why did anyone let their kids watch Labyrinth??

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Alex Meyers

Alex Meyers

7 ай бұрын

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@Neutral_Tired
@Neutral_Tired 7 ай бұрын
the 16 year old kid getting irrationally angry at her parents over nothing is probably the most realistic part of this movie
@mandisaw
@mandisaw 7 ай бұрын
Based LOL
@MiyakoPisces4.0
@MiyakoPisces4.0 6 ай бұрын
Nah, she had a good reason to be angry. Edited: Who they hell of a parent think that's okay, their child will babysit their baby without telling them, or going to their room without permission and taking their stuff, or complaining that they don't dating at young age, like mother she 15 years old like come on !.
@starlinwright2537
@starlinwright2537 6 ай бұрын
Honestly probably the only realistic thing, 16 year old me at the start when the baby stopped crying would've said finally and probably take a nap or something😂
@gamer1q658
@gamer1q658 6 ай бұрын
​@@MiyakoPisces4.0like?
@gameraspindlethorn6229
@gameraspindlethorn6229 6 ай бұрын
i watched it recently the dad literally knocked and shes like YOU DAMN NEAR BROKE DOWN MY DOOR!!!! and its like grl
@manicmechanic28
@manicmechanic28 7 ай бұрын
So the Labyrinth is about when you're at the weird age of not quite a kid and not quite an adult. Where you want to play with toys and play pretend but also you have romantic adult feelings. It's Sara's journey to maturity.
@sophiezadpoerozny4972
@sophiezadpoerozny4972 7 ай бұрын
I'm a teen and it's so true
@16driver16
@16driver16 7 ай бұрын
And so is its sequel Mirrormask
@stmsin
@stmsin 7 ай бұрын
thats called coming of age genre isnt it?
@gisela_oliveira
@gisela_oliveira 6 ай бұрын
​@@stmsinit's coming of age before coming of age was created
@gisela_oliveira
@gisela_oliveira 6 ай бұрын
The "I don't want to talk but I want you to try harder to talk to me because I actually want to talk" is a really teen felling, I used to be just like this and still am at 23, but it only lasts 5 min now
@Sharpe1502
@Sharpe1502 Ай бұрын
As a child, I never once noticed Bowie’s pants. I feel like that’s something you only notice once you’re an adult.
@lethellsing
@lethellsing Ай бұрын
I don’t think anyone did until it was pointed out.
@sousamina
@sousamina Ай бұрын
Me pasó lo mismo. Yo solo quedé embobada como Sarah mirando lo bello que era. No me fijé ni me acordaba de sus pantalones. Es algo que noté mirando la peli ya de adulta. Y eso es algo que si no hacemos ruido del asunto, un niño no tiene por qué prestarle atención.
@LadyEowyn
@LadyEowyn Ай бұрын
Same! Didn't know til someone told me as an adult.
@awritersheart
@awritersheart 26 күн бұрын
First time I saw this was in sixth grade and that was THE FIRST thing I noticed 🫣
@jesscook8346
@jesscook8346 20 күн бұрын
as some one one who watched it when i was like 11-12 i deffs did, i asked my parents what was wrong with his pants xD deffs an awkward conversation xD
@crystallake5315
@crystallake5315 5 ай бұрын
So as an adult, the beginning seems really silly, but as a teenage girl.....that is pretty much the exact amount of drama that situation could cause
@Gregory_12
@Gregory_12 2 ай бұрын
POV, your adult and a teenage at the same time:
@crystallake5315
@crystallake5315 2 ай бұрын
@Gregory_12 POV you don't understand that adult women were once teenage girls and can reference their past...🙄
@WynneL
@WynneL 2 ай бұрын
@@Gregory_12 * you're * teenager
@Kaylaw9
@Kaylaw9 Ай бұрын
Same here, and I was an emo kid. 😂😂
@clawd_not_cloud
@clawd_not_cloud 7 ай бұрын
Fun fact about the baby, he was actually the child one of the puppeteers (her husband was the lead stoty board artist), so he had been around the puppets his whole life and wasn't scared of them (he parents also met while they both were working on The Dark Crystal)
@noni4118
@noni4118 7 ай бұрын
That’s cool thank god that child isn’t traumatised ☠️
@masontrupe9047
@masontrupe9047 7 ай бұрын
We watched this recently and found out that he became a notable puppeteer within the Hensen company.
@whimai412
@whimai412 7 ай бұрын
Also his name is Toby Froud and a ** puppeteer** my b I thought he did story board art too. He worked on Boxtrolls and a bunch of other cool stuff. Like Paranorman :)
@noni4118
@noni4118 7 ай бұрын
@@whimai412 glad he had a successful career
@taylorslade961
@taylorslade961 7 ай бұрын
No, Brian Froud, his father was the art director, not a puppeteer.
@myrarefolly
@myrarefolly 6 ай бұрын
I've always found it fascinating that the creatures Sarah meets in the Labyrinth are actually toys she has in her room, the song & the dress she wears in the ballroom scene is the same as her music box, and that Jareth closely resembles Jeremy, her mother's co-star & alleged lover
@realRaven575
@realRaven575 6 ай бұрын
Her bedroom is fun to analyze frame by frame in HD. 😊
@tiedyedowl8367
@tiedyedowl8367 6 ай бұрын
Just looked Jeremy up in the fandom wiki as I’d never heard of him. Fascinating stuff, thanks!
@NecrochildK
@NecrochildK 6 ай бұрын
@@tiedyedowl8367 :O First time I've heard of him too.
@pathofthetrickster
@pathofthetrickster 6 ай бұрын
She is just tripping balls while her parents are out? 😂
@DEVILTAZ35
@DEVILTAZ35 6 ай бұрын
It is amazing how much detail is there from the very beginning hey? . All of the answers to the movie pretty much before the adventure begins, very clever.
@samtheweebo
@samtheweebo 5 ай бұрын
So about Bowie's character Jerith. If real, he did literally do everything for Sarah. He took the kid, made her fantasy world a reality and allowed her to play out all the things she wanted. His evil is more the type that gives what is wanted instead of what is needed. But she figures it out and takes what she needs (which also may have been him setting her up to grow as a person). Overall though I think the movie is all about Sarah learning to play with her little brother to make the chore of watching him not so bad. She is playing out her story and fantasy with her toys and just made her little brother the main objective. She was likely in reality holding her brother and dancing around with him singing "dance magic dance".
@diavdraconia
@diavdraconia 3 ай бұрын
Absolutely the best comment. :)
@TetsuDeinonychus
@TetsuDeinonychus 3 ай бұрын
It does seem more like he's teaching her a lesson in a trickster way than him being actively evil. Like "Okay you want the Goblin King to fall in love with you, take your brother off your hands, and whisk you off to fantasy land? Let me show you what that would really be like."
@riccardozanoni2531
@riccardozanoni2531 3 ай бұрын
@@TetsuDeinonychus that's how i interpreted it too! Especially the scene with "as the world falls down", when she literally would have had no way to wake up but she did anyway after the weird trip/dream... it kind of looks like he was just "testing" her more than trying to stop her fr.
@audreyprewett8076
@audreyprewett8076 2 ай бұрын
yeah his magic is very much "be careful what you wish for" fae stuff lol, he really did everything she asked and expected of him and all he really asked in return was acknowledgement
@Scarshadow666
@Scarshadow666 2 ай бұрын
All this is my head-cannon now too! Kinda like the idea that Sarah processed growing up through a fantasy while taking care of her baby brother, because it's realistic for most kids to process things and come to terms with feelings they don't know how to address through playing, movies/TV/videogames/books/art, etc.
@AtlasBlizzard
@AtlasBlizzard 5 ай бұрын
I love the ending to this movie, and the message that we cannot stay kids forever, but that doesn't mean that we can't hold on to our sense of wonder.
@melindamercier6811
@melindamercier6811 6 ай бұрын
Also, I love how Jareth is the villain but is the likable one who put Sarah in her place. She was purposefully insufferable as a teenaged drama queen, and a fully unlikable protagonist. My favorite line is in the tunnels and after she tells Jareth “It’s not fair!”, he goes, “You say that so often. I wonder what your basis for comparison is.” And just continues about his business. 😂
@Borealisphoenix
@Borealisphoenix 5 ай бұрын
I love his line there!
@MariaKucherko
@MariaKucherko 5 ай бұрын
Also, I love how Jareth is the villain but is the likable one who put Sarah in her place. She was purposefully insufferable as a teenaged drama queen, and a fully unlikable protagonist. My favorite line is in the tunnels and after she tells Jareth “It’s not fair!”, he goes, “You say that so often. I wonder what your basis for comparison is.” And just continues about his business.
