Guillermo del Toro was like "I hate it when the happy ending is the monster turning human" and by God he's right (he also hates fascism.)
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go off king GO THE FUCK OFFFFFFFF
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Reasons to watch Del Toro's Pinocchio
Its stop motion
The stop motion was done by people who worked on The Adventures of Mark Twain
Its Guillermo Del Toro's passion project that he's been trying to have made for over a decade
It was co-written by Patrick Mchale who made Over The Garden Wall
The designs of not just Pinocchio but the Blue Fairy, the humans and the sets are incredible
The entire score was done in wood instruments
It satirizes propaganda and how it is used to manipulate impressionable minds
Its pretty fucking anti-war
It tackles themes of loss, death, war & abuse
It does not fuck around when it comes to mature subjects
We need more support for stop motion films, its a great animation style and has so much potential that we hardly ever see
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Love this little guy.
(Look, if you know me, you know I make silly stuff for media that emotionally destroyed me as a coping mechanism.)
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[ID: A tweet by Guillermo del Toro that reads, "One significant step on Pinocchio (2022) is that we credit the animators right up front alongside the cast members- because they are. And we are touring w the puppets and Georgina Hayns to showcase the artistry that allows that performance.". Below the tweet is an edited picture of Gordon Ramsay with text over it that says, "delicious. Finally, some good fucking respect for animators."]
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It’s legitimately pretty funny that the marketing for Del Toro’s Pinocchio hides that the whole movie is a political satire about fascist Italy. Netflix is selling Del Toro’s auteurism, but is terrified you might find out the “anti-fascist fairy tale” guy made another anti-fascist fairy tale, lol.
Like there’s a couple fluff pieces about how Del Toro spent 20 years fighting to get this made, and none of them elaborate that it’s because no studios wanted to get political with a kids movie. We love praising “passion projects” but hate when artists have actual values behind them.
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Woke up this morning thinking about this scene:
“He’s made of wood too. Why do they like him, and not me?”
and how it’s such a subtle and masterful callout of the Catholics who don’t even seem to realize that they’re failing one of the most basic tenets of their faith. Like yeah, speaking as an insider, one of the most common failings of people who claim to be Catholic is that they think they’re immune to or above certain human behaviors, but in actuality they’re just as capable of pride and hatred as the people who crucified Jesus were. It’s so easy to get caught up in a sense of moral superiority that it can make you entirely blind to the whole point of Christianity--humility and unconditional love. And that kind of thing is what makes outsiders think that it’s our faith that’s the problem, when it’s actually our failure to live out that faith that hurts people. And Del Toro manages to capture that entire discussion in just a few scenes and a handful of words without ever coming across as spiteful or angry and HAVE I MENTIONED THAT THIS MOVIE IS VERY GOOD? HAVE YOU PICKED UP ON THAT YET?!
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loved the biblically accurate fata turchina and her much hotter sister
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