Strange that I and many other men seemed to enjoy the movie then.Quote:
Illumination makes fun movies for kids, Pixar now makes movies aimed at middle aged females that sometimes also appeal to kids.
Strange that I and many other men seemed to enjoy the movie then.Quote:
Illumination makes fun movies for kids, Pixar now makes movies aimed at middle aged females that sometimes also appeal to kids.
We saw it yesterday. My 14 year old daughter has been having similar attacks with sports and just can't understand why. Been trying to tell her it's just a pile of emotions steam rolling in her mind...very similar to those in the movie. After the breakdown scene, we both looked at each and went "whoa". Was very spot on.Aggie Therapist said:
As a clinical therapist, this movie is absolutely amazing for opening a dialogue with your kids and teens on emotions and why we feel a certain way sometimes.
I will watch this movie and recommend it to clients.
jokershady said:Genuinely curious….in your line of work which movie do you hold in higher regard in relating/recommending it to clients….the first one or this one?Aggie Therapist said:
As a clinical therapist, this movie is absolutely amazing for opening a dialogue with your kids and teens on emotions and why we feel a certain way sometimes.
I will watch this movie and recommend it to clients.
They're both great to me but curious to hear your take.
The first one focuses mainly on how any overpowering emotion regardless of its purpose is negative and all emotions are important when kept in check.
This one does focus on the same thing but deals with more complex (or new) emotions as you come of age and the complexity of building your character and beliefs.
Stive said:
Just curious why you guys didn't like it (or the first for that matter)?
Awesome! Appreciate the professional perspective.Aggie Therapist said:jokershady said:Genuinely curious….in your line of work which movie do you hold in higher regard in relating/recommending it to clients….the first one or this one?Aggie Therapist said:
As a clinical therapist, this movie is absolutely amazing for opening a dialogue with your kids and teens on emotions and why we feel a certain way sometimes.
I will watch this movie and recommend it to clients.
They're both great to me but curious to hear your take.
The first one focuses mainly on how any overpowering emotion regardless of its purpose is negative and all emotions are important when kept in check.
This one does focus on the same thing but deals with more complex (or new) emotions as you come of age and the complexity of building your character and beliefs.
I think the first one is great for smaller kiddos but I appreciate the complexity of the second inside out 2 because more emotions are involved.
I do like the second one better personally. They shed some light on cognitive distortions we process (irrational thoughts) and doing a great job on focusing on thinking errors ( "I'm not good enough" was said for a long time by Riley's mind in the movie) but we can challenge those thoughts of self doubt before the turn into negative core beliefs. There's usually plenty of evidence we dismiss because we are hyper fixated on only our negatives.
AggieOO said:
Honestly, I don't think there's much to it. The just slapped a mustache or whatever on the emotion to match the character so they were differentiate from Riley's.
jokershady said:Awesome! Appreciate the professional perspective.Aggie Therapist said:jokershady said:Genuinely curious….in your line of work which movie do you hold in higher regard in relating/recommending it to clients….the first one or this one?Aggie Therapist said:
As a clinical therapist, this movie is absolutely amazing for opening a dialogue with your kids and teens on emotions and why we feel a certain way sometimes.
I will watch this movie and recommend it to clients.
They're both great to me but curious to hear your take.
The first one focuses mainly on how any overpowering emotion regardless of its purpose is negative and all emotions are important when kept in check.
This one does focus on the same thing but deals with more complex (or new) emotions as you come of age and the complexity of building your character and beliefs.
I think the first one is great for smaller kiddos but I appreciate the complexity of the second inside out 2 because more emotions are involved.
I do like the second one better personally. They shed some light on cognitive distortions we process (irrational thoughts) and doing a great job on focusing on thinking errors ( "I'm not good enough" was said for a long time by Riley's mind in the movie) but we can challenge those thoughts of self doubt before the turn into negative core beliefs. There's usually plenty of evidence we dismiss because we are hyper fixated on only our negatives.
If you had your choice and they made a 3rd one, what would you want them to focus on?
The original was my kids' first movie when they were 3 and has endured as one of their favorites.jokershady said:
It'll be ok as in it won't scare or freak her out or anything....but she won't be able to follow the themes of the movie and it's meaning.
Don't think she'd be able to follow the original one either....but worth a shot as there's nothing wrong with either that would spook a little one.
Absolutely doesn't mean you can't enjoy them - just that the primary audience for these movies is female and the audience numbers bear that out. A lot of guys enjoyed the Barbie movie, but they weren't the primary intended audience for that movie either.Brian Earl Spilner said:Strange that I and many other men seemed to enjoy the movie then.Quote:
Illumination makes fun movies for kids, Pixar now makes movies aimed at middle aged females that sometimes also appeal to kids.
Based on the early box office returns, every female alive must be going to this movie 5 times a day.agdoc2001 said:Absolutely doesn't mean you can't enjoy them - just that the primary audience for these movies is female and the audience numbers bear that out. A lot of guys enjoyed the Barbie movie, but they weren't the primary intended audience for that movie either.Brian Earl Spilner said:Strange that I and many other men seemed to enjoy the movie then.Quote:
Illumination makes fun movies for kids, Pixar now makes movies aimed at middle aged females that sometimes also appeal to kids.
The Illumination movies are more gender neutral
agdoc2001 said:Absolutely doesn't mean you can't enjoy them - just that the primary audience for these movies is female and the audience numbers bear that out. A lot of guys enjoyed the Barbie movie, but they weren't the primary intended audience for that movie either.Brian Earl Spilner said:Strange that I and many other men seemed to enjoy the movie then.Quote:
Illumination makes fun movies for kids, Pixar now makes movies aimed at middle aged females that sometimes also appeal to kids.
The Illumination movies are more gender neutral
I did read that over 50% of the audience for this film are adults.The Porkchop Express said:Based on the early box office returns, every female alive must be going to this movie 5 times a day.agdoc2001 said:Absolutely doesn't mean you can't enjoy them - just that the primary audience for these movies is female and the audience numbers bear that out. A lot of guys enjoyed the Barbie movie, but they weren't the primary intended audience for that movie either.Brian Earl Spilner said:Strange that I and many other men seemed to enjoy the movie then.Quote:
Illumination makes fun movies for kids, Pixar now makes movies aimed at middle aged females that sometimes also appeal to kids.
The Illumination movies are more gender neutral
agdoc2001 said:Absolutely doesn't mean you can't enjoy them - just that the primary audience for these movies is female and the audience numbers bear that out. A lot of guys enjoyed the Barbie movie, but they weren't the primary intended audience for that movie either.Brian Earl Spilner said:Strange that I and many other men seemed to enjoy the movie then.Quote:
Illumination makes fun movies for kids, Pixar now makes movies aimed at middle aged females that sometimes also appeal to kids.
The Illumination movies are more gender neutral