Because there's always somebody who's watching, listening, recording information somewhere. The fact that the word Openheimer was even written is monitored by something and therefore putting on an advertisement in relation to the film.
This quote is, when you understand the world, it has a much darker meaning. Fear isn't an emotion, like most people would make you believe. Fear is irrational. Fear is overwhelming. And once it gets a grip on the mind, it doesn't let go. After a while, reality and imagination become a matter of "I saw what I saw." And I think that why the quote "For everyone who dreams of the light bulb, there's one who dreams of the atomic bomb" fits quite well with the idea of "dreams" and the "mind". Dreams can become reality. But someone's dream can be someone else's nightmare
@@nicksuazo4377Fear is not irrational. You can have rational fears, like fear of death. Look at videos of veterans talking about fear in combat, that's fear. Fear of the wilderness etc... That's why phobias exist those are irrational fears.
like how ULTRAKILL, a jokey FPS game where you play as a robot and name things Hank, has the quote “A MACHINE BUILT TO END WAR IS ALWAYS A MACHINE BUILT TO CONTINUE WAR.” it’s one of my Roman Empires.
God damn (the sun), I just can't escape ULTRAKILL. I mean, I love the game, I have 90 hours in it and have (almost) beaten P-2, but holy hell it's everywhere.
@@Al_Gore_Rhythmnthat's called idiom, something we non native English speakers have to study to pass exam while you native English speaking kids only speak in slang :>
Unironically, and I mean this, Robert Rodriguez movies, amidst the silliness and over the top insanity, has a shocking amount of absolutely raw lines that catch you off guard. I mean, Steve Buschemi in Spy Kids 2, another Robert Rodriguez movie, is a great example.
@@Supercybersonic944 - If that’s a joke, I looked up that musician, and I’ll give him a listen… If not, I highly recommend you watch both Machete and Machete Kills from Robert Rodriguez, based off of one of the fake movie trailers from Grindhouse (Planet Terror/ Death Proof)
There's this, the Spy Kids 2 quote, and the fact that the climax for Spy Kids 3 is a disabled old man describing everything he's missed in life because of his paralysis, which was caused by said friend
My favourite randomly profound quote is "Do you think god stays in heaven because he fears what he created", its such a good quote and I hate the fact that it's from a Spy kids movie
I always remember the line from Spy Kids 3, "It's not about whether you win or lose, it's how you play the game." I believe it may have been quoted from another source but it always just stuck with me
@@dineez627hopefully good but realistically evil. If you choose to fight fair and square you will be fighting against everyone who is willing to cheat, lie, and commit evil to win. And let me tell you trying to fight an opponent who fights dirty while you are trying to follow the rules isn't as easy as the media makes it look.
I think some of the writing in this film is actually really good for this movie, for example: they were pushing the message of "some dreams are so powerful that they become real" but disguising it as just being strong like sharkboy or lavagirl or mr electric, "they were so strong that they became real", but they were just telling you that if your dreams are powerful enough, and you work on them they will become real, just like Max's robot at the end of the film.
But lets not forget that every physicist in the world realized a bomb could be created through atomic energy. Oppenheimer and his team just invented the method not the idea
I always love how in most of Robert Rodriguez movies while there’s a lot of silly moments and quotes there’s always someone who says a deep line that catches you off guard. Like Steve Buscemi in Spy Kids 2.
Honestly this movie has a lot of really good quotes and lines. I swear they put all the budget in the dialogue. Edit: Apparently I've struck some sort of personal chord with people, about how budget doesn't equal quality.
HE RUINED MY DREAM JOURNAL I DID NOT. MR. ELECTRIC SEND HIM TO THE PRINCIPALS OFFICE AND HAVE HIM EXPELLED ENOUGH! THIS IS MY CLASS. NOT THE OTHER WAY AROUND. I KNOW EVERYTHING. AND YOU… KNOW NOTHING
Because it hits on the fundemental fact that humanity is capable of creating enlightenment and chaos. We can produce volumes of books on how to solve whatever problem arises, and just as many on how to create said problems.
With the Steve Buscemi quote in Spy Kids, at least you can "hide" that it comes from Spy Kids because the moment just has Steve Buscemi reflecting, in a room. However, what I like about this is that you could *never* hide that it comes from a campy, funny movie because how else could you justify George Lopez being in a floating robotic bulb, whose limbs are held together by electricity?
This quote on a fundamental level seems to imply that no matter how much good humanity spreads, there will always be someone spreading even more suffering.
“It was insane and it did terrible things, but, but at first, it was so human." "It was a wonderful creature, capable of great good, and great evil. Yes, I think you could say it was human.”
