>For the last time, we did not order a giant trampoline>You know, pal, you could have told me that before I set it up
>>154357959The "For the last time" implies the guard DID tell him that repeatedly. If the guard is telling the truth, the delivery guy is wrong.
>>154357959Why is there a giant trampoline provider in the capital? Why are the trampolines of a modern design? What's the trampoline made of that it's able to not only withstand CatYzma's impact, but also super-elastically launch them back into the air? Who is buying all these giant trampolines that they're able to sustain a viable business? What's their business model? What's their employee benefits package like? Do they get stock options? How do you explain an ancient Mesoamerican city having a stock market?I can't believe people defend this crap movie.
>>154358045It's called being cartoony (and that's probably why it flopped :()
>>154357959ha
>>154358045https://www.vulture.com/article/an-oral-history-of-disney-the-emperors-new-groove.html>Dindal: Story rooms, often someone will pitch an idea almost as a joke and then someone else goes, “That’s funny. But what are we really going to do?” This was the only movie I worked on where someone pitched an idea like that and we went, “Let’s use that.” Like Yzma, [who’s been turned into a] kitten, is falling off the tower and we’re like, “How are we going to get her back up? She’s not going to splat.” I don’t remember if it was Dave or Don Hall, another story artist who’s become a director since, said, “What if there’s a trampoline salesman at the bottom and she hits that and bounces back up?” We said, “Oh yeah. That’s what it should be.” You can’t imagine a story session in Bambi where somebody says that. This quickly became a movie where a trampoline salesman makes sense.
>>154358045It's joke