Ben Shapiro's Conservative Take on Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory

Published 2017-02-15
Ben Shapiro's take on the 1971 Movie Charlie and the Chocolate Factory !

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All Comments (21)
  • @minisoda1234
    Is it just my computer, or does the sound stop being synced with the visual during the movie trailer?
  • @Sirax123
    What if Ben Shapiro made a killing off of breaking down movies politically
  • @sgtwaddle7461
    He just made me think of this movie In a completely different light.
  • @tyleramon8371
    I remember when I was a kid, I used to wonder how the grandpa could walk so well because he wasn't able to walk for most of his life. I thought his legs would be too weak to dance.
  • The four bratty children don't actually die. In the book, they are all alive at the end (though they're not in very good shape), and this movie makes it so ambiguous that I never just assumed they died as a kid. I always thought it was up to interpretation (even before I knew the term 'interpretation'). Other than that, Ben Shapiro is spot-on. I always did also wonder what the grandparents were doing if they were still so mobile. Shouldn't they have been insanely bored all day?
  • @MasterFhyl
    Even as a child, I saw and was horrified by the 4 grandparents who just sat in bed while that poor mother worked her ass off to support the 6 of them. I also noticed how the MOMENT Grandpa Joe saw something he wanted to get out of bed for, he was out in a heartbeat. (Side note, how horrible must that bed smell after 4 layabouts not moving there for 20 years?)
  • @rusticman
    Roald Dahl, the original writer, had sort of a theme of bad parental figures.
  • @WilHiteWarrior
    "Mad chocolateer invites children to factory, kills them off one by one" lol I always hear people say that the kids were murdered or died horrible deaths and stuff like that when people talk about Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, but... am I the only person on earth who noticed that Wonka tells Charlie that the other kids will be fine, "restored to their normal terrible selves and maybe a little wiser for the wear"?
  • @oliviaw6926
    “The villainy doesn’t end there, that’s not where the villainy ends” did anyone else laugh at that?
  • @ajayjay6307
    I've been saying this for the longest time. Another thing that happened at the end was when willy wonka told Charlie that he was giving Charlie the factory and that Charlie can move in immediately, grandpa Joe chimes and and says, "and me?" Always worried about himself and no one else lol
  • @user-zk1tb1yx2e
    Never understood why I didn't like Grandpa Joe following Charlie around the whole film, now I remember.
  • @solaceboy
    So, Grandpa Joe would have loved Obama.
  • Whether you're conservative or liberal, we can all agree on one thing The reboot sucked
  • @matthewlee4834
    It's WILLY WONKA'S Chocolate Factory, not Charlie's. Ben even says in the video that he "isn't talking about the dumb Johnny Depp" version
  • @khfan4life365
    I watched the 1971 movie in first grade when we read the book. Ever since then, I've enjoyed the movie and catch myself humming the songs at work and home.
  • @november132
    it's interesting though how the grandfather acts like a typical sjw yet while watching the movie you don't really notice it, yet in today's shows/movies it's so forced and cringy that you can't even watch it
  • @lomak7422
    Here i thought the best part about ben shapiro was hearing him tear apart libtards, its actually hearing him talk about his kids. Got a lot of respect for Ben, keep up the good work =) "she's got my sense of humor" when referencing throwing a kid down the shute for throwing a tantrum. Classic.