@MiyakoPisces4.0
@MiyakoPisces4.0 4 ай бұрын
Nah, she had good reason to be upset, lol. Edited: Who they hell of a parent think that's okay, their child will babysit their baby without telling them, or going to their room without permission and taking their stuff, or complaining that they don't dating at young age, like mother she 15 years old like come on !.
@ralliedcookies4403
@ralliedcookies4403 4 ай бұрын
@@MiyakoPisces4.0you have copy pasted this comment twice broski. No one cares
@malindemunich2883
@malindemunich2883 4 ай бұрын
@@MiyakoPisces4.0 - I'm not sure if this is a case of you being young or a generation gap thing, but I can confidently tell you that in the 90s and before, it was completely understood that a teenage older sibling would babysit their younger siblings from time to time with or without warning, male or female. Many, many nights I would stay at a friend's house (guys) (btw do kids still do this because my kids seem utterly uninterested in sleepovers or, hell, even going over and hanging because "I can hang out on the phone" or "I play games with them online so why would I?") and his parents would be out with his little sisters at home with us, and this wasn't unusual for us even at 10 or 11, let alone 15. (Didn't happen to me because I was the baby brother, and my sister would be home with me a lot...or I'd be home alone not that uncommonly, definitely a generation gap thing.) And yeah, parents 100% can come into your room at any time. There's an amount of respect and privacy granted to help the kid grow and understand boundaries, but make no mistake, that's the parents' house, and that is their kid. They have every right to come in when they want. I agree that griping about dating at a younger age is a bit icky. Sure, have friends, and it's worrisome if they don't, but some people just aren't ready for dating yet, and that's totally cool, maybe even for the best.
@Jonathan_Collins
@Jonathan_Collins 7 ай бұрын
I think the idea with Jareth is that he's playing a role, and he's stuck in it. It's never really stated whether the Labyrinth is one of those 'different for everyone who goes through it' sort of things or not, but clearly Jareth, at least, is playing out the role she placed him in at the beginning. She made up a petulant fantasy about someone who'd take away her brother because of his love for her, and that is what he did. She doesn't love HIM - that was all just part of the fantasy - but he loves her, because that's what she wanted. What makes their subsequent relationship interesting is that he IS stuck in this role, and she's not. She doesn't stay in 'whiny brat' mode after he appears, because there's more to her than that - but there isn't to him, which is why he keeps getting frustrated at her. 'I'm doing exactly what you wanted! I took the baby when you told me to take the baby! You wanted someone to love you; well, I love you - which is why I'm keeping the damn baby! You turned me into a villain; fine, I'll be REAL villainous - thereby giving you exactly what you wanted, like I've done from the beginning! A SIMPLE THANK YOU WOULD BE NICE!'
@seanblankenship5404
@seanblankenship5404 7 ай бұрын
That is an awesome take
@geligniteandlilies
@geligniteandlilies 7 ай бұрын
Excellent explanation. That’s exactly what it always was. Love this!!!
@gretelgrimm2626
@gretelgrimm2626 7 ай бұрын
Agreed! I've always had the same sort of impression, though for me I always thought Jareth is doing what he 'thought' Sarah wanted (and what she thought she wanted, being sixteen and not really knowing the world) only for her to learn that she doesn't really want that! Alex cut the line but the next thing that Jareth says after that big speech is "I'm exhausted from living up to your expectations of me." which is honestly one of my favorite lines from the whole movie XD
@sillyseal1223
@sillyseal1223 7 ай бұрын
As a kid, I remember thinking that Jareth was essentially acting as part of the Labyrinth, giving different people different things according to their fantasy to maybe try and stall them on their way, and to truly beat the Labyrinth, they have to also "beat" the idea that made them make the wish in the first place. If you can change and do it, congrats, you win. If not, well... there's always room for one more goblin at the labyrinth.
@shannonraby5547
@shannonraby5547 7 ай бұрын
That is true. I never thought of that way. I was maybe 4 when I saw the Labyrinth for the first time. All I could think was why was so mean to her mom? Why is she screaming at her baby brother? Why does she not want to stay with Jareth he is so pretty? Oh he is singing to her and dressed like a queen. Then, when I got older, I thought that was kinda fucked that he is a much much older man and he basically ruffuee a 15 year old with a wormy peach 🍑 Now I get where he was coming from, he was a 2 dimensional character from her book and she essentially brought him to life.
@lizard_the_queen
@lizard_the_queen Ай бұрын
as someone who used to be a teenage girl, i never really questioned sarah's behaviour. sometimes you just dress up as a princess and prance around and then sacrifice your brother to the goblin king (accidentally) because you were mad about your teddy bear. yk, girl stuff.❤
@PeruvianTreeProductions
@PeruvianTreeProductions 3 ай бұрын
I always loved the message of this film (as well as just loving it for the effect and music). Sarah is growing up, but still clings to her childhood fantasies. Her parents want her to take responsibility and "grow up". At the beginning of the film, you see that the characters of the Labyrinth are toys in her bedroom. She is taken on this hero's journey to save her baby brother (responsibility) but her childhood fantasy figure, the Goblin King, keeps trying to pull her back into her fantasy world - to totally dominate and control her. By the end she realises her childhood fantasies have no power over her, and she can be her own independent person, BUT "every now and then in my life, I need you". She isn't willing to completely let go of the magic and imagination of her youth. And neither should we. :)
@sheoingoonmyboingo
@sheoingoonmyboingo 7 ай бұрын
I think the reason the Goblin King is so interested in Sarah is because the entire movie is her fantasy. Its more or less a dream, a figment of imagination. And as her fantasy he is enraptured by her.
@mateleacloverae
@mateleacloverae 6 ай бұрын
As someone who was once a 16 year-old girl, I can confirm: fantasizing about a powerful immortal hot man being obsessed with me was on my daily to do list.
@ziare2goated188
@ziare2goated188 6 ай бұрын
@@mateleacloveraetalking bout me huh🤭
@HateShitStainedCrackerss
@HateShitStainedCrackerss 6 ай бұрын
Nah of course it was me
@marykandis959
@marykandis959 6 ай бұрын
Saaaaaaaaaaaame❤
@kansaswoman87
@kansaswoman87 6 ай бұрын
When I was that age I was enamored with the books by L.J. Smith.
@soren3569
@soren3569 6 ай бұрын
Re: Sara's self-confidence. She was a teenager in the 80s. That means she's a GenXer. We were the feral generation, the latchkey kids. We had confidence that we knew how to survive because we'd been going home from school to an empty house for 6-7 years by our sixteenth birthdays, making our own dinner, and waiting for our divorced moms to get home from the second job they took to keep a roof over our heads. Oh, and more than one reviewer has suggested that Labyrinth as a whole is basically a metaphor for teenage female puberty, adolescence and burgeoning sexuality. In that light, well, she could do a lot worse than fantasizing about David Bowie playing with his crystal balls.
@kdmill7563
@kdmill7563 6 ай бұрын
As a teen girl watching this movie in the late 90’s I was there for it.
@AudieHolland
@AudieHolland 6 ай бұрын
During his introduction, Jareth throws a snake at Sara. If that's not a sexual symbol I don't know what is.
@Nevyn515
@Nevyn515 6 ай бұрын
What’s a genX? Isn’t then “gen” thing a recent thing that was only coined because someone decided “millennials “ and “boomers” were a thing in the mid-2000s, and then they needed a word for the next generation and then the generation after that now that people born in the 2000s are adults with their own children, and so invented GenX GenZ, GenTheNextGeneration Gen2ElecticBugaloo or whatever.
@vasdema
@vasdema 6 ай бұрын
@@Nevyn515 Boomers is short for Baby Boomers and has been used since the 1960's. While GenX is of similar vintage, it didn't come into common use until the late 80's early 90's.
@AudieHolland
@AudieHolland 6 ай бұрын
@@Nevyn515 My guess is that it's a crude system to distinguish between generations for statistics and marketing purposes.
@sleepy_zuccinni
@sleepy_zuccinni Ай бұрын
"Majic Dance" without the background music is so cursed lmao
@benderbendingrodriguez420
@benderbendingrodriguez420 6 ай бұрын
A movie that could only come out in the glorious 80s. RIP Jim Henson & David Bowie😔🙏
@TSotP
@TSotP 6 ай бұрын
In case noone else mentioned it already. The reason the baby playing Toby was so awesome around the goblin puppets was because his mom was one of the puppet makers.
@GEMINIEARTHWALKER
@GEMINIEARTHWALKER 5 ай бұрын
And he was the Creature director of The Dark Crystal Age of Resistance
@Bluebelle51
@Bluebelle51 5 ай бұрын
His Mom was a one of the puppeteers, but his dad designed the puppets (also designed the critters in the "The Dark Crystal) His dad is Brian Froud (LEGEND!!!!)
