This was done for a fictional play of Brave me and my friends brainstormed. I loved the idea of Dennis playing one of the triplets, and Ericka + Van helsing and him singing "Mordu" while Drac watched besotted at his wife singing joyfully about terrible things and Mavis having some concerns.
predaking: i’ve had about one hour of sleep, half a brownie, 10 shots of caffeine, so i’m ready to either jump off a cliff, kill starscream, adopt twelve children, fight god, or jump in the river
It just occurred to me that we haven’t seen Thirteen in a long time. Are they doing well? How have they been feeling? Are they still teaching classes? I worry for my space suit babe.
There was a comment that Riley's Parents only have emotions that reflect their own gender.
I feel like there are so many possible theories about that. One is that Riley is from Gen Z and their generation has a more accepting view about expressing Feminine and Masculine attributes. That there is no distinction. All expressions fall under the human banner.
- Hedgy
PS: This screenshot is from the scene when Joy and Sadness get sucked into Long Term Memory and it's only Disgust, Fear, and Anger left behind to express emotions.
When Bear mentioned that she wanted to re-watch the first instalment of 'Inside Out', I wasn't so keen on joining her.
Somehow I just decided to go for it. I think I was reluctant because I've seen it at least 4 times (each with a different person --- plus also other times where I used it as a reference to become a better storyteller.).
One of the experiences with watching the film with Bear is that Bear noticed that Joy is actually recognised by the parents. At first I was like...
"Wait...did Riley's father define his daughter as a Bundle of Joy?"
....but then while I rewatched that scene later, it was actually Joy who appeared and got Riley to smile. This made me come up with the theory that the emotion that is leading the person is the first emotion that shows up.
Previously...I thought Riley's father had anger as his Lead Emotion because that's what society has encouraged men to express. Then for Riley's mother...it's sadness because of the oppression women face.