hi everyone! so this video kind of picked up steam this weekend, and i just wanted to say i'm so incredibly grateful for all of you who watched it! all the likes and feedback are so awesome, and i am so glad this movie resonated with so many people in the way it did with me :) i am working on a second video essay that will hopefully be out in the next few weeks. (and thank you to all of you who subscribed to my tiny baby channel! i hope to add several more videos in the coming months.)
@shada03 жыл бұрын
Wow really, I just saw this yesterday. I hope to see more, it's always great to find more KZbinrs who are willing to take deeper dives into narrative studies. It also helping me push forward on my first video essay about exploring a deeper story in a neglected kids film. The script is writing itself, but I'm so worried about the audio portion.
@shada03 жыл бұрын
@meow mama I just found out about that movie a few weeks ago, that is so weird.
@caleb51943 жыл бұрын
Great video I want to watch it now
@thirdspacemaker91413 жыл бұрын
Great video! Subbed. Also, is it just me or does that tree look an awful lot like 🍒🍆?
@sanderkiki3 жыл бұрын
was just happy to see someone even mentioning flight of the dragons, its fav cartoon from my childhood.
@jasperlucas56423 жыл бұрын
"Don't run from eternal things. It only attracts their attention." - the Last Unicorn
@blueclovergirl3 жыл бұрын
"Never run from anything immortal, it only attracts their attention."
@AndreNitroX3 жыл бұрын
Haunting line
@Ramsey276one3 жыл бұрын
That was referenced in a Bleach fanfic WHICH WAS EPIC YORUICHI AZTEC BANKAI!
@reedanimated3 жыл бұрын
"You must never run from anything immortal it attracts their attention."
@hah-no.3 жыл бұрын
Say it louder for the people in the back-
@AngryNerdBird3 жыл бұрын
Molly getting angry at the unicorn is one of those scenes that can feel kind of powerful as an adult, but will go over your head entirely to a kid who doesn't understand how it feels to get older and lose that spark of innocence.
@heathermartinez29543 жыл бұрын
Very true!! Seeing it as a child I understood that Molly was angry, but didn't understand why. I recently re-read the book and when I got to that scene, I remembered the movie. It was only then that it struck a cord in my heart. 😭😭
@laffyraffy4073 жыл бұрын
I remember feeling very sad for Molly watching that scene as a kid. I didn't *quite* fully understand why she was so distraught, but I was so sad that she had waited so long to see a unicorn, and had eventually given up.
@TheInfinitySystem3 жыл бұрын
That is probably one of the most real scenes in any animated movie we've ever seen, and we grew up with Last Unicorn. So poignant.
@willowloe69173 жыл бұрын
Exactly!!! When I was a kid I used to not like molly because I didn’t understand why she was mad until I was older
@tokkia13843 жыл бұрын
This is also a discrepancy with the book. In the movie they don’t explain why she says this and it’s fair to interpret it as simply a sadness at past youth, but in the book it is more specific. It is told that there was a tradition where a bride proved her virginity by calling to the forest, and if a unicorn appeared, that would prove her “purity”. In the book it is implied that the unicorn didn’t come for Molly in her youth and she became an outcast.
@Roxax32 жыл бұрын
I always liked the irony behind this movie. The unicorn searches for the other unicornes because she doesn't want to be the last one, but in the end she will still be alone for she was a woman and now knows emotions and mortality. So she started alone and in the end is still alone. I love this movie.
@ChicanoPhD Жыл бұрын
Yes 👏🏽
@laffyraffy4073 жыл бұрын
Honestly the scene that stuck with me as a kid wasn't any of the "terrifying" stuff, but the scene where the unicorn wakes up and realizes what Schmendrick did to her to save her. When she cried, "I can feel this body dying all around me!" it struck me to my core. I realized that, as a creature with an immortal body, she could literally *feel* the process of her human body slowly aging aka dying. It struck me as horrifying, that she would have to endure that feeling. Another thing that stuck with me was when she told Schmendrick at the end of the film, "I am no longer like the others, for no unicorn was born that could regret. But I do. I regret," and she later thanked him for that. It made me realize that even painful experiences can be valuable. Honestly this movie, and later the book, has shaped much of how I see the world. It's become such a comfort read that I have entire pages memorized. This may sound hyperbolic, but I honestly think I would be a different person had I never seen this movie and read the book.
@jancole69103 жыл бұрын
I agree. This was one of my favourite movies as a little girl, the other being the Lion King. That line about regret, I remembered asking my mother what regret was, what did it feel like? She was almost hesitant to explain and had difficulty conveying the concept to me. Looking back, I realized I was like the unicorn before she left the forest, not understanding my own mortality or the pain of regret. I've often felt this movie was about the journey from the innocence of childhood where everyday stretches into eternity into the knowing sadness of adulthood, where each day feels like only a few hours.
@laffyraffy4073 жыл бұрын
@@jancole6910 YES EXACTLY!!! It so perfectly conveys that transition from the innocent ignorance of childhood to the painful wisdom of adulthood.
@NachoCheeseDorito-Kun Жыл бұрын
Honestly the interesting interplay of mortality and immortality, blatant use of the characters KNOWING they're in a fairytale world, and the entirety of King Haggard were extremely influential to me. While I prefer scifi usually there is nothing quite to the level of the classical mood this story puts me in.
@lapislazarus8899 Жыл бұрын
That's how I feel about Watership Down. I watched that movie so many times, and I've read seven paperback copies of the book to shreds. Everyone says it's such a traumatizing movie for kids, but it never bothered me. I think I may have first seen it as young as five. I think movies made specifically for children nowadays insults their intelligence and capabilities. No, Watership Down was not a children's movie, it's just an animated movie. And I think same with The Last Unicorn. Along with The Dark Crystal and Time Bandits, those were all my favorite movies growing up.
@lathyrusloon Жыл бұрын
A horrible, beautiful moment in my memory too. Only second to the "Where were/How dare you" monologue. Which pains my heart even to this day.
@ariannathatdawg34003 жыл бұрын
I love how in the book the unicorn is hinted at fighting a dragon and winning and then later when Prince Lier tries to romance Lady Amalthea with the head of a dragon and she's unimpressed
@ariannathatdawg34003 жыл бұрын
One thing I'm disappointed with from the book to the movie is the loss of the servants/warriors from th castle, I loved them so much, they were so cute with Lady Amalthea
@breathovermatter58702 жыл бұрын
Yes!
@williambarnes5023 Жыл бұрын
The unicorn fought the dragon, yes. But she didn't kill it, and it would not have killed her. They are immortal. They know each other's names. Fortuna's carnival is the first time we ever see Unicorn meet Seleno, but Unicorn instantly recognizes her and knows her name. Amalthea was not impressed by the death of the dragon, she mourned for it. Its immortality was stolen just as hers was.
@NachoCheeseDorito-Kun Жыл бұрын
@William Barnes It does state in both movie and book that the withering look she gave Lir made him feel sorry for ending the dragon's life, which always clued me in to the mood of Amalthea as well as the scene.
@eldritchcupcakes3195Ай бұрын
@@williambarnes5023she could still very much have won though, and she probably would’ve seen killing the dragon as a pointless act.
@PureMagic1013 жыл бұрын
The part where she talks about how she can feel her body dying around her, especially in the book, where the concept of a human form is so foreign to her that she ends up clawing at her skin to the point of it bleeding because she doesn’t know how to cope, that stuck with me.
@ash-bruce-leemarshmallow60463 жыл бұрын
Thank you. Literally my favourite part in the film growing up was her transforming into human and saying I can feel my body dying all around me and the pain in her voice and how terrified she was it stuck with me to this day! I loved this film growing up it was perfect to me.
@DawnSTyler Жыл бұрын
Maybe because we can all relate the feeling to the actual human experience of not quite fitting into our world?
@aidyn59165 ай бұрын
@@DawnSTylerI think because we can all relate to such an immovable fear. We’re going to die, there’s nothing we can do, even when we know how scary it is. Depictions that reflect that stick with us
@funkyfiss3 жыл бұрын
The last Unicorn is a masterpiece and so is the last unicorn song that goes with it.
@bobbybillytommy45663 жыл бұрын
And the book
@gaziibo23363 жыл бұрын
America is a severely underrated band
@bobbybillytommy45663 жыл бұрын
@@gaziibo2336 I agree
@thisistheaccountname3 жыл бұрын
Nahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh.
@funkyfiss3 жыл бұрын
@@bobbybillytommy4566 I never read the book unfortunately. But this movie is very special to my heart from childhood.
@Jacecam323 жыл бұрын
I find it highly ironic that Unicorns are seen as exclusively feminine these days. Because prior to that first line written in the cabin back in the 60's. Unicorns were almost exclusively considered to be masculine. Or at least referred to as such. They were noble defenders of maidens, saviours and healers. Beagle in part has left his stamp on the world in helping shift that understanding to something beautiful and gentle.
@straywolf1843 жыл бұрын
I like both concepts to a degree so long as either isn't oversaturated in marketability. Murder-horses were always fun to think about.
@maggiesheartlove27343 жыл бұрын
I agree! Heck, its one of the reasons why the MC of my fantasy series is a male unicorn with a knight in shinning armor motif. 🗡
@DrawinskyMoon3 жыл бұрын
Unicorns themselves aren't feminine. They were meant for feminine.
