This really is the best scene in the whole movie in my opinion. Ralph speaks with such an honest and straight-forward tone, that you immediately are able to relate to him, as the concept of being stuck in a routine job without recognition/affirmation is so universally understood. We understand where he's coming from, and we want to see him succeed: All within a span of 3 minutes and 40 seconds.
03:34......this expression on his face.... He's such a kind hearted guy! I think Ralph is one of the best characters Disney ever created. He's sweet, caring and kind hearted
@@giggitymaster8799 The thought that, while it’s a sad to think about, it is true that some people are never going to be given a chance just because of who they are…
I like how the classics are left in the back, not because they're bad games, but because the arcade can only make money by having the newer games in the front. While Pac-man isn't seen as much, everyone knows him and his colleagues. They're respected as a game in the world by both old and new. It's cool to see how we really resonate with the classic machines. If I ever visit an arcade, while the new games are cool to check out, I always find myself going to the back and look for a Ms. Pac-Man/Galiga game. Maybe it's time where I'm becoming the boomer but let's be honest they really are good games.
For 1980, it definitely was. I even remember how awestruck I was with the animation and the backgrounds in Forgotten Worlds, back when Capcom released _that_ game in 1988. I was also awestruck by the realistic-looking characters in NARC, which was also released right around that time. Nowadays, we have games which would make Forgotten Worlds _and_ NARC look like something that a box of Legos vomited up. But when they were new, they were nothing short of magical. It makes you wonder what video games will look like in _another_ 20 or 30 years, doesn't it?
utubrGaming Anyway, _you're missing the point._ 1980 was *not* 2015. If you've never, _ever_ thought that playing games like Donkey King or Pac-Man was breathtaking, then you weren't around for the 80's. (And let me tell you, those 70's games were pretty snazzy for their time, too. I could sink five dollars into Sea Wolf back in its prime, easily.)
I love the Wreck-It Ralph. Ralph's intro scene makes you sympathize with him. It's understandable he doesn't like his job and that he doesn't like being the villain and it makes him lonely, homeless and a social outcast. He just wanted to win that medal in Hero's Duty cos for once he wanted to be the hero and he just wanted to be liked, loved and accepted and respected.
Can someone explain why Ralph is actually the bad guy in his game? Imagine you have a home and someone just destroys it (or moves it away to a dump) and builds their own home over it? Wouldn't we all be a little bit mad? The nicelanders are the real enemies and Felix is no better in helping them.
Ammmmm...Because it's a video game from the 80s.And...Nothing should have just logic about the villain?. I wonder more, where Felix comes from that call. Is your neighbor or what?
Like what ztslovebird said. There are still the stereotypes of those who view gamers. Plus, if Wreck It Ralph were to receive an award, it would be more fuel to the conversation. "Are videogames art?" Which it is...
@@aarongaming2878 to make it sad, Ralph didn’t choose to be the villain but it was his programming. Calhoun didn’t choose to have a hard and haunting life but it was her programming. Turbo didn’t choose to have a good life but it’s his programming until he went against it and face the consequences. The creators of these games have to be cruel to create a villain, or disparity
U should watch it again... I did not really remember all of it so it feel like I watch it for the first time lol.. The ending about king candy real identify still blow my mind haha
This is like being sad but you don’t cry but you still feel everything. Like your have lived with something your whole life so your just used to it, but it doesn’t feel like your used to it. It’s like you are living through it over and over again, just on repeat. And eventually it just becomes like a routine but it hurts worse every time. You hear people around you talk and complain about their lives but no one ever stopped to ask how yours was............
That would be true; Sugar Rush was released in 1997 fictionally, and the Turbo incident probably happened around 1987 (Roadblasters' release), meaning he spent up to a decade in hiding.
I can't even picture how hard it must've been to animate this segment 1:29 Imagine having to make so many single frames of the same room with different character models, props constantly changing position, lighting being slightly altered, animating it in a way where the camera slowly moves backwards in a straight line, and with insane attention to continuity. If you watch this segment after having seen the film, you can see every major game in the story somewhere.
