipmi from Pop Team Epic, Bomberman, Beavis and Butthead also being there? Kirby is pushed as Protagonist Imagine racing against Akko with Izuku, shooting a missile at Gumball, Gumball, Izuku, and Akko smokig pot with their friends
i wonder what the most expensive cartoon network show is. i bet it's either megas xlr, or justice league, or symbionic titan, or whatever dc nation had
I love how Chuckie's dad literally points how this plot is odd and the Paris part seems kinda pointless, and Tommy's dad is like, it's a new century, lets go with that... Right in the actual movie
I think the idea was to satirise Disneyland Paris, which was financially struggling at the time (and/or a few years earlier) so it would have been understood by audiences back then.
There's also the fact that France is really into their Japanese media. When I went to Paris there was a whole area of Japanese restaurants, and when I turned on the TV they had Yu-Gi-Oh and Death Note in French lol. Their comic scene is huge as well so manga is a big hit there.
There is also a French cartoon show that had a strong anime influence called Oban Star Racers. Even the opening and closing songs where sung in Japanese
The Wild Thornberrys Movie makes me wish Klasky Csupo made more animated features. Seriously, the animation is almost Disney-quality, and for a Nickelodeon movie it has some surprisingly intense moments
And they looked so different. They didn't just do hand-drawn animation with CGI. There was some cool media-blending, like live-action skies in the BG, and since it was all on a feature film budget, it looked SO good!
You forgot to mention, The Wild Thornberries Movie was nominated for an Oscar, but not for animated film. It was for original song with 'Father and Daughter' by Paul Simon, which lost to 'Lose Yourself' by Eminem.
They actually used that joke already in a Hey Arnold episode. There was a block party, I think it was so everyone would shut off their lights to watch a meteor shower. Gerald suggested "Block Power" and followed it up with "It's a block thing, you wouldn't get it."
i like the Arnold movie more than the jungle movie..sue me...its fun....the Helga scenes are delightful unlike the show....its less creepy..@@xXPurpleLoliTranceXx
I’ve been told there’s a fairly large Japanese population in France, and there’s even a word for a person who moves to France and gets disappointed at Paris not being what they expected. So a Japanese theme park in Paris makes a ~little~ sense
Lugbzurg I didn’t remember what it was since I read it on a blog post by a white guy living in Japan a few years back, but according to Google it’s this パリ症候群 or Pari shōkōgun It’s just Paris Syndrome
RebelTaxi How would you feel about a Diddy Kong Racing sequel that added characters from My Hero Academia, Little Witch Academia, Kirby, The Amazing World of Gumball, Persona 5, Family Guy, Crash Bandicoot and RWBY with Haruko from FLCL, Hat Kid, Popuko and Pipmi from Pop Team Epic, Bomberman, Beavis and Butthead also being there? Kirby is pushed as Protagonist Imagine racing against Akko with Izuku, shooting a missile at Gumball, Gumball, Izuku, and Akko smokig pot with their friends
The 00's... here's where it gets into a mix of really boring and really amazingly dumb or... great? Though how many of these are remembered? Hotel for Dogs coming, whoo!
Nope, there are at least 10 Nickelodeon movies between Thornberrys and Hotel For Dogs, with Pan doing 3-4 each month, Hotel for Dogs does not come until December I think.
When Dio is messing with Polnareff on the stairs, does he have to pause time, then run all the way down pick polnerff up in his entirety, move him down the proper number of steps, then run all the way up before stopped time runs out, then make sure he's all composed and not panting and sweating when he mocks Polnereff?
78.media.tumblr.com/b8e256a4474bf8f27e68d606e0f09217/tumblr_nows1u6EPS1shh9zuo1_400.gif There is gif representation of what happened that day in Egypt.
Oh my god... Chuckie Chan... I distinctly remember watching this in cinema as a kid and as soon as that Chuckie Chan scene came on I face palmed and didn't open my eyes again until it was over...