@fairygurl9269
@fairygurl9269 5 ай бұрын
​@@Bluebelle51♡Fave Fairy Artist
@faqqur5064
@faqqur5064 5 ай бұрын
My moms favorite artist is Brian Froud, she had books of his art and I always looked through them she also made me watch this movie with her pretty often and I ended up really loving it. I’m so surprised I didn’t know this information.
@GEMINIEARTHWALKER
@GEMINIEARTHWALKER 5 ай бұрын
I first met Brian, Wendy and Toby in 2011, and I have followed Toby's career ever since, and he's still on my FB friends list. In 2019, about a week before the release of Age of Resistance, I got to introduce him to my wife and discuss his experience working on the sequel to the film where his parents met and fell in love. He told us that it was a way of continuing his parents legacy and paying tribute to the world that literally brought him into existence. . A cool experience.
@Laarye
@Laarye 6 ай бұрын
In the beginning of the iconic "Magic Dance" scene, Toby is seen crying while surrounded by numerous goblins. In reality, the baby Toby Froud wasn't the least bit scared by any of the puppets used, and seemed to have fun with the scene. The shot of one of the goblins making silly noises and faces to make Toby laugh was a genuine reaction, and was inspired by many instances where they needed him to be silent and actually used some puppets off-camera to lull him. They had to wait until he was tired and wanted to nap after filming the musical number to get him to cry.
@queenzebra8219
@queenzebra8219 6 ай бұрын
Where did you find all of this out? I never knew this!
@Laarye
@Laarye 6 ай бұрын
@@queenzebra8219 IMDB for the exact wording, but Toby, the baby, is Toby Froud, son of Brian Froud, the conceptual designer for the movie. There is a special 'Inside the Labyrinth' that goes into details of the movie.
@travcollier
@travcollier 6 ай бұрын
​@@LaaryeYep. That particular baby almost certainly found the goblins familiar and friendly ;)
@mlopez2587
@mlopez2587 6 ай бұрын
@@Eet_Mia he worked as a puppeter on Netflix's Dark Crystal series.
@bobthebuilder4240
@bobthebuilder4240 3 ай бұрын
You missed that part where like she is sent home and everything falls apart with old women collecting her belongings and tries turning the girl into a hoarder
@camelliasinensis219
@camelliasinensis219 5 ай бұрын
Labyrinth and The Neverending Story were some of my favourite films of me and my sister as a child. Genuinely miss films like these as well, there was just something very magical about them I don’t often find in films nowadays. Though probably they were kinda traumatising to us as kids lol. There’s a story my parents always bring up that when they were watching The Neverending Story once, my sister just looked at the screen, saw Morla (the giant turtle) and she just started screaming lmao in all fairness she was like 4 or something
@morgianani6259
@morgianani6259 3 ай бұрын
It's funny you say this because after watching Labyrinth when I was a child (I saw it in the theater) and adoring it, later I showed it to two children I was babysitting. (I had sprung the then-ungodly price tag to buy the VHS when it was released.) The girl (+/-9yo) loved it from the start and her brother (+/-7yo) was only scared by the Chilly Down scene.... which thankfully for having it on a VCR, we were able to pause and I pointed out the puppet strings which can be seen. He calmed down, but I wondered if he had really liked it until I found out he (and his sister) were BEGGING their mother to see it again. ^_^ I wound up giving them my VHS copy and bought a new copy for myself. Being scared by something at the start does not always translate into being traumatized by it and being scared by something in a controlled, safe setting is one of the ways we all learn to deal with scary things we come across later in life.
@Izabela-ek5nh
@Izabela-ek5nh Ай бұрын
​​@@morgianani6259 my kids also enjoyed Labirynth and they also watched Coraline in the very early age (my son loved it even when he was 5, his sister was scared but wanted to watch with her eyes closed (and her brother telling her she can open her eyes, scary thing is gone - and warning her when the next scary thing was about to happen, so she could cover her eyes again) funnily it became her comfort movie and we can speak the dialogues from memory, we watched it together so many times 😅 (my son asked if he's not scared said no, and that even if he is sometimes he likes to be scared by a movie). 😊
@williambeckett6336
@williambeckett6336 7 ай бұрын
Fun fact: Look up the story of how the Hoggle puppet/animatronic was lost for like 30 years. It was in a suitcase that got lost by the airline and turned up only 18 years ago. There's a youtube video on it but when they opened the case the puppet's rubber and latex had rotted considerably. Damn stuff of nightmares.
@christine5803
@christine5803 6 ай бұрын
What is even cooler is that the store that got it paid to restore the puppet and it's now in the Unclaimed Baggage museum. You can literally visit Hoggle if you want to.
@UnfortunatelySeen
@UnfortunatelySeen 6 ай бұрын
That timeline makes no sense lol!
@Bunny-ks1md
@Bunny-ks1md 6 ай бұрын
The images are literally censored on Google Images I’m crying. If I saw that as a child, I’d never sleep again.
@bretsheeley4034
@bretsheeley4034 6 ай бұрын
As an 80s kid, I grew up firmly believing that all children's movies should be scarring in some way. I don't know. There is something great about seeing child targeted horror sequences that stick with you through the decades.
@Raziel312
@Raziel312 6 ай бұрын
Transformers: The Movie taught a whole generation of kids the concept of mortality.
@0potion
@0potion 6 ай бұрын
90s kid here with multiple brothers born in the 80s so I got the second hand experience.
@joshuasantana685
@joshuasantana685 6 ай бұрын
I recently showed my daughter “Spirited Away” and there are some moments of pure terror/disgust She was frighten but I loved it
@gibflossegenosse577
@gibflossegenosse577 6 ай бұрын
Man, i grew up with German Fairy Tales, and i can tell you, disney really made them look good
@DarthTach
@DarthTach 6 ай бұрын
@@Raziel312 Sesame Street did that first, but in a gentler, kinder way. RIP Mr. Hooper (Will Lee). Transformers: The Movie came in and clubbed you over the head repeatedly with Death in the first 15 mins.
@carelessdreamer
@carelessdreamer Ай бұрын
This traumatized me as a child, but it also was probably the first time I can recall being wayyy too into a villain.
@JessicaB1982
@JessicaB1982 Ай бұрын
That man is responsible for my leather fetish....
@YoKnow
@YoKnow 5 ай бұрын
11:10 Technically the goblin king didn't steal the baby, he was given the baby. He was even kind enough to give her a chance to win her brother back.
@warlockofwordschannel7901
@warlockofwordschannel7901 6 ай бұрын
Y'see, Parents had balls back in the '80s and '90s, they assumed their kids had some grasp of reality vs. Fiction. Labyrinth is wonderful and kids are missing out if they avoid it.
@zimriel
@zimriel 6 ай бұрын
probably not as big as Bowie's balls
@hdw237
@hdw237 6 ай бұрын
I agree kids are missing out and that all young ppl need to be let loose more to get a mentally tougher but... Our parents (the real Boomers) did not have balls they were just to focused on themselves to give a rats hieny about their children. They were off making money to spend on their own trips to "find themselves " and no one really had any patience or care for the kids. We weren't "let free to grow and learn" we were abandoned for our parents self wants. And I'm glad for it, but I would be remiss as a GenXer to not set you straight regarding our parents complete lack of parenting as their form of parenting.
@warlockofwordschannel7901
@warlockofwordschannel7901 6 ай бұрын
@@hdw237 well, that may be truer in America, my parents were hugely supportive and fonts of information about the World right when I needed it. They never left me unattended while they went off to find themselves.
@hdw237
@hdw237 6 ай бұрын
@warlockofwordschannel7901 yeah that was definitely NOT the American boomer parent. If you had both, which most didn't by age 11, they worked all day, left at 7 came home at 7. And then they were out again for clubs and meet ups and dates and etc. We were expected to get ourselves to and from school. Fed, washed, and homework done with dinner heating in oven or crockpot when they got home. On weekends, we watched morning cartoons on Saturday and was out of the house by noon, not to return until 7 if young by midnight if teens. No one asked after us, they may show up to a game or recital- may be, and once we started working and driving, they basically didn't see us until we gave them info on our graduation ceremony. Some, like my husband, was latchkey from the start. Starting in kindergarten he had is house key on a shoestring tied around his neck. He would let himself in after school, and Starting in 2nd grade begin boiling water for pasta or heating the oven for casserole. That saved his single mother mom time when she got in from work in the evening.