@@asharahmed5238 yeah I came back to this movie because Everyone claims sonic the hedgehog movie is the best video game film ever Clearly I do not believe a film that got lucky to be the best I’ve seen so far I see a film for the first time that pretty much made video games films great that is called wreck it Ralph Holy hell this film released in 2012 and I still remember these video game characters and references it is such a smart move to pick Iconic characters from the 1990s or 1980s The world building is borderline fantastic it’s a god dam shame wreck it Ralph 2 wasted this world by going to the internet which to this day adding a plot for the Internet is going to be mediocre or bad because people forget about memes and emojis or trends in a few weeks or months Ralph story in the beginning 15 seconds that where I started to like him because there taking video games as a job which aged insanely well because I see so many speed runners and youtubers making a living over playing video games And everything Ralph does is understandable he spent 30 years doing his job and goes to therapy with other bad guys constantly to feel motivated to do his job and gets treated badly like mabye the worst I’ve seen for a protagonist like he’s homeless and missing out of tons of party’s and food or drinks or shelter like all he has is his stump which don’t mean much anyways it’s still uncomfortable just like the bricks And that’s the intro of this film and written this much about a protagonist that’s rare for me to do Every other character well that’s spoilers for other people it’s clearly the first 3 minutes of the movie I just watched
Probably the 'nice' thing about that movie is the disney princesses ( kinda only stayed for the movie because i want to see the princesses scene ngl ) but the rest of the story/movie? Just awful. Very awful. 🙃
Yeah! Although he's done a few immature things in the first movie, he wasn't as immature as the second movie. He was at least MORE mature in the first movie.
I love how even though he’s this retro, old character, his powers still apply to the modern games. In his game he’s able to easily crush buildings, able to casually survive falls from tall buildings. When you compare him to say street fighter characters. He’s powers are still top tier.
This is honestly one of my favorite Disney movies and its sad that it doesn’t get recognized more. Also that transition from 8 bit to 4k is just so good
Um I know it's probably to late to answer but, Gene and Fix-it Felix do realize that Wrack-it Ralph only does his job right. They are aware that Ralph isn't really a bad guy right?
That's gotta be the best part about Ralph's job. Throwing the guy at work that hates you for no reason as far as your can after he doesn't realize he's still a dork, and he could be the schoolyard bully that kicks his ass.
As much as I loved this movie (I was born in the 70s, so this entire movie felt like a love letter to my childhood obsession), I would change only ONE thing about it. I would have made the arcade itself a live-action set, to further emphasize the difference between the real world and the game world. Of course, I'd still keep Ed O'Neill as the arcade operator.
I like the scene in the arcade of ralph's machine taking center stage while the rest flash in and out around him. It eventually settles down and pulls back, all the while drawing yours eyes to Ralph's machine...to the point that you will *never* notice the Sugar Rush machine with Vanellope on the side on the first viewing.
I agree. While I did notice it due to my eyes trying to see the different games showing up, I announced this out loud while my family was watching the movie the first time and the first time we saw Vanellope on screen, they didn't believe me until they saw it too. It was highly entertaining to have them look at me and say I was right. Especially my parents.
It also hides Vanellope PERFECTLY behind the Open sign when present day shows, so if you aren't looking for it, you WILL miss it. That camera trick has so much foresight to ensure the key component of the movie is not revealed early.
I once saw a trailer of Wreck-It-Ralph and I thought it wasn't going to be my cup of tea. But when I saw some cute fan art of Ralph and little Vanellope , I became curious to watch the movie and I loved it. I still love it.^^
“it becomes kind of hard to love your job when no one seems to like you for doing it” I hate to admit that, but being a college teen working in retail, this is a very unfortunate truth. My managers have a very obvious vendetta for young employees like me, so they like to give us hard work that they don’t praise us enough for. I couldn’t bring myself to hate my job, considering my experience in other industries, but the amount of times i have to pull a muscle just so my managers can like me seems impossible
998Nikki His stump in the middle of the forest was his home before they rudely bulldozed his forest/shoved his stump out of the way. Ralph was able to comfortably dive down the hole before they moved it, now he's on bricks D:
Wreck it Ralph gets overlooked in regards to just how unique and progressive of a film it is. I mean, there is an built in inequality in the world that nobody addresses, and when Ralph tries to change it for himself, nobody understands that there is even a problem. It's pretty much a movie about Privilege- Opportunities are more common for different people based on race, class, and gender, and when somebody says that's wrong, people react as though people are looking for handouts or are treated as though they are looking for special privileges.
Matthew Pniewski This movie struck a major chord with me, and it's still one of my all-time favorites. Ralph's not looking for a kingdom, or true love, or tons of shiny junk; he just wants to hear "Nice work, Ralph. Thank you for being here."
@ Matthew Pniewski Beautifully typed description for this film! My thoughts exactly! This is why Wreck-It-Ralph needs to be acknowledged more for the masterpiece that it is.
Oh boy, somebody talking about privilege. Yeah, opportunities are different in Wreck it Ralph, just like the real world, and despite those differences in opportunity Ralph was still able to achieve happiness and fulfillment.
