Views : 99,168
Genre: Music
Date of upload: Feb 13, 2024 ^^
Rating : 4.919 (173/8,422 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2024-05-16T18:29:22.027266Z
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Top Comments of this video!! :3
Hellfire is the quintessential song from this movie, it's not only damn good but it really shows you the blackness of Frollo's soul. Also keep in mind that in the book, Frollo is much younger and even a tragic character of sorts, Disney were the ones who made him into this monster you see before you.
19:46 Yes, he wants her so bad that he is willing to BURN DOWN ALL OF PARIS to get her. Truly, the boner that burnt down a city
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One thing I read about Quasimodo that has stuck with me for years, is that when he is around other people and speaks to them, he stutters and his words break, but when he is alone he speaks fluently and strong. (This might be more from the musical than from the movie) You can see this as he speaks to the gargoyles, it is all in his head, they arenât real, but itâs his internal dialogue. He doesnât struggle to speak with them and you can see how intelligent he truly is and internally he doesnât struggle with his disabilities. His singing is beautiful and powerful, because it is in his head where is isnât limited. People judge him for his outward appearance without realizing how intelligent, talented, and caring he is.
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Yeah, Hellfire is considered the best Disney villain song ever, if not the best villain song period. It's really good, as is all the music from this movie. It is a flawed masterpiece of a film, but a masterpiece nonetheless
Also 20:36 the very next thing we see in the movie is the next morning and him being cranky. His captain of the guard asks "are you alright, sir?" and he responds "I had a little trouble with the fireplace"
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Some context if you never had any: basically Frollo started to lust for Esmerelda, but because heâs extremely religious, that would mean that he is technically sinning. This movie took place in the 1500s, where âgypsiesâ (Roma people) were widely hated on and even hunted down. Esmerelda is Roma. So that made him even more vexed. At the beginning of Hellfire, Frollo was begging saint Mary to send Esmerelda away and make her burn in hell, however by the end of the song, Frollo switched to swearing that heâll burn Esmerelda (at the stake) himself. The giant red figures in the song represent his conscience; constantly repeating the phrase âmea culpaâ which means âmy faultâ which shows at the beginning, he was feeling guilty but tried to shift that guilt and say it was Esmerelda, or the devilâs fault. At the end of the song, you can actually hear his conscience syncing in with his actual voice, meaning he confidently chose to burn Esmerelda. When the song was interrupted by the church worker who informed Frollo that Esmerelda escaped, this actually represented Saint Mary, or Maria, giving Frollo a chance at redemption, however, Frollo still chose the dark side.
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Hilariously, toward the end of Hellfire, Frollo begs for god to remove the temptation so that he will no longer be tempted to sin. Then a guard comes in and tells him that Esmeralda has disappeared from the cathedral. Which means that she is no longer there to take his time and tempt him and he could just let her vanish into the night.
He instead decides to burn down the city to get her back because she's HIS!
Dude actually got his prayer answered exactly as asked and rejected the mercy.
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What you didn't hear from the first song was the jester or whatever he's called was telling the story of a man and a monster so that's why there's the "who is the monster and who is the man" at the end since at the beginning of the story it's almost implied that he means that quasimodo is the monster when really frollo is the monster in the story.
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20:18 God have mercy on her, god have mercy on me. But she will be mine or she will burn.
The chills when you realize he has made his choice already, even knowing it is wrong.
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@MathewMcKenna
3 months ago
all aboard the Disney train
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