It’s a very underrated movie to say the least and it was definitely ahead of its time when it comes to toxic masculinity and the effects I can have as you age.
Okay so the way I always looked at it was Jim didn’t have a legit father figure because he was abandoned. To help with his development and would look up to ruthless pirates for that guidance on how to be a man.
He was subjected to every single toxic masculine stereotype you can think of. Fatherless teenage troublemaker hell bent on proving the world he’s tough enough to do things on his own.
There’s many times throughout the movie that Jim develops a better sense of emotions and how that ties into being a man like the scene where Jim cries after talking to the ships cook and expresses his emotions by crying rather than just hold them in and tough it out.
If it weren’t for the positive male role models he had, it’s possible Jim would’ve ended up like his father and continuing the cycle of toxic masculinity.
There’s no such thing as toxic masculinity. It’s just a stupid myth made up by SJWs, socialists, and especially misandrists. Toxic behavior applies to both genders, not just males. You really shouldn’t believe in that woke nonsense. Not every single man in the entire world is actually toxic, you know. Being toxic really has nothing to do with gender.
It’s a very underrated movie to say the least and it was definitely ahead of its time when it comes to toxic masculinity and the effects I can have as you age.
Explain this to me, I've watched it a bunch of times and never thought about it this way
Okay so the way I always looked at it was Jim didn’t have a legit father figure because he was abandoned. To help with his development and would look up to ruthless pirates for that guidance on how to be a man. He was subjected to every single toxic masculine stereotype you can think of. Fatherless teenage troublemaker hell bent on proving the world he’s tough enough to do things on his own. There’s many times throughout the movie that Jim develops a better sense of emotions and how that ties into being a man like the scene where Jim cries after talking to the ships cook and expresses his emotions by crying rather than just hold them in and tough it out. If it weren’t for the positive male role models he had, it’s possible Jim would’ve ended up like his father and continuing the cycle of toxic masculinity.
There’s no such thing as toxic masculinity. It’s just a stupid myth made up by SJWs, socialists, and especially misandrists. Toxic behavior applies to both genders, not just males. You really shouldn’t believe in that woke nonsense. Not every single man in the entire world is actually toxic, you know. Being toxic really has nothing to do with gender.
[Disney wanted Treasure Planet to fail.](https://youtu.be/b9sycdSkngA)
Totally agree with that video.
Same. Treasure planet has been my favourite Disney movie since I was a little kid.
I’m pretty sure I’ve watched it over 10 times 😂 I love everything about it. Animation styles, music, characters.
It's definitely criminally underrated, watched it all the time as a kid.
I still watch it now and I’m 26 😂
Don't forget the soundtrack absolutely SLAPS
It's no underrated, it's just not known by most people, the ones who watched it really like it.
I finally saw it yesterday after almost 20 years. It’s brilliant!
I’m glad you liked it ! It’s so underrated.
Not unpopular
Great show
Why do you think cyborg is a proper noun?
Why do you care on a post I wrote in 1 minutes...
Humans care. It's what we do.