I mean i’ve seen WORSE posters bu tthe VHS/Blu Ray cover just invokes a feeling of warmth the film proper does and feels more down to earth: Goofy on top of the car being himself, Max and Roxanne talking to each other, Bobby being there despite no one asking for him to be there. It’ spart of why I used the VHS cover instead of the theatrical poster like I usually do with movies> The other reason is frankly that the theatrical poster is as generic as all hell. So getting to the movie itself, like most of you reading this I grew up with the movie. While I do NEED my patreon and review commissions to get by doing this, I do not want to at the expense of you the reader especially those of you who would gladly help but like me don’t have a ton of money. If you’d like to learn more, it’s at the end of the review as I didn’t want to shove an add up front and I feel doing so in the past few weeks has lead to less people reading my work. I got approval from my patreons and that’s that. Once I had the idea for Goof Week though, it was obvoius this had to be the finale: it’s easily Goofy’s biggest appearance, it’s iconic to my generation and the generation before, and it had great symmetry: opening with him and Max in Goof Troop and closing with Max all grown up and Goofy struggling to connect with him. Hyuck, Yahoooey and Gorsh all you happy people! I’m proud to present the epic finale to my week long Goofy Birthday Celebration: A Goofy Movie!Īs you can tell by the title this review is a result of me hitting my 15 dollar stretch goal on Patreon a few months back, originally planning to review it in April for the movie’s anniversary.
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