@lasofi55103 жыл бұрын
👁👄👁
@fatuusdottore3 жыл бұрын
They have always been masculine. Feminists just appropriated them in the 2010’s.
@definitelynotapervert5602 Жыл бұрын
I adore the design of the unicorn in this movie. She's just so ridiculously beautiful, elegant and graceful, with a strong sense of strength, dignity and power emanating from her. Her body is well-defined and muscular, without losing her curvaceousness or breadth.
@Deadflower019 Жыл бұрын
Okay I understand the point you're making and I agree, but I *hate* how this is worded.
@MDonuT-of7px Жыл бұрын
Based horseshagger
@AwesomeYena Жыл бұрын
Are you describing the curves of a magical horse-like creature? (⚆_⚆)
@MDonuT-of7px Жыл бұрын
@@AwesomeYena Obviously
@abelardojesusplatashernand6608 Жыл бұрын
@@MDonuT-of7px based bronyposter
@quinterbeck3 жыл бұрын
One detail I love is when, just before Shmendrick turns Amalthea back into the unicorn, he and Molly and Lear argue on the beach - the things they say just seem so raw and real to the way we speak in intense moments "Do something, you have the power! I will kill you if you don't do something!" "I cannot! Not all the magic in the world can help her now" "Then what is magic for??" I just love Molly in general, such an unusual kind of character to see in a children's movie
@NachoCheeseDorito-Kun Жыл бұрын
They're a perfect trio. Lir and Schmendrick are both very good deconstructions of a story's narrative. Lir feels he HAS to do something because his role compells him to, Schmendrick feels he can never manage anything because his circumstance and the narrative prevent him from feeling he can take matters into his own hands, and Molly's the girl who says "screw it I'm making an annotated version f*ck the story it makes no sense-" This plus their constant acknowledgment that fairytale lands and worlds just have their own rules regardless of the people living between the lines is great.
@eldritchcupcakes3195Ай бұрын
Molly is fascinating. Usually the “I don’t believe in magic” or otherwise cynical character is just portrayed as a boring grump, but you can see her genuine reasoning. Magic has never done anything for her where it counts, the unicorn myth never became reality until it was too late. Her viewpoint is very understandable
@PokemonkaDub3 жыл бұрын
Shmendrick wasn't cursed with immortality because he was bad at magic, he was cursed because he was so incredibly powerfull that one lifespan would not be enought to gain controll over all the magic he had. That's also why he seemed bad at it.
@madi71783 жыл бұрын
Makes so much more sense because I always considered transformation magic to be high level magic that’s unstable. The fact that it can be performed so well by someone terrible at magic I assumed that the writers didn’t understand that there is a sort of a universal standard in writing when it comes to skill needed to perform magic. Thank you for the information!
@HamEggsButteredToast3 жыл бұрын
Yes! And we don't learn this in the book at the midnight carnival. It's at the very end, when they're already in the bull's cave, that he reveals this. It's my favourite twist in the book, since it casts such a new light on so many situations and conversations that happened before.
@Plinko993 жыл бұрын
Fun Fact, the magician he replaced at king Haggard's castle actually knew Shmendric's teacher. Together they were magicians of significant reputation.
@Tinuvielthefair3 жыл бұрын
Yup!
@TuberoseKisser3 жыл бұрын
Unicorns in mythology are really agressive, like... they're wild horses with a horn and were thought to be something that should be conquered so I'm not surprised that The Last Unicorn was dark.
@AndreNitroX3 жыл бұрын
Unicorns have been so over saturated by media that I’m sure any real ones would not be recognizable
@mynameisambertoo73793 жыл бұрын
AndreNitro X1000 Hehehe which is what both the book and film talk about, hehehe
@ms.pirate3 жыл бұрын
I agree mostly, except the "should be conquered" part i disagree on
@EvilPaladin113 жыл бұрын
I remember reading someone saying that old mythology unicorns were basically pissed off murder machines. The part where unicorns can be drawn out by a virgin maiden of pure heart, is more well known.
@morganrobinson80423 жыл бұрын
It's not really aggression. It's a rejection of impurity. The pursuit of a unicorn is a metaphor for union with Christ. Unicorns are one of the main symbols associated with Jesus allegorically, primarily because of the supposed immortality and healing ability of their horn. From there flows the need to pursue them, and the attraction to virginal purity. Enlightenment is difficult to find when deliberately sought but more easily found in innocence of superfluous sin; at least in a moralistic medieval context.
@homecko3 жыл бұрын
I never thought this movie was too dark nor scary. Not even my 6 year old self. I always loved this movie
@dreamguardian83203 жыл бұрын
When I was young, I did not understand what the story was about, I just watched it and enjoyed most of it. The only things that scared me were the harpy and the red bull. But I'm all grown up now and I've over come those scenes, just like I was able to over come Disney's the Legend of Sleepy Hallow. I've read the book, (actually the comic) and I can't decide if the book is better or the movie.
@Silly_Gamer_Neko3 жыл бұрын
Same here! " The Last Unicorn" is a film I watched so much more often then any disney movie I owned as a little kid, same also went for "The Flight of Dragons"! Still have my original VHS, still in working order :) (Funny how the scariest film for me as a kid was "The Neverending Story" because of that darned wolf, lol.)
@dreamguardian83203 жыл бұрын
@@Silly_Gamer_Neko The wolf's name was Gmork, and yeah, he used to scare me as a kid too.
@paigepriddy77153 жыл бұрын
the only part of this movie that scared me as a kid was the Red Bull... idk why but it did
@amzarnacht67103 жыл бұрын
I've always loathed the crappy production of Rankin Bass - Heck, the lord of the rings they did were considered the 'gayest movies of all time' for decades. But the story I loved, and America's poignant delivery of the titular theme sends a sword of ice through my heart to this day, so many years later.
@aircraftcarrierwo-class Жыл бұрын
One of my favorite details about this film is how passionate Christopher Lee was about the whole project. He reportedly loved every moment of his involvement in it, for instance he would slip in-character as King Haggard during meetings and suggest tweaks to his dialogue to make it flow better.
@NachoCheeseDorito-Kun Жыл бұрын
Haggard was a perfect adaptation. Between the design, expression, and Lee's performance, there is no beating Haggard for best adaptation, aside from about 90% of The Princess Bride. It's really telling that I can read lines that are only in the book and still hear Lee's voice saying them.
@aircraftcarrierwo-class Жыл бұрын
@@NachoCheeseDorito-Kun he absolutely made the role his own
@ralphisxamida8533 Жыл бұрын
Ĺike in princess Alisea, when he did something than 100%
@beans8804 Жыл бұрын
same guy who read rthe entire LOTR catalogue annually to prepare for his part in the movies. thats how actors adapting literature ought to be.
@joncarroll20403 ай бұрын
Lee also did Haggard's voice in the German dub and, as impossible as it may seem, the performance is even better.
@yapper583 жыл бұрын
To me, The Last Unicorn is more about innocense lost. The innocent don't understand regret because their lack of self-awareness and so not understanding how their actions relate to consequences. Unicorns are the embodiment of innocense ( equated with childhood and especially virginity in medieval culture) that is never lost. But in order to save them one of their "people" must sacrifice her innocense because the cynical, selfish world of humanity has tried to steal and lock this beautiful innocense away in a prison. Mento mori is part of this recognition of the flow of time outside of the magical, timeless, immortal world of unicorns that exists in the world of humans for it is the ulimate "ending" of a person's story that an immortal simply can't understand. Only in the cynical world of humans do you need heros to act as beacons of hope. You (and The Last Unicorn) do a great job of asking whether this desire on our part for the immortallity and endless joy of innocense the medieval version of unicorns represent is really something to be yearned for.
@thesisypheanjournal12713 жыл бұрын
The scene where Molly Grue confronts the Unicorn is one of the most underrated moments in cinema.
@phastinemoon3 жыл бұрын
It still makes me cry
@abeearoundapomegranate53333 жыл бұрын
I get chills just thinking about it.
@meganjob78273 жыл бұрын
and it’s amazing why as well. from my obsession with these types of literature and entertainment which is raw and terrifying with its themes and experience, her backstory is right along with it. also these voice actors are the BEST
@tenshi.kurama3 жыл бұрын
In the books lore at a ceremony for the couple the unicorn eas called to prove the woman was pure. So since almost all were rounded up suddenly all women were not marriage material
@BrownRiceBunny13 жыл бұрын
I cry every single time! It’s so moving. As I grow I see the scene differently every time. From childhood to teen and as an adult the scene would hit me differently.
@888fluffy3 жыл бұрын
holy shit, the last unicorn being a proto studio ghibli movie makes so much sense. The last unicorn and Nausicaa of the valley of the wind were my childhood
@cuckoophendula82113 жыл бұрын
I just read a little more into Topcraft, and my mind was further blown that after its bankruptcy in 1985, half of it not only became Studio Ghibli, but the other half at the time became Pacific Animation Corporation, which made Thundercats!
@Raya-xw5ud3 жыл бұрын
Right, that blew my mind. I only watched Nausicaa recently, but I felt like it had a very similar feel/vibe to it as The Last Unicorn. Wild.
@EricMontreal223 жыл бұрын
The opening of Last Unicorn (based on the Unicorn Tapestries) is very similar IMHO to the opening credits of Nausicaa with its murals (and to an extent the woodcut opening of Laputa). Also so many bonus points for the connection to Belladonna of Sadness
@leonie77543 жыл бұрын
This explains why I saw so many Last Unicorn cells when i visited Nakano broadway in Japan a few years ago! I took photos because I'm a fan of the show and it was cool, but I had no idea why a bunch of art cells from the film were being sold at a specialist auction house in a totally different country. Now I get it.
