By the end of this, I hope to have demonstrated what they've really lost because of this. These days, studio executives seem to cut any potentially dark elements from kid's films and this is probably the real reason why kid movies are now no more than smoke and noise to keep the kiddies quiet while the parents do anything other than raising their offspring properly. I'm going to focus very heavily on the last half of the film in order to discuss just how bleak its undertones are. If I didn't, then what would make me any different from the Nostalgia Critic? I mean aside from lacking the delusional belief that Will Ferrell is funny, obviously. I know that you'll be expecting me to give some kind of breakdown of the film's quality according to my personal views of what makes for a good or bad movie, but for this little review, I think I'm going to do something just a little bit different. I guess Lasseter just always had a thing for anthropomorphizing inanimate objects for movies. I'm confident that most of my readers will get that clue right there, but for the benefit of the current generation, who were not even yet gleams in our eyes when this movie came out, I'm talking about "The Brave Little Toaster," a film put together by the same people who would later go on to found Pixar Animation. I even took a character from the movie as an imaginary friend, naming our house vacuum cleaner "Kirby." It was an Electrolux, actually, but that's really not the point. After I saw it, I couldn't stop talking about it and bothered my parents to no end until they recorded it for me on a blank VHS tape. When I was a little kid, there was a movie I saw on the Disney Channel that I absolutely loved. A Look at the Bleak World of Household Appliances
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