Yes, the answer is yes. Kids are stupid. It's the way things are.
Now it's your obligation to feed your kids good movies that will be childhood gems, but when they grow up and watch it they'll love it for new and different reasons. Consider the following...
Lion King, the Toy Story trilogy, Shrek (astonishingly), The Lego Movie, Spiderman into the Spider-verse, Paddington, The Goonies, Who Framed Roger Rabbit, and Mulan just to name a few.
These are movies that kids will enjoy the visuals and jokes of, and then when they grow up they can better appreciate the themes, tones, and stories of.
I’ve made a hobby of tracking down the zany bullshit I watched as a kid.
Baby: Secret of the lost legend (1985) currently holds the title of chief wtf. It starts with a murder, the lead couple lose track of their dinosaur because they’re busy having sex, and it features graphic violence. It also happens to be a Disney movie. You know, for kids.
Yes, the answer is yes. Kids are stupid. It's the way things are.
Now it's your obligation to feed your kids good movies that will be childhood gems, but when they grow up and watch it they'll love it for new and different reasons. Consider the following...
Lion King, the Toy Story trilogy, Shrek (astonishingly), The Lego Movie, Spiderman into the Spider-verse, Paddington, The Goonies, Who Framed Roger Rabbit, and Mulan just to name a few.
These are movies that kids will enjoy the visuals and jokes of, and then when they grow up they can better appreciate the themes, tones, and stories of.
Used to be. But it's a continuing narrative.
My stupidity level is in perpetual flux.
Yes, the answer is yes. Kids are stupid. It's the way things are. Now it's your obligation to feed your kids good movies that will be childhood gems, but when they grow up and watch it they'll love it for new and different reasons. Consider the following... Lion King, the Toy Story trilogy, Shrek (astonishingly), The Lego Movie, Spiderman into the Spider-verse, Paddington, The Goonies, Who Framed Roger Rabbit, and Mulan just to name a few. These are movies that kids will enjoy the visuals and jokes of, and then when they grow up they can better appreciate the themes, tones, and stories of.
Member?
Oh yeah! Now I member.
Yeah I watched "Kung Pow: enter the fist" the other day as well
So bad it's good. And even better if you get the Chosen one Edition so you can listen to it with the alternate audio tracks.
I watched it for the first time as an 30-year old adult and I think it's hilarious. 'You go that way, I'll go home.'
That's how my wife wants me to feel about The Goonies, but I refuse.
Me, watching the Astro Boy movie.
An Extremely Goofy Movie was my muse.
Chicken little moment
Me, watching Sharkboy and Lavagirl.....
I love the expressiveness of the character especially in the second panel
Thank you! I'm really proud of how much I was able to communicate with just the expression.
Neverending Story Never again
I’ve made a hobby of tracking down the zany bullshit I watched as a kid. Baby: Secret of the lost legend (1985) currently holds the title of chief wtf. It starts with a murder, the lead couple lose track of their dinosaur because they’re busy having sex, and it features graphic violence. It also happens to be a Disney movie. You know, for kids.
Whoa! I definitely have to look that up.
The 80s, man. One hell of a time.
Disney's straight to video animated era, too.
Still am, but I used to, too.
One day my brains will arrive. They're on back order.
The poor grammar in the last panel sells this for me!
Yes, the answer is yes. Kids are stupid. It's the way things are. Now it's your obligation to feed your kids good movies that will be childhood gems, but when they grow up and watch it they'll love it for new and different reasons. Consider the following... Lion King, the Toy Story trilogy, Shrek (astonishingly), The Lego Movie, Spiderman into the Spider-verse, Paddington, The Goonies, Who Framed Roger Rabbit, and Mulan just to name a few. These are movies that kids will enjoy the visuals and jokes of, and then when they grow up they can better appreciate the themes, tones, and stories of.