http://youtu.be/9Bj-MNQdVOc
Friday, August 1, 2014
Subliminal Message in Walt Disney's Alladin
Listen carefully to Alladin's statement when the tiger comes near him, and princess Jasmine enters the balcony.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=1QYYOuQGEp0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=1QYYOuQGEp0
Subliminal Insets in Disney Cartoons-
Once again, I'm proud to present additional content from the master of the sublime, Disney!!
There's one fish in this scene from Brother Bear that doesn't quite fit in with the others. No wonder Dory and Marlin couldn't find Nemo! ;)
That's not the only film Nemo appeared in. Check him out in this scene from Monster's Inc. You know what's even more interesting? Monsters Inc. came out two years before Finding Nemo did!
Does the dog's shadow in this scene from Ratatouille look familiar to you? It's Doug from Up! (And again, Ratatouille came out two years before Up did!)
But that's not the only Disney carving the witch was working on. Check it out: it's the Pizza Planet truck from Toy Story!
The magic lamp from Aladdin makes a swift and short appearance in The Princess and the Frogwhen Mama Ode flings it around her cabin.
This one is nearly impossible to notice unless you pause your DVD! Goofy and Donald Duck attend King Triton's concert in the beginning of The Little Mermaid!
Since Radiator Springs is such a small town, we're guessing there's only one movie theater! And guess what's playing? The Incredi-mobiles! Hmm... sounds like the Cars version of The Incredibles.
Speaking of familiar toys, the dentist's office from Finding Nemo has a treasure chest of toys for its younger guests. One of the toys at the office is Buzz Lightyear from Toy Story!
Flynn and Rapunzel from Tangled are surrounded by library books, three of which include Disney classics like Beauty and the Beast, The Little Mermaid, and Sleeping Beauty.
Once again, I'm proud to present additional content from the master of the sublime, Disney!!
There's one fish in this scene from Brother Bear that doesn't quite fit in with the others. No wonder Dory and Marlin couldn't find Nemo! ;)
That's not the only film Nemo appeared in. Check him out in this scene from Monster's Inc. You know what's even more interesting? Monsters Inc. came out two years before Finding Nemo did!
Does the dog's shadow in this scene from Ratatouille look familiar to you? It's Doug from Up! (And again, Ratatouille came out two years before Up did!)
But that's not the only Disney carving the witch was working on. Check it out: it's the Pizza Planet truck from Toy Story!
The magic lamp from Aladdin makes a swift and short appearance in The Princess and the Frogwhen Mama Ode flings it around her cabin.
This one is nearly impossible to notice unless you pause your DVD! Goofy and Donald Duck attend King Triton's concert in the beginning of The Little Mermaid!
Since Radiator Springs is such a small town, we're guessing there's only one movie theater! And guess what's playing? The Incredi-mobiles! Hmm... sounds like the Cars version of The Incredibles.
Speaking of familiar toys, the dentist's office from Finding Nemo has a treasure chest of toys for its younger guests. One of the toys at the office is Buzz Lightyear from Toy Story!
Flynn and Rapunzel from Tangled are surrounded by library books, three of which include Disney classics like Beauty and the Beast, The Little Mermaid, and Sleeping Beauty.
Tuesday, January 7, 2014
8 hidden messages in famous movies
8 Hidden Messages You Never Noticed In Famous Movies
When watching a movie, most filmmakers are content with shoving all the information we need to understand a story right into our stupid faces. Because film is a medium designed for telling stories, right? Writers and directors don’t need to be coy about what it is they’re trying to say.
Unless what they’re trying to say is completely at your expense, of course, as is the case with most of the hidden messages we’ve assembled here (none of which are Disney entries, by the way, ’cause they’ve been done death elsewhere). Ask yourself, this, though: why did the filmmakers associated with these flicks take the time out of their busy schedules to ensure that these subtle inclusions made it into theatres?
The logical answer? To reward viewers patient enough to search for hidden clues, you say? Probably not. More than likely, it was all done to either make them feel good about themselves, or to ridicule our growing obsession with analysing each and every frame or everything we happen to gaze upon…
8. Escupimos en su Alimento – Anchorman (2001)
Anchorman is packed with jokes on just about every subject, from milk to aftershave, most of them great because the characters are saying them in English (which certainly helps when it comes to, you know, understanding the punchlines).