@gmfreeman4211
@gmfreeman4211 6 ай бұрын
@@hdw237 You speak for yourself, or perhaps the majority, but not everyone had parents that abandoned them. Not everyone had your life, and I am sorry that yours was not as good as mine, but I think Warlock is spot on with his analysis. Sounds like you were raised by 1st generation Boomers (Silent Generation), whereas I, and I would bet Warlock, were raised by 2nd generation boomers (Actual Boomers). Either way, don't discount the childhood experience of others just because yours doesn't match. I hope you understand I mean no malice by my words, and hope your life has only gotten better throughout your years. From the way you describe being raised, I would say you grew up tough compared to the coddled generations (Millennial/Gen Z), and have a good grasp on reality vs fiction, right?
@ItsMikky
@ItsMikky 6 ай бұрын
This movie is chaotically beautiful and terrifying simultaneously. It is a fever dream.
@rigelb9025
@rigelb9025 6 ай бұрын
You nailed it. To me, that is precisely what it is, as much for the viewer as for the main character. My 'fan theory' is that it was all a dream and she never even left her room. (which I'm sure others have concluded as well).
@kenenigans
@kenenigans 5 ай бұрын
that crotch area is a fever dream more than anything 😅😂
@saymyname2417
@saymyname2417 4 ай бұрын
It's about disassociation of the mind. Very basically it's a variation of the Wizard Of Oz, Alice In Wonderland and Peter Pan. And some connect this type of story to sinister things.
@rigelb9025
@rigelb9025 4 ай бұрын
@@saymyname2417 Like Ketamine.
@TheGoodGman95
@TheGoodGman95 4 ай бұрын
that is what makes it so damn good, as a kid i hated the dance scene when she ate the peach, as an adult i can say its so amaizng to see what jim did, to me my mother was a 80's baby she always said this was every girls fantasy when it came out to dance with David bowie i am sure Jennifer has bragging rights to other ladies
@the_gaming_witch
@the_gaming_witch 5 ай бұрын
I LOVED this movie as a child! I feel it has so many inspiring (and disturbing) things! AND I in deed asked my mother: „Why does his pants look like this?“ And she nervously answered: „Aahhh well he… well… put… ahm… socks in them! Yes, Socks!“ I laughed so hard seeing, that you mentioned this pants situation!
@ThrowawayAccountPremium
@ThrowawayAccountPremium 5 ай бұрын
fun fact: the actor who played Sarah (Jennifer Connelly) also had a main role for Requiem For a Dream, she’s a super talented actress! 😊
@b21141413
@b21141413 3 ай бұрын
Hahha thats like saying fun fact tom cruise played maverick in top gun
@ElisaAvigayil
@ElisaAvigayil 2 ай бұрын
I hated that movie. So unsettling at the end in the hospital.
@dynamynx
@dynamynx 2 ай бұрын
Oh boy if you think Labyrinth is traumatising…
@ryukiravenwing8530
@ryukiravenwing8530 7 ай бұрын
I remember watching Labyrinth first at age 4. Started a life long love for David Bowie music and its still one of my favorite movies 30 years later.
@aquacat658
@aquacat658 7 ай бұрын
Same. After watching labyrinth for the first time as a child David Bowie and labyrinth took over my life
@Ghostly_Gay
@Ghostly_Gay 7 ай бұрын
When I was like 5 me and my dad watched the labyrinth and from then on like once a month I just have the most vivid dream about it
@otakuparadise3585
@otakuparadise3585 6 ай бұрын
Same
@PumpkinLady11
@PumpkinLady11 6 ай бұрын
I was 2 when I first watched it and became instantly obsessed. I watched it almost every week for years. Weirdly it was the first movie my mother saw at the cinema when she was pregnant with me and I’ve always been told I look like Jennifer Connolly.
@jimmy9439
@jimmy9439 6 ай бұрын
i also watched it that young and adore bowie now!
@myko740
@myko740 7 ай бұрын
No, your absolutely right. Those movies had a “magic” that movies today seem to lack. It’s hard to put my finger on but it’s like a fear of not knowing what the movie may do or show you plus a sense of wonder and adventure into something wonderful and frightening. Like you said, “dark fantasy” but the 80’s had a certain type of charm that just adds. Ya know?
@poochyenajones1362
@poochyenajones1362 6 ай бұрын
Because these 80s movies tried to show us genuine fairy tales of old. People today like to say how it's "dark" and can frighten younger kids, but I always saw it as just "honesty". Because real life can and will be scary and confusing at times. But there will also be some truly wonerous moments. And that's what those movies did, they showed those fantasy worlds as both dark or unsettling and also charming and silly, just like real life.
@seekittycat
@seekittycat 6 ай бұрын
​@@poochyenajones1362for the record "real" fairytales are just two edgy guys who wrote down spoken tales and made them edgier for their own purpose. Because no matter what century it is parents don't like to be waken at 4am because their kid got nightmares about molten metal shoes or casually tell stories about sexual assault to their kids.
@Jimmy94411
@Jimmy94411 6 ай бұрын
*you’re
@jeebuschristos8423
@jeebuschristos8423 6 ай бұрын
Dragonslayer... Ladyhawke... The Black Cauldron... The Black Hole... The Last Starfighter... Cloak & Dagger... Flight of the Intruder... Explorers... all kid's movies that respected the intelligence and maturity-levels of their viewers... And then came the Mac 'n Me's to f*ck it all up...
@sediqalhlh6160
@sediqalhlh6160 6 ай бұрын
yes I do know, your absolutly right.
@randychene5130
@randychene5130 29 күн бұрын
"So the labyrinth's a piece of cake, is it? Well let's see how you deal with this little SLICE." -Goblin King
@aprilhollow5780
@aprilhollow5780 Ай бұрын
The animation with Sarah’s hair being filled with a cheese grater and a dead cat and Chris Hanson popping up! Then the “Mr Bowey, David if I may” 😂😂😂
@Arcane_Cypher
@Arcane_Cypher 6 ай бұрын
fun fact: the baby grew up to be perfectly normal, loves his role and was very close to getting a sequel made starring him
@cordeliacullen2621
@cordeliacullen2621 6 ай бұрын
There was a manga published through Tokyopop that starred Toby
@zimriel
@zimriel 6 ай бұрын
@@cordeliacullen2621 i need to check that out. i know there are a few nonmanga Labyrinth graphic-novels out there, which aren't terrible
@DeltaNovum
@DeltaNovum 6 ай бұрын
It gets even better. He became a puppet master!
@brianlawson3757
@brianlawson3757 6 ай бұрын
Fun fact #2: Toby was played by Toby Froud, son of Brian Froud, who did the character design for all of the creatures both in Labyrinth and the Dark Crystal. His artwork is astounding, and he's published several books of illustrations of fey creatures from faeries to goblins. Toby later went on to become a puppeteer for the Jim Henson company.
@rebeckylee157
@rebeckylee157 6 ай бұрын
I thought that I read Toby Froud also hosts a Labyrinth ball every year…
@jaydamann3360
@jaydamann3360 6 ай бұрын
Okay, I love the Labyrinth so I want to clarify something- Sarah is not doing a play, the Labyrinth is her favorite book, and she believes that the Labyrinth will be easy because she's familiar with it through her book.
@wintersprite
@wintersprite 6 ай бұрын
While it’s not a play, she’s still acting it out.
@phaedrapage4217
@phaedrapage4217 6 ай бұрын
She's acting it out because that's what kids did in the 80s. We played outside, we got creative, used our imagination. And we read books.
@ramonesgirl1
@ramonesgirl1 6 ай бұрын
​@phaedrapage4217 Thank you. This guy is so completely clueless, and then he gets to David Bowie and he describes him as this guy 😮 no wonder he doesn't show his face because I would be😬😬😬😬😬 embarrassed to be him🤡
@lollybowser
@lollybowser 6 ай бұрын
​@@ramonesgirl1okay so I agree alex often has very little clue of what he's talking about and it can be a bit embarrassing, but you also clearly have no clue about him either since he's shown his face before in videos, he shows it on Twitter along with his girlfriend's (he's a bit overbearing about her being pretty and happy together in fact cause they got together after he divorced, which he also talked about in his channel) and overall is not afraid to talk about / show himself.
@3mbracingautism
@3mbracingautism 6 ай бұрын
​@@phaedrapage4217gas is kind of like live action role-playing that's what she was doing was live action role-playing that's what that is and I absolutely love this movie I know every line every word I can recite the whole movie and I think that David Bowie is one of the hottest people
@loonaeskridge8749
@loonaeskridge8749 2 ай бұрын
15:00 I CAN’T BREATHE 😭🤣
@nintendbro3275
@nintendbro3275 Ай бұрын
10:30 do yourselves a favor and listen to "chilly down", the song for the red fellas. Its a banger
@sunspotmill1291
@sunspotmill1291 6 ай бұрын
11:18 Don't worry, Alex. That baby actor turned out to be just fine! In fact, he went on to become a filmmaker and a puppeteer himself and even worked on The Dark Crystal series on Netflix. 😉If anything, this movie probably *inspired* him instead of traumatized him.