Honestly I just had an epiphany that this movie has a deeper undertone that went over our heads as kids. The movie is about manifesting your dreams in the flesh. Think about it! Max believed in Shark Boy & Lava Girl. No matter what everyone else has said, and he eventually manifested them in the flesh in front of everyone. But the only problem he had was believing in himself, this is something Lava Girl also struggled with. She didn’t believe that she was more than destruction until Max spoke life into her. It’s so crazy how deep this movie actually is.
The thing about good, hard hitting dialogue is that it can come out of anything that was made with passion. From stories written by kids to some user making an excited post about something odd they enjoy, you can get lines that wouldn't sound out of place in a cinematic masterpiece or classic literature. Like the fucking dril tweet that ends with "I'll face God and walk backwards into Hell" wtf was up with that raw ass line being in a shitpost about getting kicked out of the zoo?
This reminds me of that Orson Welles quote (can't remember the movie) where he says that 100 years of Italian bloodshed gave us Leonardo and the Renaissance, while 400 years of Swedish brotherhood gave us the Cuckoo Clock.
That's from "The Third Man", when his character attempts to justify the horror of his actions to the Hero. Saw it with my mum at the cinema in 2021 (that's a cinema that only shows retro films).
@@ilikedinosaurs392 In "The Thrid Man", Orson Welles' character is seling some drugs and, for reasons that I forgot a bit, it ends up killing toddlers becuase that's what the hospitals gives to them. The hero calls him out on this, as a friend of his, and Orson defends his selling of the drug, its repercussion, and the fact he wants the Hero to join this enterprise by saying "You know, disaster is what births great things anyway. Look at Italy, bloodshed and murders everywhere and they gave us Leonardo and the Renaissance. Then the Swedish Brotherhood allowed peace in Switzerland. Their contribution to mankind? The Cuckoo clock!"
Robert Rodriguez is really an artist, his movies, while usually lacking too much sense and have very cheap CGI (due low budget) Still manage to have a charm to them, There's not a single Robert Rodriguez Movie I saw and didn't like, nor as a kid or more mature. I guess it comes down to the passion the director puts on the movies he makes
Using bobheaded supervillain George Lopez and looney loner Steve Buscemi to spew two of the rawest quotes in modern cinema is definitely an approach by Robert Rodriguez, is it a good or bad approach? Judge that by yourself
@@ihH6053 George Lopez is one of those actors that you don't even have to double take if it's them. His face is distinct, his voice is incredibly distinct.
It's a bit darker in latin spanish: "for every person that dreams about the electric lightbulb, there's another that dreams about the holocaust of the atomic bomb"
@generalmarkmilleyisbenedic8895 Every person who born in latin america is latino. That's the name cause our language came from Latin, just like Italian.
@@generalmarkmilleyisbenedic8895 Latin was also a language that spawned many different other languages and dialects, like italian, portuguese, spanish, etc. We call it Latin America because it's a region encompasing most of South America, Center America and Mexico that talks latin languages, like spanish and portuguese. But it's different in many ways to the spanish spoken in the iberic peninsula. So, most spanish-speaking differentiate between the spanish spoken in Latin America and the iberic spanish spoken in Spain, calling it latin spanish, as opposed to iberic or hispanic spanish which also has a lot of idioms, dialects and unique identities. And wow, Sherlock, yes, you could say I'm hispanic, which it's a pretty genius take on your behalf, considering I'm talking about a movie I watched in latin spanish. I congratulate your vast deductive skills. Do you also want to guess if I'm spaniard or latino? Oh, and shut that condescending act. If you want to teach, then sure, share your info. If you want to smell your own farts, at the very least get your stuff right. Latins didn't came from Rome, they were colonized by Rome
Fun fact: fifteen different inventors made their own version of the electric light bulb before Thomas Edison patented his design, meanwhile hundreds of scientists were employed by the Manhattan Project.
Very much agreed. I have a relative who is barely even 8, but she's way smarter and better at absorbing information than I thought I was at that age. I learned the hard way not to double down on the coddling or underestimation of our youth, and I hope the rest of the world can learn the easier way and make things smoother for everyone.
The irony is that the dude who dreamed up the atom bomb was a pretty introspective, morally self-aware human being and the guy who dreamed up the electric light bulb was a piece of shit narcissist.
Edison gets a bad rap but he didn’t actually steal the credit for the electric light bulb (he even called his company Edison-Swann United and their electric light bulbs Edison-Swann bulbs, so he gave Joseph Swann his due) and Tesla’s frustrations weren’t actually with Edison they were with Westinghouse. And Edison and Swann were both fully aware of other people trying to create the same thing. While Dr. Oppenheimer directed the efforts to create the atomic bomb and was horrified by its effects (I am become death, the destroyer of worlds) but it wasn’t his idea to build it, it was Dr. Leo Szilard and Dr. Albert Einstein. And Szilard and Einstein only recommended it to Roosevelt in the first place because Dr. Werner Heisenberg was working on creating one for Hitler.