+Matthew Pniewski Hmm, you've almost got it, but not quite IMO. Ralph and other villains for instance, aren't feared for how they look, but what they do. In fact, it seems like the entirety of Bad-Anon was quite happy with their roles as a villain, and could care less about who liked them or disliked them, because they enjoyed their job. This would be why Ralph is lumped in with the others, because it is literally unheard of for a villain to want to be nice, just like it is for a protaganist to want to be evil for a change (Wreck-It Ralph hasn't really covered that aspect, unless you count Turbo maybe). In fact, I'd say the movie sends a message that's more along the lines of "It's not who you are, that makes you. It's what you do". I mean this in the sense that Ralph, intentionally or not, was always seen as the bad guy since his actions are often (even if the intention was otherwise) destructive... Thus, it became easier for the other protaganists to just lump him in with the rest of his fellow villains (in other words, it wasn't because Ralph was part of a group that shared his same qualms about being a villain. He was an outlier, an odd one out, which is why everyone was so surprised when he went "turbo". Not because he was of any race, or gender, or even I daresay, his "class". The closest thing that there is to it, is his status as a villain, in which I say again... He was an odd one out (as far as we know anyways), and often times systems/ways of operation designed to adhere to the majority simply aren't well equipped to handle outliers.) To add onto what I'm saying, I suppose the entire thing was supposed to also be a lowkey jab at how (oldschool) videogame logic usually works; the villain is always the villain, and the hero is always the hero. Neither have too much in the way going for what makes them who they are... But usually the player(s) just roll with it, and accept it as is. Thus it would stand to reason, that most residents of Fixit Felix's game would follow this same sort of "videogame logic". However, this has changed by the present day; while villains are still sometimes just tossed in with a very basic reason for being who they are... There are plenty of them that exist who one may even be able to relate to, so much so that they may not even see them as villains anymore, and look past their actions. This is in fact, what has eventually happened with Ralph, when he finally proved that he wasn't just a "bad guy", despite his role as a villain... And his absense actually gave the inhabitants of his game a new appreciation for what he does. In other words, he did something that ultimately allowed everyone to accept his status as an outlier, and thus... Make a few compromises so both parties would be better off, and then some.
+Schwarzer Ritter their approaches aren't comparable. Ralph is mad because his stump was moved to a dump. The Lorax is mad because trees are dying. In Ralph's case, the tree is already dead, since it's a stump with a hole big enough for him to fit in.
Wait a sec. So ralph isnt the bad guy here. These selfish people moved his home to the dump and build this giant ass apartment building in its place. So by felix fixing it he is part of the problem.
I adore this movie with every fiber of my being. The characters, story, music, atmospheres, artstyles, worlds, story, message, everything! Its my favorite Revival Era movie and favorite animated movie all time. So much opportunities for Disney to expand the arcade's world-building through spin off shows about the other games like Hero's Duty and Sugar Rush. Instead we got the atrocity of Breaks the Internet...
1:29 you can see Turbo's console just beside Ralph's This is actually some kind of foreshadowing of whats going to happend later on... Cool lil easter egg
Good character introduction. Already giving him a basic backstory and showing his personality, giving him multiple emotions, take a hink disney, this is how you do it.
This movie is meant to appeal to two generations of video game players. Arcades first appeared during the early 80s and the children who once played there are now adults. Ralph is portrayed as a 30 year-old who's going through a midlife crisis - someone to whom said adults can relate. The 9 year-old Vanellope represents the current generation, giving today's children common ground with the adults.
I've watch this movie a long time ago when I was in Grade 6 in 2012, 6 years ago! I miss 2012!😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
I like the consistency of this movie; you can see the Turbo Time arcade to Fix-It Felix Jr.'s left at 1:27 and when you watch the scene where Fix-It Felix tells the story of Turbo and the expression "Going Turbo", you can see the Fix-It Felix Jr. arcade to Turbo Time's right.
Becomes kinda hard to love your job when no and I mean no one seems to like you for doing it anybody notices that people just pretend to like you when it’s clearly they don’t
I love that my favorite arcade game DanceDanceRevolution got a cameo and even gave one of their characters, who in the actual game never had VAs before, a line and voice. 💛
I like how Fix it Felix Jr has a subtle use of perspective because the closer you get to the console, you realise how far away the building is from the screen. So, how would someone react to finding that out when playing the game?
this film has that epic nostalgia moments you feel when your just a kid. i love the music, head inside fix it felix jr camera view, not many films can pull this off, its all....chliche.
Wreck it Ralph (2022) youtubemovies.uno los mortales abian apreciado tan hermosa mujer . Tu..belleza.viaja.al.universo.se.reune.con.estrellas. y.luceros...tu.mirada.enamora.al.sol.....tu.hermosura.quedara.por..una.eternidad. en .los.corazonede. tus.admiradores......feliz Navidad.y.noche.buena....mis. respeto .para.todas.las.mujes.del.mundo...saludos..al.fin.del.mundo