I get the feeling this Nick movies and other smaller studio films in the 00s approached their budget like a 8 year old with a hundred dollar bill “I can buy so much candy* with this” *celebrity cameos and Smash Mouth songs
yep pretty much...bring in lil romeo bow wow and nick canon and nick carter and smash mouth of course with a little bit of less than jake and some mighty mighty bosstones thrown in with blink 182 and simple plan or sum 41 if we cant get them....
Sometimes I'll get so mesmerized by all the smooth editing and polish that Pan Pizza puts in his videos that I'll think I'm watching a real show. And then Filthy Frank will show up and I'll realize where I am.
"Rugrats in Paris" was a fun ride and had plenty of great emotional moments for Chuckie, despite some weird ideas like staying at a 'Japanese theme park in the middle of Paris.' "The Wild Thornberrys Movie" also had a lot of great action, animation, and animals (especially the elephants), along with some nice interactions between Eliza and Debbie. I don't remember liking the "Hey Arnold" movie as much as the other two, despite loving the show at the time and still loving it to this day. But in spite of the cliché plot and poor coloring/shading, I thought it was alright. At least we got "The Jungle Movie" years later. I never saw "Clockstoppers," but I remember being interested in its premise. That Simpsons Treehouse of Horror segment you brought is the closest I've seen to that movie.
Pan, I always appreciate the high production quality of these videos you've been producing as of late; honestly, it's because of that I feel your videos are worth the wait.
1:25 it's in Paris because it's a f-u joke on EuroDisneyland.. when the movie's script was written Disneyland Paris was probably in the news.. cuz when the park first opened it was known as a failure because Parisians hated it and thought the themepark was an eyesore... (but it's perfect for the dad, Stew Pickle, because he's usually a failure at everything.. )
Oh shit. One thing I really remembered from when Rugrats in Paris was the awesome Nick.com game with Chuckie Chan fighting those dragons. I wonder if it holds up...
EXCUSE ME GOOD SIR! Would this happen to be an allusion to the very popular Japanese anime and manga series that debuted in Weekly Shonen Jump in 1987, written by Hirohiko Araki, known as JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure, colloquially referred to as JoJo’s?
I was OBSESSED with Clockstoppers when I was a kid! I agree, I love the fashions and pop culture from that little pocket of time from about 1999 to 2002, mainly because that was my adolescence, so to me, this is what "real" teenagers/adults did.
Something I’m surprised is never brought up about Rugrats in Paris is the fact that it is one of the few times you ever see a interracial couple in cartoon with Chaz and Kira, and I mean human race not any fantasy race or aliens.
I remember seeing the Rugrats in Paris movie in theaters, actually feeling sad for Chuckie without a mother, while I went to the theater with mine. I remember having to go to the bathroom and losing which theater I was in. For some reason they switched the signs for the Eraser Man and Rugrats so I accidently walked I to that one for a few minutes. It was nutty.
Saltybenniboi - I'm still waiting for him to talk about, Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events, The Spiderwick Chronicles, and that live-action version of Charlotte's Web.
Oh god, since he's looking at every Nick film, that means that he has to look at the really odd PG-13 ones that they put out. No, I'm not talking about the Ninja Turtles films.
@@superduperisaac Angus, Thongs and Snobbing and Fun Size. Angus wasn't even released theatrically here in the States, I think, and Fun Size was originally supposed to be released under the MTV Films label but got changed to Nickelodeon at the last second.
I know this is really late, but is that actually true? I heard this song throughout my life at various points, especially in my childhood, and I was born in 2001. I refuse to believe that a Rugrats movie is what caused such an unrelated cornerstone of my childhood, years after that movie was relevant
When I first watched the Rugrats movie, I related with Chucky, because my mother passed away when I was 2 years old. Now I have two parents, but that’s because I was adopted in 2016 after my father passed away. Great video!
I still don't understand how this channel isnt growing faster :/ the editing and comedy are impeccable. Pan should be in the millions. Between loki irl and the pizza party podcast you should be vastly more recognizable and popular. Oh well, keep up the good work.