@EricMontreal223 жыл бұрын
@@leonie7754 Ah man I'd love to see the photos! As a kid I had some idea there was an anime connection because (I woulda been five or six) the look kinda reminded me of Sea Prince and Fire Child kzbin.info/www/bejne/fpPak5uuo7aKnrc which I knew was Japanese
@craftcat10123 жыл бұрын
Out of all the characters I think the unicorn has the worst fate. She will never die, forced to remember her friends forever despite the fact they forgot her the moment they passed.
@moonlady30003 жыл бұрын
In the book it's clarified that immortal beings aren't born with the ability to regret. So normally an immortal being wouldn't be affected by that. So it's even more tragic because, as she says in the movie, she's the only unicorn in the world who understands regret.
@EccentricGentelman3 жыл бұрын
They forgot her? I think that only applies if there is no afterlife.
@dinofelis93433 жыл бұрын
There is no greater curse than to life forever with regret, eternally haunted by that which could have been but never was and never will be. It is a fate I would not wish upon my worst foe.
@veronikamajerova45642 жыл бұрын
@@moonlady3000 Yes, they don´t have the ability to regret. But the last unicorn gets it, because she was human for a while. She now knows regret.
@kenpoarniceguy12 жыл бұрын
And yet I believe she will forever to thankful he Magician for letting her experience it all. For now she is much more wiser than the rest of her kind
@keyboardwarrior3702 Жыл бұрын
I remember being so alone when my dad died. Kids movies left me feeling hollow and broken. There was no magic, no heroes, no happy ending in the real world. There was only pain, loss and loniness. Then there were films like The Last Unicorn, Castle In The Sky, Princess Mononoke and Flight of Dragons. Movies that showed death and loss as a part of life, a cycle instead of a finale. They gave me the space to process my grief and understand that I wasn't alone. Kubo and The Two Strings, Del Torro's Pinocchio and The Fantastic Mr Fox are more modern examples with the same spirit. It's sad to see them labeled as "too dark/weird for kids" Kids experience loss, death and pain as much as anyone. But we deny them the terms and tools to process these feelings, just to make ourselves feel better.
@MaryArts3 жыл бұрын
So in the end it states: One mortal life fully lived in love and regret is more worth than thousand immortal lives filled with no friends, no sorrow, regret, love and less.
@MaryArts3 жыл бұрын
@Doofus But life is not beautiful when you can't feel that it is beautiful. Those unicorn feel nearly nothing but are merely living on. Life is only beautiful because you feel love and more. So rather waste a life filled with love (human) or lives filled without love (unicorns)?
@MaryArts3 жыл бұрын
@Doofus You do you. And I always say: "You can't miss what you never had". Being born a unicorn you will never miss feelings and love. But by my experience as a human, I can at least say for myself, love is way too great to live without it. Just like the last unicorn having to know what love is and not being able to be with her prince. And with deep fear comes deep joy. So I take all the fear in the world, just to be in love with my partner and feel joy with the people I love. But that is just my thinking. I can understand your preferences.
@EccentricGentelman3 жыл бұрын
Wouldn't a thousand immortal lives be the same length as 1 immortal life?
@williambarnes5023 Жыл бұрын
@@EccentricGentelman And why would you ever bother wishing for more of nothing?
@EccentricGentelman Жыл бұрын
@@williambarnes5023 I don't follow.
@therealfinnaspring85853 жыл бұрын
People are obsessed with calling any kids movie that isn't pure sunshine and rainbows disturbing, dark, or traumatizing. I'm really starting to think the internets reactions to these movies is just exaggerated.
@chichiro86253 жыл бұрын
For me the movie was traumatizing I had to sleep with lights on the next days BUT im not the only person in the world. Every kid is different and parents schould treat them so Some kids can handle such movies others not For example i always loves coraline but a lot of kids called it too scary
@ms.pirate3 жыл бұрын
Same, and i mean, I enjoyed the movie when i was a kid, I never associated unicorns with pooping rainbows BS. Except the scene with the skeleton, that's was what i was afraid of
@caleviwin3 жыл бұрын
@@ms.pirate when the harpy ate the witch it spooked me a bit but other than that I loved it as a kid.
@bearbones79133 жыл бұрын
Honestly everyone needs a bit of negative emotion to truly make something feel genuine. This can come across as violence, fear or just something uncomfortable but you need that element. If you don't have that then its liable to come across as toxic positivity
@ms.pirate3 жыл бұрын
@@caleviwin i mean, same! I loved the movie too!
@darthlazurus43823 жыл бұрын
King Haggard's motives are terrifyingly realistic. He is desperate to feel happiness to the point that he acts in an utterly selfish and childlike way.
@sarahbaiocchi3 жыл бұрын
The darkest reaction to chronic depression.
@WobblesandBean3 жыл бұрын
Yup. He wasn't sinister or evil in any way - he was simply human.
@sarahbaiocchi3 жыл бұрын
@@WobblesandBean I think his actions WERE sinister and evil, but I agree that they were founded in an all-too-understandable, and very human, painful existence. Hi, I'm Sarah and I hold suffering people accountable for their actions. :P
@sirorliktheironclad3 жыл бұрын
Alongside Frollo from Hunchback.
@lordfarquaad82673 жыл бұрын
Word!
@nessyno-name38553 жыл бұрын
The deadpan delivery on "...unicorn frappuccino, which looked and tasted like a jar of sand art" made me laugh
@FIXON993 жыл бұрын
WHY ID NO ONE TALKING ABOUT THAT
@crow64973 жыл бұрын
Ya hilarious
@aerialpunk2 жыл бұрын
As a kid, the parts that stuck with me as being mildly disturbing were how, when the harpy kills Mommy Fortuna, Fortuna just stands there with her arms wide open, excited to he horribly killed.... And how the unicorn was the only one of her kind who could feel regret. I sure loved this movie as a kid, though, even if the themes were a tad on the heavier side. It's a moving and beautiful story.
@CG_Hali3 жыл бұрын
Japanese animation in the 80's often dealt with real-life struggles, grief, losing loved ones, facing incredible odds, and rarely getting a moment's rest. It taught a whole generation of Gen Xers that life isn't all rainbows.
@Mugthraka2 жыл бұрын
And thats why we're all depressed ;p
@JuanLeon-oe6xe Жыл бұрын
@@Mugthraka Yes and no, for the good that darker animation brough when it shattered the pink-colored illusions about life, it also didn't help preventing hope getting (almost) killed. Think about it, if everything's dark and awful all the time, why caring, why doing anything at all? For as much as "there's darkness" was a necesary message, it quickly spiraled into "life _is_ darkness", while also very conveniently forgetting the part about moving on from said darkness... I think every single human knows at this point that we're on a living Hell, without the obvious being repeating over and over. How do we fix it? Too long, didn't read: too bleak, stopped caring.
@LadyCoyKoi Жыл бұрын
@@Mugthraka Gen zs have more of that than us Genxers. Gen zs were sheltered too often. They could've have it better watching these types of films. The generation after the Zs... lost cause. Families sheltering these kids too often. I feel sorry for them.
@JuanLeon-oe6xe Жыл бұрын
@@LadyCoyKoi Uhm, buddy, what are you even saying? Legit, Lockdown was bad, but it didn't killed the internet, *this movie is on KZbin even*. Or are you coming with the Boomer mentality of "kIdS tHeSe dAyS wItH tHeIr sAtAnIc pHoNeS"? Lol no, try being a mexican kid playing outside *WITHOUT* being kidnapped and recruited, not by Dr. Halsey, but by a Drug Cartel (that is, assuming they don't need a sex slave or organs for the Black Market instead) (I'm assuming you're on PC). I'm assuming this wasn't written by an A.I., I'm also not making an r/ihadastroke joke, but you're making it hard...
@Tenkuu-san7 ай бұрын
Not only animation. Have you ever read the manga Tokyo Babylon by CLAMP? It follows a young onmouji and the people he helps, and a lot of the stories involve death, depression, and other dark topics. I highly recommend reading it.
@TiBunCosplay3 жыл бұрын
Ah, you got a clip where Molly says "Damn you" in her speech when she first sees the unicorn! I finally feel validated! I had this movie on VHS as a kid and I knew she said "damn" in that part but when I bought the movie on DVD the word had been cut out and I thought I was going crazy because no one else remembered her saying it.
@dmgice3 жыл бұрын
The Blu Ray has the audio correctly and uncensored.
@BonaparteBardithion3 жыл бұрын
My DVD copy has it censored too. Actually, I have two copies. One completely muted the line and the other repeated "Where have you been?". Either way you can still lip-read "Damn you". Our VHS definitely had it uncensored, but some of the songs were truncated. "Now That I'm A Woman" was reduced to a brief instrumental bridge and I didn't know it existed until DVD. There've been so many different releases.
@xRaiofSunshine3 жыл бұрын
I watched this movie sooo often as a kid (with the cursing bits) it feels so weird not hearing it in other versions. Glad some clips are still around :0
@Rennies-World3 жыл бұрын
Huh. I'm going to have to check my iTunes version for that...