@nickcagesgoodseed
@nickcagesgoodseed 6 ай бұрын
Lol I just read his parents meet on a production of The Dark Crystal 😂 things going full circle
@keiichimorisato98
@keiichimorisato98 6 ай бұрын
I will never forgive Netflix for canceling Dark Crystal AoR.
@glitterbug5678
@glitterbug5678 6 ай бұрын
I have to say as someone who watched this, the dark crystal, and many other amazing dark family movies Not every kid is so easily traumatized. And having a parent there to help explain stuff while it's happening also helps.
@desireer6915
@desireer6915 6 ай бұрын
Thats so cool!!!
@bettrhalf8006
@bettrhalf8006 6 ай бұрын
@@glitterbug5678 I was *very* easily traumatized. Ghostbusters scared the shit out of me, and Superman III and Star Wars gave me nightmares. All the 80s stuff discussed in this vid though? Utterly *obsessed* with it! I watched and rewatched Secret of NIHM, Last Unicorn, Labyrinth and Dark Crystal every time I could (this was in the dark ages, young'uns - before streaming we had bluray, and before bluray we had DVD, and before DVD we had VHS, and before VHS we had rental stores full of betamax videos because betamax was The Future and VHS was going nowhere so there were like maybe 5 given VHS titles at any given time, and our family was too poor for Betamax so we fought with everyone else in town for access to anything even remotely new for the VHS, and as to actually owning titles to keep in our very own home? HAH!). The only thing that freaked me out was the fire gang. I'm middle aged and I STILL just skip that song because UGH, something in me just cannot stand their movements, and the minute they started talking about tearing Sarah's head off... if it was recorded I fast forwarded, if it was on TV and wasn't skippable, I just disassociated the whole time they were on screen. 😂
@JAndersonGhost0326
@JAndersonGhost0326 6 ай бұрын
The whole movie is a metaphor for a girl giving up her childish things and growing into a young woman. Jareth represents her childish desires, but he can only offer her dreams and fantasy. Which is why in the end she declared, "You have no power over me." and starts taking responsibility for her little brother. There were a lot of really great stories in these 80's dark fantasy movies, this and The Neverending Story being my favorites.
@elly7199
@elly7199 6 ай бұрын
I was 16 when I saw this in the theater. This was the theme that hit me profoundly. I have always been a dreamer and an intensely avid reader. I felt inspired to see how it was time to pack away some of the childhood trinkets and embrace the next step of my life’s journey. Loved how the movie portrayed that part of my life at the time so well and in such a fun way too.
@zerolegacy7821
@zerolegacy7821 6 ай бұрын
That's definitely a valid opinion but I don't think the writers went that deep with it.
@morrisbrinard
@morrisbrinard 6 ай бұрын
⁠@@zerolegacy7821you’d be wrong, this is quite literally exactly what they were going for… google it
@darianstarfrog
@darianstarfrog 6 ай бұрын
​@@zerolegacy7821well, you are wrong
@Hi-Phi
@Hi-Phi 6 ай бұрын
Yeah, they were great. The Dark Crystal was a favourite of mine.
@stephenbowden2265
@stephenbowden2265 4 ай бұрын
I absolutely appreciate the fact you have “ the never ending story “ movie bc I’ve been trying to find that for so LONGGGGGG but couldn’t exactly remember the scenes or title and to see it , BLESS YOU
@John_the_Paul
@John_the_Paul 3 ай бұрын
It’s a book as well!
@christopherkucia1071
@christopherkucia1071 3 ай бұрын
There’s also a second one. The cowboy in (or AND) the cupboard is another good one. Not really the same strange genre though.
@jenlyon8371
@jenlyon8371 4 ай бұрын
The only thing that was unbelievable in this entire film was that Sarah didn't say "YES! Ok, let me pack a few things, I'm coming with you!" the second Jareth showed up the first time...but then the movie would have only been 10 minutes long. 😅
@lolajaramillo4620
@lolajaramillo4620 4 ай бұрын
𝔸𝕘𝕣𝕖𝕖𝕕!😄
@DukeSkylocker
@DukeSkylocker 7 ай бұрын
Watching the movie as an adult, the plot is admittedly pretty basic and Jennifer Connelly still has a long way to go before she would be delivering Oscar worthy performances, but Jim Henson's creature work is incredible (some iffy green screen aside), David Bowie is clearly having a blast, Dance Magic Dance is a bop and the blend of dark but whimsical fantasy truly makes it unique. Alex is right, you really don't see these kinds of films anymore.
@NotoriousLightning
@NotoriousLightning 6 ай бұрын
This movie is better than anything, pal. Stop bullying your betters!
@lulusanchez1874
@lulusanchez1874 6 ай бұрын
I mean this was the first movie to my knowledge to use "green screen" but it was black velvet backdrop
@Evute02
@Evute02 6 ай бұрын
It’s because imagination has been lost. Remakes are taking over (as we know) and there are no new fleshed out ideas for the fantasy genre.
@THambrough
@THambrough 6 ай бұрын
Jennifer Connelly still looks absolutely amazing nearly 40 years later. Good Lord 😅
@Daniel.Barret.Official
@Daniel.Barret.Official 6 ай бұрын
As a Bowie fan... Damn that man is fine....
@skeletal13
@skeletal13 6 ай бұрын
Got married last week and our dance was to “As The World Falls Down” (the ballroom scene). This is my wife’s favorite movie and she owns lots of merchandise, books, and every media release of the film. I’ve loved it since I was a boy. Darker fantasy films were my lifeblood. Everything is so watered down now.
@Batham55
@Batham55 6 ай бұрын
Dude, my wife and I got married this summer and we had that song played as we exited the ceremony.
@boythee4193
@boythee4193 6 ай бұрын
that song is amazing.
@tipsybass7060
@tipsybass7060 6 ай бұрын
omg... that is my dream to have someone look at me like Jareth looks at her in this scene. I also haven't found anyone to dress up as this pair for Halloween. your wives (the guy that first responded to this one) are very lucky to have you two as husbears, and got to have this as your wedding song.
@surphyra
@surphyra 6 ай бұрын
I'm totally stealing that idea
@arianamyers8142
@arianamyers8142 6 ай бұрын
omg no way!! first off congratulations and SECOND I was thinking of that being my wedding song too!! Im glad im not the only one who thinks so.
@Krazy_Kookum
@Krazy_Kookum Ай бұрын
Watching as a kid: This looks like fun and I will sing these songs FOREVER! Watching as a teen: Goblin King is hot, how do you juggle like that? Watching as an adult: Package, Worm guy, Package, Package, Hoggle, Package, Package, Yes
@mattcat83
@mattcat83 Ай бұрын
I always thought the stepmom gave the teddy bear Lancelot to Toby the baby, who dropped it and cried as a result.
@ironwolf56
@ironwolf56 Ай бұрын
That's the interpretation I had even years and years ago when I watched it as a kid so I'm pretty sure that was the implication.
@epsileth
@epsileth 6 ай бұрын
Watched a deep dive into labrynth the other day. In a blink and you'll miss it subplot, her scrapbook shows her mother being big in the local play scene, which is why she is into acting as well. It also shows her mother meeting another actor who looks a lot like Bowie, and they eventually run off together. Which is why the Goblin King looks the way he does.
@myrarefolly
@myrarefolly 6 ай бұрын
In the novelization Sarah is clearly starstruck with her mother's life and wants to be part of it. She also kinda has a crush on Jeremy which, I guess, kinda explains why the Goblin King looks like him.
@mnomadvfx
@mnomadvfx 6 ай бұрын
@@myrarefolly It also explains why Jareth is overly dramatic too, which considering he started as an owl is quite a feat.
@arisu_6635
@arisu_6635 6 ай бұрын
could you tell me the name of the deep dive video it sounds intresting
@philyra2
@philyra2 6 ай бұрын
What and where is this deep dive video?
@Mugthraka
@Mugthraka 6 ай бұрын
That and also the fact that nearly all the characters she meets in the Labyrinth actually ARE the Dolls/plushies she has on her Wall. The whole ting is actually a Fever dream projecting her insecurities due to her fertile imagination, love of Theatrics and Drama and Teenager Hormonal imbalance.
@jovensquire
@jovensquire 6 ай бұрын
My mum took me out of school when I was 6 to see this movie at the cinema because she was too embarrassed to see it as a 30 year old adult on her own. I loved it, she loved it. Still one of my favorite movies.
@JadeEyes1
@JadeEyes1 4 ай бұрын
Aw, what a nice memory!
@alphabetsoup6681
@alphabetsoup6681 4 ай бұрын
Your mom did an awesome job!