Dang. I saw all of these in theaters. Rugrats in Paris was amazing. Really knew how to pack in everything kids would love (toilet humor, mech fights, sad single parents). Jimmy Neutron was okay as a kid, but I think the best aspect now is the old store-bought computer animation. Not even Toy Story looks that old, and that's cool. Clockstoppers was boring, but kinda memorable when you got to the aging aspect. Hey Arnold! The Movie was disappointing in a cruel way. They hyped that scene about Helga confessing her love to Arnold so much on Nickelodeon that when Helga was able to get away with saying jk at the end, I was an angry little kid who knew I picked wrong when choosing between the Hey Arnold movie and Adam Sandler's Mr. Deeds. The Wild Thornberrys Movie really showed how much drama a Nicktoon could bring. I loved seeing the sisters bond, and there was so much fun in the world travelling of the show that got really atmospheric on the big screen.
The Real Delphox 616 best movie in terms of scale and story. But as an adaption of SpongeBob it really starts to falter. Patrick and to a lesser extent SpongeBob got dumbed down in comparison to seasons 1-3 and without Squidward there to both react to an balance out SpongeBob and Patrick’s silliness it loses the more smartly written dialogue and replaces it with mostly juvenile gags that tend to drag on. The SponeBob SquarePants movie is at its best when it’s trying to be a movie, rather than SpongeBob. The sequel has the exact opposite problem with everything feeling like SpongeBob but lacking that grand story and scope (hopefully the 3rd movie finds a perfect balance between the two extremes).
That "ClockStoppers" bit reminded me more of that one episode of Dexters Laboratory when he slows down time to get ready for school...but of course you were thinking of something more obscure.
When the narrator said "Arnold's old friend little romeno" thats when I lost it I could not watch the rest of the video cause I was laughing so hard. Awesome video rebel!
I actually had an idea for a continuation of clockstoppers which had Zak acting as a mentor to a group of high schoolers and having them use Hypertime as well as an additional power they each possess to become superheroes.
That opera house scene with the 'Reptar, I love you' song is my favorite of any movie, ever,, even if I don't love the movie very much. Even if ends in hijinks, it was a delight to see for the first time.
Oh wow, so many memories in all these movies for myself.. I don't remember much of the Wild Thornberries show, but I remember being soooo excited when they announced when the movie would be on TV.
Rugrats in Paris and the wild thornberries movies were major deals for me growing up thats like my childhood on film would love solo retrospectives for both
YES! THE CYBORG 009 SHOUTOUT! That is a perfect example for what you were explaining. It's been years since I've watched Clockstoppers but just seeing the clothes and hearing the music in it really does make it the quintessential early 2000s timepiece. I also recommend you watch the entire 009 series if you can. It's pretty dang good. I heard it is supposed to get a remaster soon.
Theres a fan theory that the reason why theres a lot of japanese references in rugrats in Paris despite being set in Paris is because originally the film was meant to be set in Japan however it was change to France at the last minute presumably due to Viacom wanted to make fun of their rival disney for euro Disney land (now called Disneyland Paris) massive failure when it first opened
Having re-watched all of Hey Arnold! lately I think that the 2002 movie only really feels more rewarding for the fans who had been following the show from the beginning, cause when you've spent all that time with Arnold and his friends in their suburban neighborhood to be so invested with those characters then you do kind of feel for their situation in the film by that point. Though still not as rewarding as having to wait years after the show's cancellation to finally get The Jungle Movie that closes the book on the mystery of Arnold's missing parents and that whole cliffhanger that the show was originally left with. I do think the film's biggest weakness is that it definitely did not have as much of the big theatrical look and feel that the Rugrats and SpongeBob movies had, with animation that didn't look that much above what the show already had. At least now it should be well known that it was really intended to be aired as a TV movie before Nick decided it should be pushed into theaters, resulting in it doing poorly which then led to The Jungle Movie (which was always intended to be the actual theatrical movie for Hey Arnold!) being shelved until 2017. While it is nice to know that the other movie does exist now, it's still probably one of the biggest "What could have been"s for Nickelodeon Movies had they just waited to make that movie for theaters instead. Maybe they wouldn't have needed Rugrats Go Wild as a theatrical movie if they already had Hey Arnold!'s own big jungle movie for theaters. BTW, that Runaway Bus tie-in game from Nick.com shouldn't really be considered lost media anymore. It's on Internet Archive now.