@thecouchpotatocom3 жыл бұрын
I was shocked as well when the dvd goes silent for the cursing. My husband, who has no nostalgia for any movie, would have forbidden it from being played if he had seen the VHS version. Now my child adores the film aswell, so I guess it was for the best.
@Cryptid_in_the_Cellar3 жыл бұрын
The last unicorn fills me with a sadness and yet happiness I cannot explain.
@georgehutter3393 жыл бұрын
Same
@claireevans333 жыл бұрын
me too, i always cry watching it
@PolarisGrace3 жыл бұрын
The most traumatic part for me was when she was talking about her flesh rotting when she became mortal.
@Sanee6503 жыл бұрын
same...
@SlighlyMacs3 жыл бұрын
Yeah when she’s screaming “I can feel this body dying all around me!” I always tear up.
@Redwallfan_13 жыл бұрын
That line is one that stuck with me since hearing it. Even when I didn't fully understand all it's implications it still stuck with me. It's a stunning line.
@gamer1X122 жыл бұрын
The Last Unicorn captures existential dread in such an incredible way
@syenite Жыл бұрын
As a child, I was terrified of the red bull, but still asked my parents to rent this video all the time. I had nightmares about the bull, but could not get enough of the unicorns. When I grew older, the novel became one of my favorites, a book I read at least once a year. It was either the 20th or 25th anniversary of the film release, and my local theater was doing a showing with Peter Beagle in attendance. He signed books and had a Q and A. When I handed him my book I informed him that the bull haunted my nightmares for years as a kid. His reply? "Good, kids need to be scared every now and then." I'll never forget that. Also, as a kid, I related to the unicorn and her desire for love. Now? At 35 years old? I relate to Molly Grue so much. Where has my unicorn been? Where was she when I was young?
@lydiablasko23803 жыл бұрын
As a child whose childhood started with this fucking movie, I can confirm, I love it. People think its just weird but they don't understand. The magic in the animation, the beauty of the unicorn, each character unique, the scenery that feels so peaceful, the calm in the unicorns eyes, the iconic moments such as the skeleton i like to call "sassy skeleton", and the deep meaning in it. To me, looking back at it, although I didn't think this as a kid, this movie had a message, especially at the end, that things change, and so you have to move on, and things that once were important, have to be acknowledged and grateful for, but move on. Even in the weird animal zoo boobie bird old hag scene(idk what to call it), even the hag herself talks about how people believe what they want to believe and see what they want to believe, and even draws parallels to zoos and how the animals aren't as happy there. And another thing, I'm not gonna say that all the women in the film weren't sexualized cuz that's just not true, but what I am saying is that many of the women in the film weren't picture perfect, like the old hag, and the supporting woman character(i forgot her name) has the same scraggly hairstyle the whole time. And when the unicorn is in human form, the sexualization and general sexism is less than other, the only main sexualization scene is when she's just been turned into a human and she's fricken naked, but shmendrik is respectful THE ENTIRE FILM, and than there's the old fuck corpse guy who gives off rlly creepy vibes but still treats her as the unicorn creature she is, not an object. So food for thought, or should I say BUFFET for thought, I like to write a lot.
@manonpavllptdr3 жыл бұрын
Amen !
@VeryBlueberrry3 жыл бұрын
Boobie bird old hag = harpy. Part woman & part hawk/eagle type of bird, they’re a pretty interesting mythical creature! Anyway, I enjoyed your word buffet. I also love this movie and you described part of its charm quite well.
@lydiablasko23803 жыл бұрын
@@VeryBlueberrry OMG thanks so much. For some reason I forgot the name but that’s what I call it anyways In my head. looking back I typed A LOT but I’m glad you enjoyed it!
@hinasakukimi3 жыл бұрын
schmendrick drinks respect women juice
@meganjob78273 жыл бұрын
yessss someone said it !! i so agree, i feel like growing up on these types of old, not-so-sugary films gave me a serious fascination for them that i would rather die than be without. so sad they don’t make them like they used to.
@raelaash47593 жыл бұрын
As a German growing up with Das Letzte Einhorn in the 90s, I will be eternally grateful Christopher Lee voiced King Haggard in German aswell. His voice and pronunciation/accent in the role always enchanted me as a child, and keeps doing so as an adult. It's the perfect fit.
@metallicblood2 жыл бұрын
Ich konnte es nicht fassen als ich das gerade im Video gehört habe. Ich wusste weder, dass er die Rolle im Englischen gesprochen hat noch, dass er fließend deutsch sprechen konnte.
@rexremedy17332 жыл бұрын
It’s a good movie. And I always stood unapologetically by that statement. Which as a young man wasn’t always easy. But I recognise quality when I see it.
@freckledflutist Жыл бұрын
His unicorn monologue is my favorite in the entire movie. “The first time I felt it, I thought I was going to die”, “nothing makes me happy but their shining and their grace”, “I am truly young in spite of myself”. I love these lines and Lee did such a beautiful job capturing his character.
@janedoeeyed3 жыл бұрын
I still get all misty eyed when the other unicorns are rescued from ocean. The build and emotional payoff is absolutely priceless
@Ceira_OwO2 жыл бұрын
That last line from the book gave me chills. Really makes this movie 10x sadder knowing that in the end, her friends all have died and her existence has all but faded away
@yanii99103 жыл бұрын
Me: "Oh, I remember The Last Unicorn as a bit dark, but I enjoyed it when I was a kid! Wonder what this video says..." The video: *immortality and death, the fear of dying and the fear of living*
@A_ghost_milkshake3 жыл бұрын
Fun fact about Molly. Back in the day sometimes there was a ceremony before a wedding where the bride had to sing a song and if a unicorn apeared it'd mean she was pure of heart and a virgin and was therefore allowed to marry. I dont quite remember if that was a "princess only" sorta thing, it might have been, but that might've been what Molly was talking about when she asked the unicorn where she had been.
@daryatislenko46513 жыл бұрын
I heard that if a person sees a unicorn at a young age, they will be happy for the rest of their life. So when Moly was furious, saying "how dare you come to me now, when I'm like this?!", I interpret it as she missed her chance at living a happy life. Now grown-up it hits differently and truly sad.
@thecouchpotatocom3 жыл бұрын
The old myth was that only a pure hearted virgin could summon/tame a unicorn. They go into the forest and sing, if successful, the unicorn would come and lay its head in the girls lap. That is how, in the unicorn hunt paintings, they caught and killed the unicorn.
@drakynoch3 жыл бұрын
Its in the book as well. I really think that's why Molly reacts the way she does. Molly sang, the unicorn didn't come, and thus Molly was abandoned. At least that's what I believe...
@ggilbert89673 жыл бұрын
I think in the book that Molly believed very fervently in the existence of unicorns and she continued to throughout her life. She was raised on stories of unicorns coming to young, beautiful, pure maidens and so she believed that one would come to her because she was those things, but as time wore on she felt she became less and less worthy to see one. She still believed in them though, unflinchingly it seems because she is the only non-magical person who sees The Unicorn and IMMEDIATELY recognizes her for what she is. We know this to be true because she says, "If you had waited as long as I have to see a unicorn." or something to that effect, and that's one of the beautiful things about this story, is that it states that unicorns can come to people who are not "perfect". Molly is upset because she thinks that she's not worthy enough to see a unicorn now, she's "old", "ugly" and not a virgin anymore, and that's why this part is so beautiful. The Unicorn lets Molly touch her, hold her, cradle her, when before she clearly didn't let anyone touch her if it could be helped. She acknowledges Molly's pain and even comforts her "I'm here now.", she signals to Molly that the woman is still pure in some ways, she can see her and she wants her to come with her and stand by her side for the journey.
@daryatislenko46513 жыл бұрын
@@ggilbert8967, you are so damn right. And it's a very mature statement for a "kids' movie". You are not perfect but you are worth what good is coming your way.
@akirasaito15513 жыл бұрын
I always thought the unicorn's design was beautiful. Ephemeral, ethereal, and unnaturally bright
@azurithdetwilight3 жыл бұрын
I'm just kinda shocked people found this scary, this was my favorite childhood movie.
@KaliqueClawthorne3 жыл бұрын
Actually it was ...kind of. But based on the atmosphere. And it's Just ..a reason why movies for Kids aren't Just for Kids everytime. Especially ghibli movies (since the Studio from the Last unicorn later became the ghibli Studio) For me it was that Red, aggressive bull, hunting the unicorns thst scared me
@rickwrites2612 Жыл бұрын
The vulture with 3 naked pendulous breasts coming down and eating a carnie did it for me. Also the red bull scenes were ominous, but I think there was a music effect involved. It depends on age too. 5yrs or 8 yrs or 11 yrs
@Futurebound_jpg Жыл бұрын
Same. The only scene that really stuck with me was the fantastical scene where the unicorns are stampeding in the waves.
@demakusan Жыл бұрын
It's crazy, when I was a child I always felt bad for the bull. Yes he was scary but I rather cried when he was forced into the ocean
@Tenkuu-san7 ай бұрын
It has adult themes to be certain, but I also never found it frightening. I have always preferred serious stories to traditional Disney "happy" ones, it was the main reason I got into anime, and before it, movies and series like this one. If you have never seen them btw, I recommend watching the anime adaptions by Toei of both Ningyo Hime (Mermaid Princess) and Swan Lake. The latter in particular has always been a favorite of mine. If you like unusual movies in general, I recommend checking out The Black Cauldron too, mentioned in this video.