@Bluebelle51
@Bluebelle51 5 ай бұрын
Just a note, I'm pretty sure the "baby actor" in the movie wasn't "traumatized" since his dad probably had all those critters laying around the house anyway (The baby is Toby Froud, son of Brian Froud, the guy who designed a lot of the weird critters in Labyrinth and The Dark Crystal)
@oldsoulyt4757
@oldsoulyt4757 4 күн бұрын
Couldn't been worse. Sara in the books is 14 and Jareth during the ballroom scene legit tries to force her to kiss him. He also has a thought bubble that's like "too old to turn into a goblin, too young to keep". Crazy shit
@BuiHieuDong
@BuiHieuDong 7 ай бұрын
Labyrinth is like a movie that your brain creates in the dream when you're having a fever dream.
@cooney2011
@cooney2011 6 ай бұрын
This is just a hilarious comment
@hermioneziggeraut7617
@hermioneziggeraut7617 6 ай бұрын
Jared is the kind of fantasy boyfriend you want when you're 16. Mysterious, androgynous, has magic powers. And he's also the type of first boyfriend you get - petulant, demanding, dramatic. I mean, if David Bowie offered me that deal I'd probably take it, but Sara recognises a toxic relationship when she sees one. She's giving up childish ideas of her 'ideal man'.
@marquislexil
@marquislexil 6 ай бұрын
Jareth*
@kaisersoymilk6912
@kaisersoymilk6912 6 ай бұрын
Mhh, I bet this movie is popular in Japan. Your description fits the average shoujo manga protagonist pretty well.
@indigonight
@indigonight 2 ай бұрын
When I was sick, my mother and I would watch this and The Neverending Story. Good memories.
@Bunbunfunfun
@Bunbunfunfun 5 ай бұрын
This has a moral that is pertinent . It’s about that time in life when you have to grow up. As well it demonstrates that sometimes you have to work hard for the benefit of someone else (like keeping a family going). It teaches you the value of appreciating family. Pretty good values to teach I think.
@silephalberion4558
@silephalberion4558 7 ай бұрын
I always interpreted Jareth as a normal faery. Less interested in Sarah herself and more interested in the deal and the game. She was very attracted to him, and he saw an angle to manipulate her, so he took it.
@bhart3321
@bhart3321 7 ай бұрын
It's David Bowie of course she was attracted to him. That man could instill gay panic in straight men so hetero females stood no chance. 😂😂😂
@MrDeedsly
@MrDeedsly 6 ай бұрын
@@bhart3321 Yep as a straight man I can confirm this.
@FirstnameLastname-gr5kb
@FirstnameLastname-gr5kb 6 ай бұрын
​@@bhart3321and he was into kids even younger than her very fitting
@BrokensoulRider
@BrokensoulRider 6 ай бұрын
Alleged. Not backed with evidence.@@FirstnameLastname-gr5kb
@hihenia3263
@hihenia3263 6 ай бұрын
@@FirstnameLastname-gr5kbhe denied a kiss scene w her wdym like tf
@katw.6519
@katw.6519 7 ай бұрын
Also the line : "...just fear me, love me, do as I say and I shall be your slave..." Yyeaaahh. Jareth's Package was the REAL Goblin King all along. It's about a young person leaving childhood and one's ideas of what life SHOULD be behind, and growing up to see how things really are - yet still keeping a positive attitude. Friendship, family, loyalty, love, helping yourself and others. Labyrinth is, at it's heart, a simple transcendental movie.
@mandisaw
@mandisaw 7 ай бұрын
It's one of those great coming-of-age stories specifically from a girl's / woman's POV. Dudes love the movie too, but we kind of stopped getting these, outside of those Hunger Games & Twilight era YA books with questionable messaging.
@BrokensoulRider
@BrokensoulRider 6 ай бұрын
You know, at her age if Jareth showed that sort of obsession with me I 100% would have said 'okay' and never got out of that fantasy. But yeah. Her loyalty and humility and friendship to everyone else shone through where most people would get lost. I'm, sadly, one of those lost girls. I'm a little more found now, but... :)
@katw.6519
@katw.6519 6 ай бұрын
​@@BrokensoulRider- ohhh, I'm right there with you totally on this one. Though if Jareth DID show up at my window even now....I'd probably let him in. 🫠
@BrokensoulRider
@BrokensoulRider 6 ай бұрын
Same. Absolutely same. @@katw.6519
@Zorayah
@Zorayah 14 күн бұрын
I saw this at age 9 and used to sometimes get frustrated with my younger siblings and THINK 'I wish the goblins would take you away' and then take it back and really hope nothing would happen. Just lightly traumatic lol
@simonesezza119
@simonesezza119 55 минут бұрын
Yep, glad you didn't say it!! Another one ya gotta be careful about thinking 0R saying is, "I wish you'd never been born"! Jimmy Stewart learned that lesson in the classic, "It's a Wonderful Life"
@carlacampbell9708
@carlacampbell9708 Ай бұрын
What? Labyrinth is a timeless classic!
@JohnnyV83
@JohnnyV83 6 ай бұрын
Fun fact, a labyrinth by definition is merely winding and twisting with few to no branches and always leads to the same destination. A maze is the distinct puzzle type structure with dead ends that most people think of.
@mr.bryteseid3189
@mr.bryteseid3189 6 ай бұрын
a maze's entrance and exit are on the perimeter of it, but a labyrinth's entrance is on the outer edge and the goal is in the center
@JohnnyV83
@JohnnyV83 6 ай бұрын
@@mr.bryteseid3189 well said
@GnosticAtheist
@GnosticAtheist 6 ай бұрын
That is indeed very correct. Many people confuse the terms. A labyrinth is just a type of path, while a maze is constructed for deception (although not commonly malicious).
@ericmoore571
@ericmoore571 6 ай бұрын
Labyrinth sounds better as a movie name than Maze
@Miss_Camel
@Miss_Camel 6 ай бұрын
Yeah I think Daedalus was pretty definitive in the design, description, and sole purpose. 🤣 lol I’m currently playing a Skyrim character I named Ariadne, KZbin had no idea about my secret teen obsession with Jareth. Hahaha
@ECHunter-tn3mv
@ECHunter-tn3mv 7 ай бұрын
It’s so difficult to explain to people who haven’t seen The Secret of Nimh how close to perfect that movie is ♥️
@mallorycarpinski1160
@mallorycarpinski1160 7 ай бұрын
I loved that book in school. It makes it hard for me to love the movie that much but I agree its great!
@emilyrouk1820
@emilyrouk1820 7 ай бұрын
Whats it about and why is it so good
@avengefullgirl95
@avengefullgirl95 7 ай бұрын
@@emilyrouk1820Its about a mother finding courage to save her children from certain death
@christiec3947
@christiec3947 7 ай бұрын
I think I randomly saw it on cable when I was younger and fell in love but couldn’t remember or find the name for like… 8 years
@violettheorgangrinder
@violettheorgangrinder 7 ай бұрын
I've sent it and it was boring.
@sinjun1973
@sinjun1973 14 күн бұрын
I always thought Jareth wasn’t as evil as they made him out to be. He taught her a valuable lesson. One that she wasn’t learning on her own.
@romarikacejas8073
@romarikacejas8073 2 ай бұрын
I watched this movie when i was in grade school 2007 and my first impression about it is that, It is indeed a child movie as I remembered where a baby was abducted by a rockstar dude and i always laugh in that one part where there's this one bad green screened grinch thing musical
@juliesteimle3867
@juliesteimle3867 6 ай бұрын
Labyrinth was my favorite movie growing up, alongside Ladyhawke. The film was rather deep. Sara was so self- absorbed and had learn that life was more than all her daydreams, which she had to let go of. If you notice, all the things in her bedroom show up in the labyrinth in some form or another... including the goblin king. You also skipped the junkyard part, which actually is rather important--the part where Sara realizes all her stuff is just junk and people matter more.
@madiantin
@madiantin 6 ай бұрын
Ladyhawke was so good too!
@perfectallycromulent
@perfectallycromulent 5 ай бұрын
Sara has a Judge Dredd roleplaying game supplement on her bookshelf at the beginning of the movie. i don't know why it's there, i noticed because it's bright yellow, and is a very weird choice for a prop, since it's IP belonging to another company. but Judge Dredd doesn't show up later in the movie, unlike the other stuff.
@alexiellexi4140
@alexiellexi4140 3 ай бұрын
Ladyhawke and princess Bride sadly forgotten in the list!
@morgianani6259
@morgianani6259 3 ай бұрын
I'm so glad you brought up the junkyard scene!! There are so many times in my life I've thought about that scene and it's meaning applied to various situations. Labyrinth is hands down one of my favorite movies of all time..... Also loved Ladyhawke too!! ^_^
@catandrobbyflores
@catandrobbyflores 3 ай бұрын
"Walk on the left side!"