You know Rugrats in Paris is a movie where they visit a Japanese theme park in the middle of Paris. That's why they're sumo wrestling, Chucky Chan and a Godzilla fight. They could have just called the movie Rugrats in Japan and it would be the same movie. I think when the dog gets out is the only part where you get to see Paris
Ahh but you forget pan that it's Japan in France so Japanese rules supercede the previous laws. In Japan giant mech battles are common. Also for the fat kid that ate too much cotton candy in Jimmy Neutron that he gained 20 pounds. He's gonna have to loose all limbs minimum cause that would be way too much sugar.
I got to watch a special screening of the Thornberry movie before it was even out. There were chunks of the movie that weren't finished, and I remember that more than I remember what happened in the actual movie.
I was young at the time, so the details are fuzzy. I just remember mom got the chance to view the movie early and brought me. There was also a guy before the movie started that asked people to fill out a survey after the movie was over.
Literally the last reference I ever expected was for Cyborg 009, but heck ye. As far as episode go, that's a pretty good one to be the only episode you've ever seen
Jimmy clocks Arnold's thornberry in Paris , sounds like a spectacular crossover ,also who's glad that Pan finally released this video instead of that Michael Jackson Halloween video he was going to release in late September.
@@YudoTheHex it a pattern in the 90s 70s kids were nostalgic of the 70s in the 2000s 80s kids were nostalgic of the 80s and now 2010s 90s kids were nostalgic of the 90s soon in the 2020s the 2000s kids will be nostalgic of the 2000s.
nixon randy Yep. That seems to be the cycle. The 80s also saw a bit of 60s nostalgia (hence shows like The Wonder Years) and the 70s saw 50s nostalgia (hence shows/movies like Grease and Happy Days). After the 2020s, the 2030s may likely see 2010s nostalgia by today's kids and so forth.
dude holy shit, the era that Clockstoppers was released in gave me SUCH rush of nostalgia. I remember getting my Gamecube, a few games and a Blockbuster giftcard for my birthday in like 2002/2003. Fuckin playing so much Melee and SSX Tricky and using my card to rent Luigi's Mansion and Clockstoppers often.
That movie spat on the face of Mexican Masked Wrestling's greatest hero, El Santo, at the time when Mucha Lucha was still a hit cartoon that paid tribute to him in the main characters family's masks and eventually encountered him in his full platinum masked glory in their straight to video finale movie.
I almost feel like the Hey Arnold! movie was more interesting for how it affected one or two episodes that took place afterward. Because you've got this situation where Arnold now knows how Helga feels, but he's pretending he believed her when she took it back, and she probably doesn't know whether that's genuine or not. They played with that in the April Fools Day episode, which was pretty interesting. Honestly, I would've been really interested to see what it would have been like if their relationship had developed more naturally over time, instead of how things actually played out. Toward the end of the series (even before the movie), you saw Arnold becoming more aware of Helga's romantic, poetic side, which he was definitely into, but he was still put off by how she usually acted, so... Sorry, I have a terminal case of Shipper's Brain, that kind of thing is super-interesting to me. On another note, I should go back and watch The Wild Thornberrys sometime. It had a strong sense of atmosphere to me; I remember enjoying it a lot. Also, "Lock the nipper in the dunny!"
Coco was definitely a great villain in this movie! Especially compared to the first movie when it felt like there was about 4-5 different villains roughly which was kind of confusing. In Paris clearly defines who the main villain is.
Pan thanks for being the only fucking youtuber who actually sticks to a schedule. Seriously its rare for a youtuber to stuck to a pretty good schedule that isn't daily and not pumping out garbage