@Tarotlynx Жыл бұрын
I loved the conversation between Molly and the cat. I loved his point that cats aren't really fooled by illusions as where humans insist on enjoying being fooled by illusions. And that no cat ever truly gives a human a straight answer. We're not worthy of it.
@evilqueen-et1du3 жыл бұрын
Now I can decide that The Last Unicorn is my favorite Studio Ghibli movie.
@G601763 жыл бұрын
Its not studio ghibli, though..?
@WannabeAltruist3 жыл бұрын
@@G60176 The video explains that Studio Ghibli was formed by Miyazaki out of the remnants of Topcraft when they closed.
@alexanderwerewitch3 жыл бұрын
@@WannabeAltruist ok debate: did you say it was a ghibli movie or a tophat movie? (The op said "now i can say its my fav ghibli movie" which, uh, ok, the super western one huh? Oookaaaay. Anyway.)
@TheInfinitySystem3 жыл бұрын
@@savantofillusions Preach, brother GenX. Preach. Don't forget Heavy Metal. Remember that weird claymation piece The Adventures of Mark Twain?
@WannabeAltruist3 жыл бұрын
@@alexanderwerewitch Yeah it's objectively not an actual Ghibli movie, lol. Saying it's their favorite might even be bending the truth for the sake of the joke. But hey, if they prefer the more western influenced movie that's cool. It does have an interesting blend of eastern and western animation styles.
@hannahlillis2363 жыл бұрын
Uf, this really captures what made child me so heartbroken at the end of this movie. Not the deaths or scary monsters, but that the Unicorn had found love, friends and a potential future whose loss she would remember for eternity. Her life as a unicorn seems so stagnant. This may have been the first art to communicate the concept of regret to me.
@jtillman82513 жыл бұрын
I rewatched the film several years ago and the end credits sequence when the unicorn goes back to her forest to be alone forever moved me to tears.
@mattboggs63042 жыл бұрын
That's a brilliant point, and I think you're absolutely right. I was 3 when this came out, but saw it repeatedly on VHS for years after, and I'm convinced this is what taught me what regret was as well.
@stephysteph85583 жыл бұрын
Why am I not surprised that Christopher Lee is fluent in German and voiced both the English and German versions of his character...
@vivvy_03 жыл бұрын
Rip a legend
@CrisSelene3 жыл бұрын
You shouldn't be surprised. He was in the RAF Intelligence and SAS in WWII. It was only normal he'd learn German for that
@why_karlaly3 жыл бұрын
and he doesn't even have an accent - I watched this movie as a kid and never even realised he was in this until I saw this video
@KossolaxtheForesworn3 жыл бұрын
being a spy does benefit later in life.
@Aniracia3 жыл бұрын
@@why_karlaly u are right he does not have an accent, but he speaks in a very unusual way. I always noticed but did not think much of it since it was so fitting for the charakter.
@kiskastudios60463 жыл бұрын
The last line on this video hits hard enough for us watchers to realize the true fate of life... "The cage that traps her, one that will exist long after her forest has vanished and all the stars in the night sky have burned themselves out."
@sagethemage39793 жыл бұрын
Hi, I'm actually crying. This video helped me unlock something I was missing for the stories I'm writing, and understanding my mental health in relation to death/dying. My appreciation for this video cannot be expressed in words beyond that.
@kimberlybogert70313 жыл бұрын
Honestly same in some ways.. essally for one of my oc's.
@graphitepants65223 жыл бұрын
For some reason mommy fortuna’s death and the Red Bull weren’t scary to me, but damn if I wasn’t terrified of that skull screaming UNICORN UUUNICORN
@EmilyTheOtakuofficial3 жыл бұрын
This. This is the one.
@MK-ophelia3 жыл бұрын
I can hear it clearly in my head reading this...
@0heartangel0353 жыл бұрын
For me, it was that flipping tree...
@johnnam13623 жыл бұрын
My dad quotes that part all the time haha
@IamCree3 жыл бұрын
It filled me with existential horror lol
@katcordes43173 жыл бұрын
When I was in grad school, we were visited by Betty Buckley (o.g. American Grizabella in Cats, gym teacher Miss Collins in Carrie, star of stage and screen). I asked her a question of art; where to pull it from, where to find it, what to do when you feel lost. She looked at me very keenly and said "My dear, I see you. And you, specifically, need to read The Last Unicorn. Anytime you see the word 'magic', replace it with 'art'. It is all true." And that is a memory I've held very close to my heart for some time now. Every year, I reread when Molly Grue finally sees the Unicorn, and every year it gets harder and harder to bear. The passage of time is unendurable, and yet so effortless. Thank you for the deep dive into a work of art. All the critical essays, quotes, images; it's all so good. The title says it all. It is all true.
@hugrat3 жыл бұрын
Some people assume that everything animated is made for kids. Now let's watch Watership Down!
@miunya3 жыл бұрын
I will never forget the trauma from watership down as a kid omg
@brodriguez110003 жыл бұрын
Heh. Show them Heavy Metal.
@iammsmorales3 жыл бұрын
Please NOOOOOO!!!!! 😱😱😱😱
@georgehutter3393 жыл бұрын
*quiet chanting* plague dogs plague dogs
@sofiapaakkonen37313 жыл бұрын
The rabbits suffocating, crawling to get out, eyes glowing red as they wriggle against each other for air... But the entrances are blocked. I could cry just thinking about it
@eriklarson23123 жыл бұрын
I really liked the quotes you used from the book and the movie I’d forgotten the almost poetic form of dialogue the author used. One of my favorite lines from the movie was when the unicorn asked Schmendrick after he achieves his dream of being a true wizard if he’s happy and he can only say “well, men don’t always know when they’re happy but I think so.”
@skeletonwar44453 жыл бұрын
She really just dropped a banger outta nowhere and then said cheers. It's Breadsword all over again.
@CloudsAndDays3 жыл бұрын
Watching this movie is one of my earliest memories. My parents bought this movie for me and I had watched it regularly. It never gave me nightmares, it didn’t scare me too harshly. I don’t think I ever truly understood the movie, hell I couldn’t remember the names of the characters. I just enjoyed watching the beats come along. In a way it feels like that childhood experience mirrors the unicorn herself. Starting off blissfully secluded and enjoying her life, watching people come and go without ever knowing who they are. Only to one day begin to understand them and the lives they’re leading. You just can’t go back to that kid mindset, you grow up and it’s gone for good. I dunno.
@AndreNitroX3 жыл бұрын
Well said as a child you believe your invincible but as you experience life and mortality you know that you must carry on through life with expectation that death will get you.
@christinekaye63933 жыл бұрын
I always had an association of unicorns with innocence, so I think what you said is very insightful.
@akaony3 жыл бұрын
It's true
@Choshako3 жыл бұрын
The Last Unicorn imo is in the same category as Coraline, both are scary and nightmare fuel, but that's part of why they're so good. Movies like these teach valuable lessons, the characters are in really terrifying circumstances, but they survive them nonetheless. I think that's a great example to show kids, especially kids who may be in terrifying circumstances themselves.
@JuanLeon-oe6xe Жыл бұрын
Something about the kids already knowing dragons exist, and fairy tales saying the dragons can be slain...
@TheDragonsTreasure3 жыл бұрын
As someone who's constantly and desperately in search of quality videos that aren't people just vomiting the plot of a show, I thank you for this. I hope to see more from you in the future.
@sarahanniswerid3 жыл бұрын
Yo, same. Gimme more, please. (I can wait though, lord knows how much time, research, and editing she put into this *applause*)
@chromalore3 жыл бұрын
thank you so much! i have more essays in the works. it definitely takes a lot of time to do all the research, but it's so worth it :)
@teelehansen49953 жыл бұрын
I must have been a strange kid. Even at 8 I thought this was the best movie ever made. No nightmares or any scared moments, just a continuing want to re watch it every chance I could.
@emroz01 Жыл бұрын
Yes
@ShaelynAvalon Жыл бұрын
It's been my favorite since I was like 4 years old. I'm 27 now, I get it
@RYMAN13212 жыл бұрын
This was pure 80’s. Being rated G yet being very dark and mature. Loved the ending, as well as the theme by America. Both still hit me in the feels to this day though
@thesisypheanjournal12713 жыл бұрын
Anybody claiming nowadays that "The Last Unicorn" is too traumatic for children obviously hasn't watched Coraline.
@chalkywaters3 жыл бұрын
The other mother tho-
@manonpavllptdr3 жыл бұрын
At some point, the Last Unicorn canbe scarier than Coraline I think. I mean, Coraline's whole world and atmosphere is gothic and scary. The Last Unicorn is supposed to happen in an enchanted place, with Fantasy, Magic and Wonders. To see this theme being twisted into such a dark story is unsettling.
@thesisypheanjournal12713 жыл бұрын
@@manonpavllptdr Coraline's world was whimsical and then turned ugly.
@manonpavllptdr3 жыл бұрын
@@thesisypheanjournal1271 You're absolutely right, but even the "beautiful and magical" parts were kinda creepy and disturbing
@phastinemoon3 жыл бұрын
Heck, hasn’t watched the earliest Disney animated films - Pinocchio, Snow White, Bambi...
@Wisteria_Night3 жыл бұрын
This was a very interesting video and really opened my mind up about “The Last Unicorn”, a movie I loved as a kid but didn’t understand the depth of the story.