@@GigaDonk99 Oppenheimer wasn’t the person who dreamed up the atom bomb, he’s the one who made the dream a reality. It was Einstein and Szilard who suggested the creation of the bomb and even then they weren’t the ones who dreamed it up, Dr. Werner Heisenberg was the one who was first trying to build it for Hitler. (And he wasn’t even the first person to whom the idea occurred.)
It’s funny that this movie is deep af with its message about not only believing in your dreams but working for it, then there’s the “close your eyes shut your mouth dream a dream and get us out” scene
Robert Rodriguez' approach to making kids movies was equal parts complete insanity and actual thematic exploration. Not necessarily in sync though, more like just randomly switching on the meaningful dialogue every fifty minutes and then going back to nonsense.
The most profound line I've encounter in the past 2 weeks is... "Memories turn into a well-acted plays that you yourself start becoming the audience for."
considering the context that this guy's the twisted manifestation of a teacher in a child's dream this is more useful than what most schools give you also for those people who keep calling me out, this is a joke
This is always what kids say when they didn't pay any attention or do any work, and get out into the world unprepared to solve their own problems. You're getting a tool kit, not an answer key.
It _is_ the weirdest movie you have ever watched. This movie is the pure definition of ‘bizarre’, and that’s why I would always watch it each time it aired on Disney Channel 😂
This is easily one of my favorite quotes because it encapsulates so many feelings. It's fear of the unknown, fear of technology, human nature, abuse of technology, but also, progress, Innovation, hope for an easier life. Human's are capable of so much technological innovation. I get goosebumps each time because this shows what power dreams have. They are ideas and ideas can push people to power the world or destroy it.
You know what’s really wild. Waking up from a dream and saying I’m going to build the most fucked up weapon humanity has in its disposal simply because why not.
The invention of the atom bomb was inevitable. It was only a matter of who would do it first. It simply would've been irresponsible for the US not to pursue the bomb like everyone else was
Yeah, actually really profound Humanity will think of the most beautiful and innovative creations while also inventing some of the most horrific things
The Spy Kids movies and the Sharkboy and Lava Girl movie all have some of the hardest quotes ever. It was back when kids movies didn’t treat kids like idiots. It’s some heavy stuff, some thought provoking stuff.
@@matityaloran9157 Technical correction: Edison perfected the lightbulb, not created it. It was an already existing technology, but usually didn't last for more than a few minutes.
I still remember how in fucking Spy Kids 2 this scientist says “Do you think God left earth because he was afraid of what he created?” Like in the middle of a normal scene too 💀💀
Man, I never expected soemthing this profound from a Mexican comedian like George Lopez. Maybe a Mexican comedian like Gabriel Iglesias, but not George Lopez.
Recently heard a great quote "The future doesn't begin tomorrow, it begins today." Heard it in Girls und Panzer, don't know if that's the origin though.
It's weird how movies for younger audiences have quotes so much deeper and more relevant than movies meant for adults. SpyKids 2: "Do you think God stays in Heaven because he lives in fear of what he's created?"
No that makes sense. They are meant to not be some long winded message that forgets it's own point but something easily digestible that a kid can understand the logic of. It doesn't try and present itself as profound but simply a matter of fact. Like a parent trying to impart wisdom to their kid. Not to mention imparting said wisdom when someone is young helps have that message stick out more or become a core part of that persons mentality going forward. I remember that was how I embraced nihilism as a kid because of American Dragon Jake Long. "If all you can see is the bad things in the future, all the small happiness of the world become that much brighter" which is a paraphrased quote from one of the twins in that show who could see the future but only the bad yet she was happy and giddy. Meanwhile her sister who could see only the good was moody and miserable cause it takes the fun out of life.
@@RavenCloak13 Pretty sure that quote espouses idealism and that cynicism gets you nowhere, not nihilism. I remember starting to doubt my own religious faith in my younger years, but it was weirdly a one-off episode from Avatar: The Last Airbender that headed me off from that path. I can't recall the full quote, but paraphrased, "Time is just an illusion, and we are all connected by great roots". Granted, A;TLA was one of those more serious shows that wasn't nearly as campy/silly as this movie, but it still impacted me a lot more than people might think. Folks out to give those old cartoons a bit more credit.
@@mrreyes5004 No it's nihilism. Nothing matters so don't worry about it because nothing has intrinsic value. You, me, the world. Nothing. Everything is worthless till worth is placed on it by someone. If I just assume bad things will happen I won't be disappointed. Hasn't been proven wrong yet on that. And as such if nothing bad does happen then that's good. I would rather be wrong then right because being wrong makes me happy and being right doesn't set me up for disappointment hoping it doesn't happen. Nothing is the protagonist, the star, the main reason everything is. Everything just is, without thought. Which is comforting. Otherwise I would have game ended myself at like 12.