But not every joke in Anchorman was deployed in the English language, because where’s the fun in that, right? I refer you to the scene prior to the one where Ron Burgundy (as played by the one and only Will Ferrell) is fired for his recent outbursts, in which Veronica Corningstone (Christina Applegate) can be seen having dinner at a Mexican restaurant.
The name of the restaurant, we see, is the enigmatic “Escupimos en su Alimento.” Which, by the way, means “we spit in your food” in Spanish. Though this is just something of a throwaway gag in the confines of the movie, it really does have the power to make anybody who doesn’t speak a second language nervous about going out for dinner to any foreign joints…
7. Tyler’s FBI Warning – Fight Club (1999)
Given the twisted, psychological nature of David Fincher’s movie, it’s no surprise that Fight Club is packed to the brim with a whole host of cool hidden messages, many of which are employed on a subliminal level. The most famous of these has Tyler Durden (Brad Pitt) appearing in several of the movie’s scenes for a single frame at a time.
But here’s one that lots of people might have missed, though you’ll only catch this hidden message for the home DVD release. Once you’ve popped the disc into your player, you’ll be treated by an FBI warning (a general piracy warning if you’re in the UK). Business as usual. But wait a second, as the warning switches to something else.
A warning from… Tyler? And one instructing me to live my life to the full, ‘less I’m sitting here reading the text on an anti-piracy at home on my own, right? The reason most people will miss this is because we’re conditioned to just ignore that screen completely. Who knew? A hidden message that can make you feel like a real loser.
6. F*ck U – Kill Bill, Vol. 1 (2003)
Quentin Tarantino is one filmmaker who takes an obvious joy (and serious attitude) towards layering his movies with more in-jokes, movie references and hidden messages than you can shake a Big Kahuna Burger at. His fourth film, Kill Bill, has Uma Thurman as a former assassin seeking revenge on the associates who betrayed her, which she does using mostly a samurai sword.
One such samurai battle takes her to Tokyo, where she faces off against something like 77 enemies in the House of Blue Leaves. In one shot, though, as the Bride walks over a glass floor, the camera is nicely positioned underneath, so we can glimpsed the bottom of her shoe. And look, a personal message from Tarantino himself, which says…
Oh. Ahem. Well, although we could probably surmise that this little insult is more to do with the Bride’s “take no prisoners” attitude than one that is aimed directly at the public, it’s certainly possible this is a note from Tarantino, making fun of the fans who like to search his work for hidden messages… messages exactly like this one.
5. “Show Me The Monkey!” – King Kong (2005)
Here’s a hidden message that proves you should never listen to anything that a movie tells you, because it’s probably lying, and look at you, sitting there with your popcorn and soft drink, having a “good time” - shame on you! Inappropriate outbursts aside, the movie is King Kong, Peter Jackson’s epic love letter to his favourite movie ever.
And the scene in question, which takes liberty with your knowledge of morse code, by the way, comes at the very beginning, with the ship approaching the elusive Skull Island. A morse code message is suddenly received, which we are told is putting out a warrant from Carl Denham’s (Jack Black) arrest.
Nope. The real message translates to the hilarious “Show me the monkey!”, which will only not make sense if you don’t know what King Kong is. Anyway, this is why we should all brush out on dying languages, like morse code and, uh, Latin… in case Peter Jackson tries to trick us. Thankfully morse code machines don’t exist in The Hobbit.
4. “It’s Still Alive…” – Cloverfield (2008)
When it comes to huge, Godzilla-like monsters, the last thing you ever want to hear is: “It’s still alive…” Despite the fact that there’s never been any Cloverfield sequel of any kind put into the works, there’s a hidden message included at the end of the original flick that plainly allows us to understand that “Clover” is still breathing.
No need to feel bad if you missed this one, though, because the filmmakers decided to be super subtle about it: not only will you find it at the very end of the movie’s credits, its meaning can only be derived if you play it backwards. I don’t know who decided to do that first, but, uh, good work?
That’s to say, there’s a somewhat invincible ocean beast still trampling around New York, and I for one would like to know how the army went on to deal with something like that. I’m not saying we have to have a Cloverfield sequel or anything, but… Well, I am sort of saying that. Make a sequel. Please.