@obsidianagent3 жыл бұрын
Same here! I feel that is is what GOOD movies for children are; movies where you can find NEW meanings as you grow older.
@Wisteria_Night3 жыл бұрын
@@obsidianagent Exactly! Movies that can last through time are the best movies ^-^
@Lesandira3 жыл бұрын
As a German native speaker it's a real treat to listen to Sir Christopher Lee's performance for both The Last Unicorn and Das Letzte Einhorn!
@Karfunkelfuchs3 жыл бұрын
No matter which version I watch, it always makes me a bit sad since that awesome actor and voice actor is gone. Rest in Peace, Christopher.
@Lesandira3 жыл бұрын
@@Karfunkelfuchs He got to live to 93 years of age and had roles in over 280 films. Many of which are very iconic - such as Dracula, Saruman and more. He also was active as singer in heavy metal bands. He may be gone but is certainly not forgotten. He really left an amazing legacy behind.
@DerAykac3 жыл бұрын
@@Lesandira Not to forget that this man allegedly hunted nazis. And as another "German native speaker" i can´t be thankful enough.
@adrianaheiler97943 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I only watched the German version so far, so the original voice actors mean nothing to me when it comes to the history I have with this movie, apart from Christopher Lee of course. It was the 2nd film I watched at the movie theatre as a kid (first one was Disney's Snow White).
@jaspersratfeces3 ай бұрын
this was my absolute favorite movie as a kid, and still is one of them today. however, watching it now, after maturing and gaining more experience, it hits so much harder. beautiful narrative, animation, and characters. the king isn't even "evil", he just wants to be happy. (i love when villains have actual logical motives.) and there are so many interpretations you can get out of it, or you can just take it as face value as well. i particularly love the scenes where molly is angry at the unicorn, especially now, when i can understand the longing to have someone come and save you from everything only for them to come too late. that and the scene where the unicorn is realizing what shmendrick (still laugh whenever i remember that's his name) has done to her, and she only wishes that she could have died to the red bull rather than suffer inside her new body, are probably my favorites just based on how impactful and meaningful they seem now.
@keylimesatellite28353 жыл бұрын
I watched this movie so many times as a kid that I can recite every line. I don't know if it scarred me or not, but even as a kid who didn't truly "get" the movie, I always remembered Mommy Fortuna's death, the Unicorn's transformation scene, and that final pan to the Unicorn's woods. There was something especially about that last shot that always left me sad.
@brookerickettson49503 жыл бұрын
There are no happy ending, bc nothing ever ends.....she will remember you when men are myths written in tales told by rabbits.” Personal fan theory ahead: Haggrid is the human male the one unicorn was turned onto so long ago. The wizard who turned him did the spell different, so while human, his aging was slowed down considerably. He has lived so long now that nearly nothing holds meaning to him anymore, and he has long forgotten ever being a unicorn. Yet when he sees another he is transported to a time when he was one, but never recognizing that he was one: only that he is free of the burdens of such a subtle magically extended life, and he is happy for those moments. If you think about it , his beard is similar to depictions of how unicorns are portrayed with beards. Yes the story saids that THAT unicorn lived a long , happy life and died, but that is a story, and stories can be altered to better be remembered. Humans love their happy ending after all, and what is happy about a unicorn being turned into a man who grew so old and cold that he never remembered being a unicorn, let alone a warm lively happy man?
@madi71783 жыл бұрын
I love this. Maybe that’s why his son likes the unicorn so much in her human form. He’s so used to the presence of a unicorn that she feels familiar to him.
@GLORIOUSCHONK3 жыл бұрын
I don't understand, at all but I'm here for it.
@thecouchpotatocom3 жыл бұрын
I like it.
@TheFirstHurrah3 жыл бұрын
HEADCANON ACCEPTED
@TopsideCrisis3463 жыл бұрын
That hits deep, friend. I remember watching Mad Max (I forget which one); there's a scene in there, where a kid gives Max this little music box, and Max is working this thing and just staring at it in complete bewilderment. It occurred to me - this character had known nothing but pain, suffering, war, and conflict. He had known it so long and so well, that anything not associated with such - any symbol of peace, love, hope, or beauty - had become completely irrelevant to him. We all create our own hells.
@dragonlady38523 жыл бұрын
Shmendrick is right you know. Life is beautiful because it ends. A flower is made all the more precious because it fades and every moment is priceless because it will never come again. And to him an immortal life is the cruelest curse of all because it never ends. The unicorn on the other hand has always been an immortal and knows no else until Shmendrick's spell. Now she is the only unicorn who knows what it is to be mortal. She alone has experienced mortal existence and all the emotions that come with mortality. As she says herself unicorns do not feel regret, yet she experiences it. Not only that, but she is the only unicorn to have experienced love. Mortal love with all the pain and joy it brings along with the knowledge that it would eventually end. In the very beginning of the film we get a glimpse of what her immortal life was like. She lived in a forest that was always spring and was pure and beautiful like her. Death did not exist in her forest and all was perfect and unchanging. This seems to symbolize her innocence, naivety and ignorance as she is even unaware that the other unicorns are gone. She was eternally the same unchanging with no need to worry about the well-being of the others until she found herself completely alone. She didn't even really seem to care that they were gone at first until it slowly dawns on her what being the last really means. Being the last means that someday the unicorns will end. It is that realization that terrifies her to the extent that such a self-absorbed creature as a unicorn sets out on a journey to seek for the others, doing something so completely against her nature as an immortal. And in the end she can never return to that innocent childlike state for she has been forever altered. She is now alone an immortal who will exist forever with all the regrets and memories of being mortal. She will exist forever with regret in her heart and in some ways that is the final death the death of innocence.
@tintinhelicopter26773 жыл бұрын
That’s really beautiful
@rosemartasgaminghoard3 жыл бұрын
"There are no Happy Endings because Nothing Ends" Schmendrick, I love that line so much it is one of my favorites from the book. The Last Unicorn is a masterpiece of literature because it is so aware of itself. It is aware of the nature of Heros in stories as well as the nature of Legends and Myths. I love it
@maya-parisan3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this insightful video. I can't believe some critcs didn't even like the visuals. I think the design is hauntingly beautiful, and the animation - especially of the unicorns themselves - is so graceful and elegant, even if it is on two's. The music is also top-notch, the songs as well as the score. Having said that, I hated the movie on my first watch. It made me feel all kinds of things I didn't want to feel - especially at the end, but once I was able to put that aside, I came to love the movie as the classic and the masterpiece it so obviously is.
@nickmitsialis3 жыл бұрын
You're telling me! The animation WAS incredible. I used to show it to my (now teenage) daughter. I never even heard of the movie until it caught my daughter's eye one day. I gotta say, that I hope they don't try to make a live action version of this movie. I can't even think of a 'human' actress who'd do justice to Princess Amalthea. She'd have to be so beautiful, graceful and elegant it would be like looking at an angel.
@richardwilson76143 жыл бұрын
I've loved this movie since I was a kid. I think my favorite line that I still cling to is, "there are no happy endings... because nothing ends."
@Kat-tq6tm3 жыл бұрын
I feel the tree was always more traumatic compared to the witch's death
@missdaniels31183 жыл бұрын
As a kid, it flew right over my head. Now as an adult, I always skip the scene cause its so weird. Someone with a smothering fetish had to animate that. No excuse for it lmao!
@jaendhoe39623 жыл бұрын
this randomly came in my recommended, but one thing about Molly Grue is that she laments not seeing the unicorn in her youth because there's a folk tale about virgins being able to tame unicorns and she is now unable to because she was no longer "new", a virgin
@smirglepapier5313 жыл бұрын
Nah, it more of the myth that girls that have seen a unicorn will live a happy life. Molly never saw a unicorn despite believing in them thus she concludes that her miserable life is due to her never seein a unicorn
@mokarokas-17273 жыл бұрын
@@smirglepapier531 - Kinda, it's rather that this revelation just hit her now that she finally saw one. She was resigned to a normal, cynical life without magic and now her world changed on a dime.
@smirglepapier5313 жыл бұрын
@@mokarokas-1727 sure, I know. It's just that it doesn't make sense for a whole community (who never saw a unicorn as a whole) to just treat one (1) girl, Molly, different because she wasn't able to tame an unicorn. Because no girl/woman was able to tame said unicorns. And that was what the original comment implied. Totally agree on the revelation of the real existence of unicorns hitting Molly anew.
@Phoenix-zy1cx Жыл бұрын
I agree with your original assessment. There are myths from the Middle Ages of virgins being the way to tempt a unicorn into leaving the forest. It doesn't seem like Molly was specifically expected to do this, but rather that now that her life had passed and she had grown up and lost her newness, she was no longer pure. "Where were you when I was new?" Her own loss of innocence haunts her.
@w1nterdays Жыл бұрын
@@smirglepapier531no they’re right. That’s mentioned in the book
@NextToToddliness3 жыл бұрын
The Dark Crystal & The Last Unicorn were both my favorite movies as a kid. I've pretty much had a near lifelong fascination with existentialism, spirituality, the macabre & the ambiguous.