@Edriely
@Edriely 7 ай бұрын
That's the crazy thing about older movies. The idea was that you could scare the bejeezus out of kids and show really weird and disturbing things and have intense adventures, so long as you had the happily ever after, everything worked out in the end it was fine for kids. Nowadays the smallest thing can get a show canceled for being "problematic" and "traumatizing"
@lillyisle
@lillyisle Ай бұрын
At 15:01 Alex wat part 🤣🤣🤣 also like the referencing of jrpgs through out the vid😂😂😅 Had this album ep as a kid & I enjoyed this movie.. Thanks Alex
@saranethpeacer7148
@saranethpeacer7148 Ай бұрын
This movie and The Princess Bride are my top fave movies they both have everything you want and need in a movie. I also love the quirks The Labyrinth has, like David Bowies face turning up randomly around 6 times.
@crescendo5594
@crescendo5594 6 ай бұрын
I’m gonna chalk this off as a generational gap. Almost everyone’s parents allowed their kids to watch this movie.
@rodgerlang884
@rodgerlang884 6 ай бұрын
I love this movie so freakin much. It's whimsical, it's a bit dark, and the message underlying it all is so perfectly embedded in the story. Bowie absolutely knocked his role out of the park and 90% of the effects hold up so well to repeated watchings. I rewatch this fairly often and it never gets old
@Smokehappy_
@Smokehappy_ 9 күн бұрын
All of the movies you listed at the beginning perfectly describes both what i grew up watching and my ideal movie. The art style and themes were so unique and made it so memorable
@JamesRichardsPlays
@JamesRichardsPlays 5 ай бұрын
I actually liked this video. Well done. Awesome editing. You earned a like AND a subscribe ;) I think this is a perfect representation of how things changed. I was old enough to see this film in theaters. I was four years old at the time, I vividly remember the lighting, the big seats, the popcorn and soda... And just a spread of five years shows the difference some people might have on certain topics. This is most certainly a kids movie. It can also be enjoyed by adults. I enjoyed the plethora of "problematic" movies from those times and I am a well adjusted adult (I at least hope so) I don't diddle kids, I don't beat on people, I don't mistreat staff at restaurants and retail shops (by the way, most of those who do are much older. Seems like we act more maturely than our parents) I drink in moderation and enjoy legal weed once in a while. As long as you teach your kids right from wrong, fantasy vs reality and how to be at least borderline good people; this kind of movie is fine for a child to see. The only people who claim the movie is problematic are the ones who are finding things to be offended at and believe everyone else should be as well. There is a lot of missing nuance in that statement and shouldn't really be argued at length here; KZbin isn't exactly the greatest platform for discussing those kind of ideas in enough detail. Already I can hear the keyboards of a hundred upset kids...
@brianbooker8724
@brianbooker8724 7 ай бұрын
To this day, 40 years later, Secret of NIMH is still one of my all time favorite animated films.
@nickynicks_
@nickynicks_ 7 ай бұрын
YES
@mandisaw
@mandisaw 7 ай бұрын
It's responsible for the entire Don Bluth post-Disney catalog. They literally bet the farm on making that movie. The book is even better, and well worth the read even as an adult (2nd book is fun, but not as deep, the 3rd one just so-so). They really don't make them like this anymore.
@bhart3321
@bhart3321 7 ай бұрын
That movie scared the ever loving SH*T outta me as a kid but it was sooooo good. I still have it on VHS from when I was a kid.
@sunside7
@sunside7 6 ай бұрын
I loved the Secret Rats of NIMH book as a teen!
@Catmom-gl5nt
@Catmom-gl5nt 6 ай бұрын
The book should have scared you, it’s based on a real experiment involving rats, perceived utopia, and the carnage that follows having all your needs met without effort. It’s a fascinating study of societal behavior and truly terrifying, in its own way.
@theacemetalhead
@theacemetalhead 7 ай бұрын
Labyrinth is such a staple in my childhood. I love it so much.❤❤
@namantherockstar
@namantherockstar 7 ай бұрын
Labyrinth inspires me.. My parents said if i get 60K followers They'd buy me a professional camera for recording..begging u guys , literally Begging.
@simonsays7687
@simonsays7687 Ай бұрын
Your reactions made me remember so many good old shows, thanks.
@bearieroblox6451
@bearieroblox6451 2 ай бұрын
Bro respect to that baby actor, he probably had nightmares about goblins for years, I bet none of his friends believed him in school either.
@yonkonomi5706
@yonkonomi5706 7 ай бұрын
I think one of the coolest and easily unnoticed bits from this movie is that all of the "creatures" and setting in the labyrinth world are all toys etc in her room. So hypothetically this whole movie was just a emo fever dream.... Close-ups of Bowie's junk and all 😂 Bowie also blatantly makes a "snorting cocaine" reference during Dance Magic Dance when he asks what kind of magic spell to use, then closes a nostril and snorts a invisible line 😂
@Angelika5378
@Angelika5378 6 ай бұрын
Never noticed the nose thing🤯
@yonkonomi5706
@yonkonomi5706 6 ай бұрын
@@Angelika5378 isn't it wild how blatant it is?! Just a insider thing for the adults I guess 🤣
@Jimmy94411
@Jimmy94411 6 ай бұрын
There’s also very overt sexual lyrics
@lorddvanity13
@lorddvanity13 7 ай бұрын
Actually, she got the question right. The thing is, she immediately said something along the lines of “This’ll be easy.” And every time she gets overconfident like that, something bad happens
@postbunnie
@postbunnie 6 ай бұрын
I think she said that it’ll be a piece of cake But we all know that the cake is a lie
@37Kilo2
@37Kilo2 Ай бұрын
There was so many things from this movie that creeped me out and gave me nightmares. Yet, I still loved it. The one thing from this movie that sticks with me, to this day, is David Bulgie. I mean Bowie.
@fadingfrost2617
@fadingfrost2617 2 ай бұрын
I broke my femur a few days before christmas in '88, when I was 9. The entire 2-3 weeks that I was in the hospital, I only watched 3 movies, repeatedly. Nothing else. Labyrinth, Stand By Me and The Color Purple. I must have watched each 100 times. I had little to no oversight growing up. (might be why i was there to begin with, now that I think of it) I also began reading VCAndrews like a fiend the following summer. For me censorship has only become a thing as a 40-something adult. (yeah, im talking about you youtube)
@sarahcox1197
@sarahcox1197 6 ай бұрын
15:11 is the best reaction to that line I have ever seen
@scoot-scoot51341
@scoot-scoot51341 7 ай бұрын
14:16 "Now, you see, this is where things start to get kinda weird." ... As if it hasn't been weird BEFORE this point?!
@Mehubshib
@Mehubshib 7 ай бұрын
IKR love this movie
@Pineapplecrispy
@Pineapplecrispy Ай бұрын
I genuinely don’t think any modern remake could ever recapture the amazing weirdness that were the movies of the 80s
@AaronVA91
@AaronVA91 4 ай бұрын
yo I GYATT to see the labyrinth just to see hoggle 🤩🤩🤩🤩| 11:59 |
@gundarsmiks4889
@gundarsmiks4889 6 ай бұрын
Labyrinth had something almost none of todays movies have. A heart. And an actual story, wich also is missing from the most todays movies...
@kristalgic1534
@kristalgic1534 6 ай бұрын
You must only watch Marvel movies or something 🙄
@gundarsmiks4889
@gundarsmiks4889 6 ай бұрын
@@kristalgic1534 how many of Marvel movies can you watch twice?! Theyr ok... But no one will care about them in 10 years...
@TomFynn
@TomFynn 6 ай бұрын
Also, songs you actually want to listen to.
@JrsProperty1601
@JrsProperty1601 6 ай бұрын
For the last time: SARAH GOT THE LOGIC PUZZLE RIGHT. SHE FALLS BECAUSE SHE SAYS “That was easy!” Every time she does that in this movie Jared moves the goalposts in spite. First he shortens her time, then he drops her into the oubliette, and finally sends the cleaners machine to kill her and hoggle. If she could’ve just kept her mouth shut, she’d could’ve skipped like half of the extra challenges!
@946towguy2
@946towguy2 6 ай бұрын
If she had just been patient an listened to the worm, she could have skipped the labyrinth altogether and gone straight to the castle.
@zimriel
@zimriel 6 ай бұрын
@@946towguy2 would she have been ready for the castle then?
@Incognicia
@Incognicia 6 ай бұрын
It was a lesson was to humble her ego, which was problematic from the very start of the movie.
@AmyDaisy69
@AmyDaisy69 6 ай бұрын
Exactly. It did not lead to certain death.
