We’ve got a new nutcase on our hands and Brian is not a character he uses.
(Source: poohadventures.wikia.com)
(Source: poohadventures.wikia.com)





Overall: 2.4/5
0.52/10. Well, that was disappointing. I really should’ve picked a worse video to riff this Halloween. I could’ve picked one of Yakko’s videos (that is, if I could find them again). Instead, I chose an old video that doesn’t come close to -1/10. I mean, come on, it’s Pooh’s Adventures of frickin’ Beetlejuice. Ah well, at least I didn’t have to sit through introduction scenes or overlong gasping montages. Hope you enjoyed your Halloween better than this video!
Don’t have much to comment about on this part, since the guests have such little screen time. People think this is fun, by the way.
*Couldn’t find a better reaction shot, sorry
You know, Pooh and his friends have such little screen time so far, I was expecting something newer. Something worse.
And here’s the part where Winnie the Pooh and his friends finally die.
Boo! Hiss!
Yes, those sounds are exactly what you think they are and more. It’s Halloween! So here’s a terrifyingly bad idea for a Disney crossover, and old one from the looks of it - the original Beetlejuice. There’s also adventures through Hocus Pocus and The Haunted Mansion with Eddie Murphy, but those two are Disney themselves. This is Tim Burton going wild at Geffen.
Where I come from, Beetlejuice is classified 15, a more strict rating than PG. This is not just because the film has swearing that will quite obviously be replaced by tamer captions, but because of the gory images throughout. How will Daniel Esposito cope? Let’s find out, shall we? *evil cackling followed by a fit of coughing and wheezing* Winnie the Pooh meets Beetlejuice.
Remember the time I controlled a Jaeger with talking trains and magical equines inside?
(Source: poohadventures.wikia.com)





Overall: 3.4/5
0.32/10. Well, that was okay. The movie I mean, not the video. The video sucks. While it could have been worse, it just goes to show how these Pooh’s Adventures creators do not understand comedy, even when it isn’t that funny itself. They just see movies as fun and adventure, not anything inspirational (besides crossovers) or well-developed.
You’d have to be a complete fool to miss the point of a film that has the intention of satire or teaching life lesssons; Back in Action may be too self-aware, but it’s the anti-Space Jam, and one of the biggest problems with Space Jam was that it was fun over substance, with too many characters surrounding our hero including those with no personality. This video is not what Joe Dante had in mind. And what better way to finish off a commentary on Looney Tunes than…