@local_cryptid Жыл бұрын
This was my favorite movie as a kid; I first saw it as a ten year old. It's STILL my favorite movie. The harpy scene always stick with me, not for the death or terror, but because of just how stoked Mommy Fortune is about the entire situation. I never particularly understood why as a kid, but later realized it was because, despite her fixation with immortality, she also had no issue welcoming her death. She, in her mind, made such an impact on her victims that she would always be remembered. And then she is immediately forgotten by the main cast, completely breaking the expectation of "her immortality"
@justachannel8600 Жыл бұрын
"Not on screen" does not mean not remembered. Even if she wasn't actively recalled ever again, the idea that she shaped an immortal being might be enough for her.
@ColumbusCrewSCFan9 ай бұрын
Here is Hunters story:It all started when I was a young lynx, growing up in the beautiful Edmonton River Valley… 18,000 acres of beautiful urban parkland that I love dearly and am extremely proud of! Like my lynx family and friends, I only come out at night to hunt, and on one of those nights I actually came across a bunch of kids playing hockey on an outdoor rink. One look at the game and I was hooked. The speed, the skill, the fun! I began climbing up the banks of the River Valley every night during the winter, catching shinny games with everyone wearing their Edmonton Oilers jerseys, both old and new! It didn't take me long to become a hard-core Oilers fan. During the winter of 2013 I heard many shinny players talking about a new, world-class building that my beloved Oilers were going to play in. I was ecstatic and knew right then and there that this was my chance to get in on the action. On the night before the first shovel hit the ground, I packed up my stuff and made my way to 104 Ave and 104 Street, where I built a secret den under the construction site, watching and waiting for this magnificent building to be completed. Just as the finishing touches were being made to the building, I revealed myself to the Oilers. After their initial shock of a lynx living in a secret den below Rogers Place, they quickly realized how HUGE a fan I was, and how committed I was to the team. They asked me to be their mascot and named me HUNTER after "Wild Bill" Hunter, the original owner of the Edmonton Oilers. As the Oilers mascot, I love to get out in the community and help out wherever I can - hospital visits, charitable functions, events & festivals… I love them all! You can also see me at games, doing everything I can to cheer my beloved Oilers to victory. And our opponents better watch out because I've got a fierce snarl and I'm known to be a prankster to do anything I can to give our team an edge!
@clearcat72963 жыл бұрын
"Everything dies, I want to die when you die!" Amalthea from the movie.
@AndreNitroX3 жыл бұрын
Damn girl. Chill we just met a day ago😂
@brodriguez110003 жыл бұрын
Book I read awhile back points out the downside of a pairing between an immortal and a mortal, outliving the other. That would also apply to friends as well.
@AndreNitroX3 жыл бұрын
@@brodriguez11000 that would be painful
@misspinkpunkykat3 жыл бұрын
I always thought Mommy Fortuna had it coming when the Harpy killed her.
@TheSorrel3 жыл бұрын
I think it was kinda confusing for a child that she was so convinced nothing bad would happen to her. As a child, you expect the autjority of adults to be true, but hers just didn't work, she just died.
@miriamrobarts3 жыл бұрын
@@TheSorrel Mommy Fortuna knew this would happen. The unicorn tells Mommy Fortuna that the witch's death sits in the cage (of the harpy). The witch agrees, but says that she will live on in the memory of the immortal creatures that she held captive. Since they will live forever, she will always be remembered. Mommy Fortuna doesn't try to run from the harpy because she knows it will capture her. She stands reaching up to it-embracing the fate she choose when she captured the harpy.
@MagicalHatStudios3 жыл бұрын
Mommy Fortuna always knew she had it coming too.
@AndreNitroX3 жыл бұрын
She expected it “she’ll kill me one day or another” and felt validated that atleast both the harpy and the unicorn would never forget her. Giving her immortality
@TheDragiix33 жыл бұрын
@@TheSorrel I didn't expect that as a child tbh, I also thought she had it coming lol
@plerrythedingus3 жыл бұрын
Lol I'm austrian so I speak german and I always loved the voice of king haggard. This movie is on tv every year on christmas and I always watch it. I love everything about it, the music, the voices, the fairytale vibe and the weird animation. The only thing that deeply disturbed me was the scene with the tree.
@osmanyousif78493 жыл бұрын
Christopher Lee did amazing voicing the character.
@Zephyr11563 жыл бұрын
You get this as a Christmas movie?! Lucky. Ya, that tree scene was weird.
@patrickhorton45963 жыл бұрын
his accent is insanely good. i had no idea it wasn't a german actor.
@VeryBlueberrry3 жыл бұрын
Lol in some ways that tree was a lot more unsettling than some of the other stereotypically scary stuff in the movie. Just a really frickin’ weird scene, it kind of squicked me out as a kid.
@Shastasnow3 жыл бұрын
That tree made me so anxious as a kid that I could not sleep that night but loved the movie. 😰
@quisp14925 ай бұрын
35:36 The skeleton's statement about time is one of those pieces of literature that haunts your dreams and rattles around in your brain like an annoying fly. It is such a mind f*ck. It is one of those things the exemplifies the power and beauty of words.
@robertlauncher3 жыл бұрын
Anytime Angela Lansbury is in an animated film, I get excited. Her voice is just so unique and beautiful
@robertlauncher2 жыл бұрын
Update: RIP
@f1L0zof Жыл бұрын
sir Lee also for me, his voice is so magical
@lindamarkova52293 жыл бұрын
This movie is a masterpiece. I truly think that kids nowdays should be exposed to more than just the Frozen movie 7 times a week. Parents are so extremely protective of their kids that they try to remove any kind of “traumatic” stimulus and then when their kids are older the reality will hit them extra hard. I remember watching this as a kid and not even realizing the things we see now with our adult eyes. I just saw a beautiful animal, loved the music and the storyline, enjoyed a little moments of scare. And also the “boobie tree” made me hiccup with laughter. Give your kids some credit - they are not as fragile as you think.
@manonpavllptdr3 жыл бұрын
I watched it too when I was a little girl. I saw it again last month and I didn't even remembered the part with the tree, so safe to assume I wasn't traumatized. People take their children for fragile and frail, delicate little thing. It'd be nice if kids were exposed to various shows. Nothing wrong with Disney and their happy endings, but sometimes, they should learn that life isn't always sunshine and rainbow, you can't always have what you want.
@fawnieee3 жыл бұрын
Ashamed to say I was absolutely terrified of that harpy, it took me quite some time before I could walk in open fields without watching the skies for it. That being said, I really do agree with you. It's funny how people are quick to use "trauma" especially when describing children who are a bit scared of a film or show, I guarantee you it didn't take me long too long to get over it and then completely forget it. I think that's just a normal part of childhood, and the more parents freak out about such trivial things, the more their children pick up on that and go onto mimic/become even more freaked out by their own reaction. My mother laughed at me when I told her of my fear, it wasn't a big deal. There are so many important lessons and when you compare these films today to the mush that is "minions" etc... Well, I'd much rather them watch things like this than media today.
@Nigolasy3 жыл бұрын
After I watched the movie for the first time in the early 2000s, only the red bull was on my mind. I didn't feel threatened by it but he was so scary that I could only remember the bull chasing the unicorns. A couple of years later I watched it the second time, all this was gone and I could remember the good parts of the movie. I love it. Admidettly I was exposed to death very early in life with my granddad dieing and in 3rd grade I think my guineapig died. My mom let me choose if I want a vet to check on her so she might get better or if we put her down. The old girl was my absolute best friend and I didn't want her to suffer. She died while we were walking to the vet and I knew I made the right choice to put her down if she made it there. Being able to make this choice made me grow a lot at that age (I think I was 9 or something). It was really sad and I can cry on command thinking about this day, but just because I miss the little one.
@sodacereal89873 жыл бұрын
yeah, thats probably why my sister gets scared of everything while im harder to scare mum kinda changed her ways of parenting, i guess
@manonpavllptdr3 жыл бұрын
@@sodacereal8987 same situation ! My sister is very paranoid. She's scared of heights, robbers, puke, the dark, speed... the list is endless. I'm more down to earth, but we weren't raised the same way. It does not restrict to cartoon of course
@yasashiiyuuyake3 жыл бұрын
I first saw this movie at a family friend's house while I was sick as a child, and it made me cry. I didn't know what "regret" meant, it just felt so deep. Anyways this movie was always special to me and it's one of my favorite depictions of unicorns.
@yltraviole3 жыл бұрын
Excuse me, the most traumatic scene in the movie was seeing that poor old sad lion 😭 Mommy Fortuna deserved it
@doraeguyakaneddie65863 жыл бұрын
The Gravity falls portrayal of a Unicorn is a pretty good interpretation
@FlyingFocs3 жыл бұрын
It's kind of weird that unicorns are normally shown as friendly, when you consider what they are. Horses: wild or domesticated, and temperamental even when the latter Fairies: not evil, but flighty, unpredictable, can be helpful, but also screw with people for amusement Unicorns: fairy horses.
@redactedimage10 ай бұрын
I first found this movie as a kid digging through old VHS tapes. It had no label, it had been scratched off. So, curiously I popped it in to the player. Looking back the whole thing seems like the beginning of a fairytale, young child finds mysterious tape, plays it and gets transported to a magical world. No such fantasy came to pass, but it certainly felt like it! It quickly became one of my favorite movies, I watch it all the time. This video was a joy to watch, well done!
@kotonohakatsura69303 жыл бұрын
For me as German it feels weird to hear all over sudden my native language. I had no idea we share the same VA for the villain. Fan fact: The last unicorn is very popular in Germany as the show always runs on TV on Christmas Eve every year. I basically grew up with it.