@chrisford8403
@chrisford8403 6 ай бұрын
Ya, but then it would've been an awfully short movie; you need the "Hero's Journey".@@946towguy2
@PsychoVision19
@PsychoVision19 5 ай бұрын
Her running home through the rain passes by a deli in Rockland, New York, little bit up the block from where I went to school. It was the most amazing thing seeing it when I was going there.
@karaleetdrenduringdragon8961
@karaleetdrenduringdragon8961 5 ай бұрын
Oh, I did love the Labyrinth was/is so good. I remember seeing the commercial when it came out and guilt tripped a family friend SO HARD into taking me. She was SO ANNOYED and totally did NOT want to go, then laughed her rear off the whole movie. She thanked me for 'making' her go. It is a cherished memory. Thanks for the blast from the past.
@emilygratz9203
@emilygratz9203 7 ай бұрын
15:01 "fear me, love me, do as i say." Also him literally 00.1 seconds later: "and i will be your slave." I agree that deserves a huge "wut?"
@gloomy_gal
@gloomy_gal 7 ай бұрын
As someone who did not grow up with these movies, i completely agree with the point you made towards the end. A lot of movies that have been produced recently are just producers trying to make money. Its much more uncommon to see these beautiful works of art that tell stories that never get old. Now we get remakes of movies and every new concept of a movie is under marketed and might turn out good but doesnt turn out good profit. Its just a really sad industry right now. 😢
@Annabelvasquez1001
@Annabelvasquez1001 2 ай бұрын
Man, I remember the first time ever watching this movie. It was in my music class I wanna say, my teacher was very much in love with this movie and I remember seeing her with such joy. I am thankful for her showing this to us 😊 back in elementary school..
@annettemyers628
@annettemyers628 2 ай бұрын
Seen it around 89 with and they pulling it up for their children. They love it too Jareth in a pair a khakis or a business suit or even tshirt and bagging torn, tattering jeans? Hes the villian of course . A kilt, nah. Toby wasnt having because he always talked to him and no screaming like sister Sarah.
@_The_Archive_
@_The_Archive_ 7 ай бұрын
Fun Fact: The owl in the title sequence is computer generated and was the first attempt at a photo-realistic CGI animal character in a feature film.
@gingergoddess8953
@gingergoddess8953 7 ай бұрын
Fun fact: the baby was absolutely not traumatized being all around those puppets. They had another baby actor who WAS freaking out, so the director went to one of the puppeteers and said "hey, you have a baby who's been around puppets, right?" That kid grew up to literally make more puppets. His name is Toby Froud, and yes, they changed the character name to be his real name so he'd be more likely to respond on camera. He worked on the Dark Crystal Netflix show.
@katarinabrunk8698
@katarinabrunk8698 7 ай бұрын
That's actually really sweet, love that
@zachryder3150
@zachryder3150 2 ай бұрын
The only time nepotism made sense.
@AndrealVox
@AndrealVox 15 күн бұрын
9:20 actually she doesn't get the answer wrong. she gets the door riddle correct, if you rewatch the movie and pay attention to whenever the phrase "it's a piece of cake" is said it's like rolling a Nat1 in D&D. So as she entered the correct door she says the cursed phrase and sets off the trap. She loses time when she says it to the Goblin King's face shortly after. Every time the phrase is said.
@kerryberryb8199
@kerryberryb8199 2 ай бұрын
As a mid-80s baby I watched Labyrinth when I was quite young but I loved it. It's one of those movies I remember a lot of the words for; the interaction with the worm, the door knockers, I still don't understand the red and blue doors (not proud that I've had 2 people draw me diagrams to explain it). I once heard someone trying to explain the movie to their friends and said "you remind me of the babe", and I jumped in with "what babe?" and did the whole routine with a stranger. Didn't help explain it but it was funny as hell. After Bowie passed away suddenly a lot more people found it which makes me happy for some reason. If they re-made it now I worry they'd ruin it with CGI, and who thinks they pull off The Goblin King better than than Bowie!? Neverending Story = early childhood trauma (1 word - Artex) but again, loved it - who didn't want a fluffy talking dragon!? Dark Crystal... that was something else. All of it scared me, even the "good" characters so wasn't interested in the Netflix version.
@staraco
@staraco 7 ай бұрын
I love how Alex never changed one bit. Consistently incredible content for years
@jackthefrog80085
@jackthefrog80085 7 ай бұрын
he changed a lot. but for the better
@richbrine64
@richbrine64 7 ай бұрын
as an NPC, im legally obliged to say "Can we just appreciate the dedication this man has?"
@namantherockstar
@namantherockstar 7 ай бұрын
Alex inspires me.. My parents said if i get 60K followers They'd buy me a professional camera for recording..begging u guys , literally Begging.
@theroyaljules39
@theroyaljules39 7 ай бұрын
@@namantherockstarthis is the npc bro not you
@editornoob4606
@editornoob4606 7 ай бұрын
​@@namantherockstarI'm surprised you have this many subscribers to begin with
@ejwowiing
@ejwowiing 7 ай бұрын
well said.
@ejwowiing
@ejwowiing 7 ай бұрын
@@theroyaljules39
@riccardozanoni2531
@riccardozanoni2531 3 ай бұрын
11:33 ah the scene that made me bi lol 🤣 this movie is such a classic
@SakkaraKirax
@SakkaraKirax 12 күн бұрын
The 80s were a great time to be a kid when it came to things like movies and cartoons. When my sister started having kids, I would crack out the movies I loved as a kid when they would come to stay for a few weeks in summer. The Goonies, The Princess Bride, Willow, Labyrinth, The Dark Crystal, The Neverending Story, Back to the Future, Beetlejuice, Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure, Flight of the Navigator, The Last Starfighter, so many more. I loved sharing those with them and they held up really well.
@crominion6045
@crominion6045 6 ай бұрын
As a 16 year old boy when this came out, I was only focused on Jennifer Connelly’s beauty, but seeing these clips again decades later I’m struck by how amazing David Bowie’s speaking voice was. Right up there with James Earl Jones in terms of cool sounding male voices. 👍
@Marika50
@Marika50 3 ай бұрын
Look up Bowie and Bing Crosby video Peace on Earth. It was shot wen Bing was already living with dementia. But Bowies speaking vioce in that video is so soothing. Also Bowie knew Bing was struggling with dementia during filming and frequently had to be reminded about what was going on arround him. Apperantly Bowie would just talk to him very calmly to make sure that Bing was doing ok.
@tekboi1984
@tekboi1984 3 ай бұрын
Me too. I had a total crush.
@christopherkucia1071
@christopherkucia1071 3 ай бұрын
True but everytime I see him I cringe and feel very sorry comfortable lol! And he probably always was just a cool and genuine and good person. He just looks like a creepy evil villain lol! He’s teeth! I have terrible teeth from years of drinking, but they aren’t like… CORN yellow… they aren’t just OUT THERE like his lol. I was always annoyed when people said “you look like a David Bowie!” Or “are you a fan of Bowie?” Like NO shut up. I have red long hair and I’m thin… so what. Anyways, maybe I should get into him more. I never liked his music but my taste is always expanding. And FAST, especially at 27 years old now.
@christopherkucia1071
@christopherkucia1071 3 ай бұрын
My friends showed me this movie saying that if I were a character in the Labyrinth I’d have the mental confliction of the 4 playing card guards, but the personality, energy and style of that little fox guard with the colorful clothes/feather and rides that white little dog. That “fight” scene with the big orangutan cracked me the fuck up. I’ll take the fox and card guard comparison to myself with pride, but DONT call me David Bowie lol!
@curtisbryce5096
@curtisbryce5096 2 ай бұрын
Crap, I missed all that because I am still captivated by her beauty and even more so now that I know how she matured. She is tinier in real life than I would have thought. I hate Paul Bethany.
@WishingStarInAJar
@WishingStarInAJar 6 ай бұрын
Fun fact about the baby: Toby is the son of Brian Froud, the creature and prop designer of Labyrinth and the Dark Crystal. His real name is also Toby. He followed in his father's footsteps and became a puppeteer and special effects designer. He worked on Netflix's The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance alongside his parents. Safe to say he wasn't traumatized in the slightest by the creepy goblin puppets xD
@MarshmallowAlien
@MarshmallowAlien 6 ай бұрын
They originally had a different name for the baby, but Toby only would respond to his name so they changed it.
@BloodyBay
@BloodyBay 2 ай бұрын
1:32 Wait a minute. That music...that theme song...I haven't heard it for many years. Why is it so familiar? * gasp * *It's the 'Lively Town' theme from Shining Force II!* Is there any reason why you chose that tune for the background music in your sponsor drop, Alex? 😄
@CMZneu
@CMZneu Ай бұрын
0:48 Great...Thanks for triggering my nostalgia Alex... now I have to go and rewatch The Secret of NIMH...
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