3. IS 5416 – The Matrix Reloaded (2003)
The world of the Matrix is both complex and complicated, something that the Wachowskis seemed to take a cruel kind of pleasure in when it came to writing the plots for the two somewhat ill-judged sequels to their original sci-fi classic. All Matrix movies are dense with references of both a philosophical and biblical nature, but perhaps one of the most interesting inclusions is this one.
Which you’ll be able to spot towards the beginning of The Matrix Reloaded, as Agent Smith (Hugo Weaving) steps out of his sleek Audi A8. Take a look at the license plate, which reads IS 5416. In any other movie, that’d probably just be a series of random letters and numbers, wouldn’t it? But this is The Matrix, people, where license plates are shorthand for deep theological implications…
“IS 5416″ is actually a neat reference to a Bible passage, Isaiah 54:16: “Behold, I have created the smith that bloweth the coals in the fire, and that bringeth forth an instrument for his work…” So whereas some directors just use cars as tools to ship their characters from place to place, the Wachowskis are using them to to get, like, seriously deep…
2. See You Next Wednesday – John Landis’ Filmography
You know John Landis as the man who made An American Werewolf in London and Michael Jackson’s infamous Thriller video. He’s also a man who likes to repeat the same joke over and over again, as witnessed by the (fictional) movie “See You Next Wednesday,” which has been scattered throughout his filmography in various incarnations.
Seriously. See You Next Wednesday came to John Landis when he heard the line during a phone conversation in Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey. Since then, he’s included it somewhere in at least 12 of his movies and TV show ventures. Sometimes it’s a movie poster, at other times the words are referenced in unsubtle dialogue cues.
Will we ever see a full-length version of See You Next Wednesday? I surely hope so, because going by the poster above (as glimpsed in the comedy/musical the Blues Brothers), it’s about a giant gorilla going berserk downtown. Which is what all movies should be about, fundamentally.
1. Superman/Batman Crossover – I Am Legend (2007)
Here’s an inclusion that was actually intended to be something of a real message back when it was drawn up, although – like most things in life – it eventually turned out to mean absolutely nothing, ’cause the world hates us, and some unspecified cosmic force just never wants that Superman/Batman crossover to happen.
The movie in question here is I Am Legend, which starred Will Smith as “the last man on Earth,” who wanders a post-apocalyptic New York with his dog and drives fast cars and stuff. Look hard enough and – during one scene – you can see a poster for what looks to be a Superman/Batman crossover over, with a release date of 15 May 2010.
When this got out (and as you’ll imagine it would have), the world went crazy, only for the collective dreams of comic fans everywhere to be later shattered. Why was it included, then, you ask? Because I Am Legend producer, Akiva Goldsman, had once apparently been involved in such a project, only for it never have realised. This was included as a sort of semi-reference to such a memory. We hate you, Akiva.
Benson and Hedges subliminal advertisement
The above is an advertisement by Benson and Hedges, for their cigarettes. It talks about the two kinds of product packaging, and how cigarettes are safe in their hard pack. The conscious mind percieves the two actors, the pack of cigarettes and the room they are in.
However, to the sub/unconscious mind the message depicted is entirely sexual. Notice the reference to the male phallus in the actor's hand and the candellebra. Also scrawled on the wall behind them is the word "Sex" clearly visible.
Saturday, September 7, 2013
Subliminal cues in Disney's Snow White
Snow White Is About Cocaine
The Walt Disney Company has been the center of countless conspiracy theories, most of them about sexualizing children. However, some claim Uncle Walt also wanted to teach the kids about doing blow, and that he intended Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs to be a timeless classic about cocaine. The biggest piece of “evidence” supporting this theory is the characters’ names: Snow White is slang for cocaine, and the dwarfs’ names supposedly represent the different stages of addiction. First, users are happy, and then they start sneezing. Eventually, they get sleepy, and then they’ll feel depressed or bashful. Then users will act dopey, and eventually they’ll need to see a doc.
Not surprisingly, there isn’t any real proof to back these claims. No one who knew Walt Disney ever claimed that he or his animators used recreational drugs. Even so, Snow White was released in 1937, and the big drug of the ’30s was alcohol, not cocaine. So perhaps Dumbo was part of a conspiracy to have kids grow up to be alkies. (Of course, anyone who saw that pink elephant sequence probably swore off drinking for life.)
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)