@cristlewrite79443 жыл бұрын
lol, I never would have thought to associate The Last Unicorn with Christmas Eve as a non-german
@quincyfry6569 Жыл бұрын
I used to watch it when I grew up in Germany and was amazed when I moved to the states (mid 90s) and no one my age had heard of it (or Nausicaa, Flight of Dragons, or Nutella...)
@coolbeans59113 жыл бұрын
This was one of those movies i watched only once as a kid by chance (on old school tv) and could never find out what it was until recently. I honestly thought it was a dream and was overjoyed when i found art of it on the internet oneday to confirm its existence😂😂😂 I'm glad people are still talking about it; it's such a wonderful movie experience
@DoodleBug843 жыл бұрын
Omg. That's what I felt like too! I saw it when I was little, loved it, and thought it was a dream because I couldn't figure out what the heck it was until YEAAAAAARS later! I was overjoyed!
@weatheranddarkness3 жыл бұрын
that happened to me with Time Bandits
@artsoundsgreatASMR3 жыл бұрын
What is interresting to me how similar most people's experineces are with this movie. They saw is as a kid and remembered it because it made a big imrression on them. Then they were looking for it for years, like a lost memory and then found it at the right time. I was one of these people too. It means this film is deeply influential on children and not many films can say that about themselves.
@laweafome5283 жыл бұрын
please never delete this video
@chromalore3 жыл бұрын
i would never! :) this took MONTHS so even if i look back and cringe at it one day (i already cringe in some parts, haha), i could never throw it away!
@leviathania3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much. I'm born 1984 and watched this movie every christmas since then. It is still one of my favourites. I remember making unicorn and red bull masks out of paper and playing with my best friend when we were little children. Many years later when studying philosophy, I started reading childrens books authors for fun like Astrid Lindgren, Peter Beagle, Otfried Preußler (I'm German), Roald Dahl and others. I discovered the philosophical depth of The Last Unicorn, and I still was a unicorn fan my whole childhood into adult life because of this wonderful story and animated movie (I'm a huge Gibli Fan too). Your video is another highlight in my line of wonderful experiences anound this movie. Many, many thanks again :*
@esverker70183 жыл бұрын
I would also say the unicorn trend was also a response to adult minimalism. Adults feel constricted to simplistic, minimally colorful styling in clothing, makeup, interior design, etc. Marketing towards children has always been colorful, but when it comes to adults, I think the eye-watering rainbows and sparkles of the unicorn trend was a way for people to let loose a go crazy glam.
@AMTheOcarinaPlayer3 жыл бұрын
Honestly, I think it’s good that The Last unicorn was so dark and I LOVED that rankin bass did it. Just remember that Top Craft eventually became Studio Ghibli! Thank you so much for mentioning all of this!! 🤩 I think we need more dark movies that make people think.
@AndreNitroX3 жыл бұрын
That fun fact blew my mind
@wernerviehhauser94 Жыл бұрын
One of my favourite movies. There is nothing to be gained by wrapping children in emotional bubble wrap. They need to learn that life isn't just cupcakes, songs and glitter. They can handle dark themes, if they were raised to handle them.
@mikankitsune0440 Жыл бұрын
One of the lines that stuck with me since I saw this movie at age 8 was Amalthea saying: *"I can feel this body dying all around me."* I died and was revived on the table during open heart surgery at age 5 and remember it vividly, so stories that play with the idea of mortality and immortality have always colored my life and while at times macabre, have brought me comfort and helped inspire my own writing.
@1983horizons13 жыл бұрын
I finished this video and was ready to binge your entire channel before realizing this was only the beginning.
@jaojao17683 жыл бұрын
Same for me
@lndcruz7213 жыл бұрын
lol same
@EyreAffair3 жыл бұрын
As a female equestrian, there's one thing I also feel is important to the conversation about unicorns and femininity...and that is that horses, a previously heavily masculine and military-associated animal, became to be seen as a "feminine" thing after the military's horse Cavalry was disbanded in the 1940s. As for the unicorn, for centuries, it was the royal emblem of Scotland and its Kings, a masculine power symbol to counter England's lion. After WWII, in the 1950s and 1960s, equestrian sports were opened to women, and they went from being heavily male-dominated, to heavily female-dominated, up to 80-90% women. However, sexism and misogyny against women riders culminated in horses and unicorns being now-coded as "feminine".
@ХорхеГарсия-э5е3 жыл бұрын
This is interesting, I can´t blame men though. I like horses, they are cool, but tanks are cooler XD
@ariannadravis39343 жыл бұрын
That's really intresting, thank you for sharing this knowledge!
@chromalore3 жыл бұрын
i was definitely a "horse girl" as a kid, and i remember all my girl friends were too--meanwhile, i don't think i knew any boys who (outwardly) liked horses. i actually didn't know that history about horses and femininity! (admittedly i am now an adult who is terrified of horses. not for any traumatic reason, they're just so much bigger IRL compared to the ones i had on wall calendars!)
@juststatedtheobvious96333 жыл бұрын
@@chromalore Growing up in the 80's, I was one of the few boys who was into horses and unicorns - but that might have been because my family, while fundamentalist and very backwards in a lot of ways, were opposed to gender stereotypes. Have you seen Wildfire, by the way? It's a children's cartoon made by the same writer. And you can see hints of a better story in the title song.
@jambothejoyful29663 жыл бұрын
Has nothing to do with sexism lmao
@Q2693 жыл бұрын
1:00 in and you've already hit us with "Ultimately, it provides a compelling demonstration of why Human mortality is such an important component of our experiences and cultures" Dayum Queen, I hit subscribe.
@AndreNitroX3 жыл бұрын
Yes so profound
@chromalore3 жыл бұрын
thank you so much!
@toffeestrange77062 жыл бұрын
The last unicorn is what I call the feminine melancholy; aging, loss of youth and beauty, love and regret... things young girls who grow into women feel in a level no one else does. Like when you get your first menstrual cycle, you become a woman, and not by your choice.
@esmokah11 ай бұрын
My favorite movie since I was a child. Mom rented it once, and i remember being mortified, but intrigued. It left an imprint. I watched it again as an adult, and it resonated more than ever.
@molly37013 жыл бұрын
I remember this movie being my absolute favourite when I was younger, despite it being made 20 years before I was born. I have always loved this movie, though this analysis makes me love it even more!!
@ML-di8lt3 жыл бұрын
I see another Molly. (That's another part that made this movie special to me as a child - when the name Molly was only for pets and great-grandmothers)
@kathylennerds7503 жыл бұрын
There is something about fantasy from the 80s that has always been compelling to me, even though I wasn’t even born yet around that time. I think that might actually play part in my fascination? Fantasy media from the 80s is just so otherworldly and weird that in a way that is what makes it *actually* feel like a fantasy or dream.
@catterboi61033 жыл бұрын
Very well said
@kathylennerds7503 жыл бұрын
@@catterboi6103 thanks!
@RYMAN13212 жыл бұрын
What makes this film stand out is how 80’s G it is. LOL Having some quite frightening moments, mild swears and even a bit of nudity yet still being G for the time. Granted had this been released today it’s easily be PG at least
@sleep_is_awesome28383 жыл бұрын
There are many best lines in this movie, but my favourite is "Don't look back, and don't run. It will attract the immortal's attention."
@sleep_is_awesome28383 жыл бұрын
Also the golden lines are at @18:51 "WHARE HAVE YOU BEEEEN!?"
@dylansaus11 ай бұрын
What I found amazing is that the director of spirited away worked on this movie! As a kid this movie was so weird to me, but also very real somehow, unlike other movies. Yesterday I watched it again after idk 15 yrs or something. really really appreciate all of it
@mushroomocean5177 Жыл бұрын
Wow, really amazing video. I’ve struggled a lot with death anxiety over the past year. The Last Unicorn is one of my favorite pieces of media, but I never fully understood its message. I suppose I felt sad for the unicorn as a child, but I wasn’t sure why. I now think it’s because to be human is to be mortal, and the unicorn has been cursed with human feelings without ever getting the release of death. I want to read the book again asap. I’ve thought before that I’d much rather be mortal than immortal, and I think this further cements that feeling.
@Wixyification Жыл бұрын
I loved this movie as a kid and watched it many times. From a young age, I never wanted to be immortal. When I read Twilight, I was really horrified by Bella's desire to be immortal and the Volturi in general. I realize now this movie is probably responsible for that feeling. Death is scary and the idea of an endless void gives me panic attacks. But living forever sounds like eternal torture.
@HerrderRingeFan13 жыл бұрын
Never thought of unicorns as girly but then again, I grew up in germany with a fairy tale where a unicorn was trying to kill a tailor by impaling him... you know things for kids
@brodriguez110003 жыл бұрын
Next on the sewing channel...
@HerrderRingeFan13 жыл бұрын
@Shiohane "Das tapfere Schneiderlein" "The brave little Tailor"
@dragonofepics73243 жыл бұрын
My grandma's grandpa was from Germany and he'd give her watered down beer for breakfast.
@pineapplesarereal6363 жыл бұрын
oo that reminds me of this kids storybook game for "girls" that my mom got my sister, where it was just full of fairytales from around the world they were all sad, and gruesome stories my sister and I loved them.
@smirglepapier5313 жыл бұрын
@@dragonofepics7324 my brother always got the foam on top of the beer