MePhone's reality show competition finale with Suitcase and Knife contestants is jeopardized when his creator's past reemerges, endangering participants and threatening an unresolved ending.MePhone's reality show competition finale with Suitcase and Knife contestants is jeopardized when his creator's past reemerges, endangering participants and threatening an unresolved ending.MePhone's reality show competition finale with Suitcase and Knife contestants is jeopardized when his creator's past reemerges, endangering participants and threatening an unresolved ending.
Americatress
- Control Shimmer
- (voice)
Marco Bonomo
- Yin-Yang
- (voice)
Michael Bruzzone
- Lightbulb
- (voice)
Dee Cashin
- Cheesy
- (voice)
- …
Alexa Chapman
- Pepper
- (voice)
- …
Hailey Chapman
- Microphone
- (voice)
Justin Chapman
- Goo
- (voice)
- …
Kacie Chapman
- Soap
- (voice)
Olivia Ciabattari
- MePhone3G
- (voice)
- …
Geoff Goldfeder
- Mechintosh
- (voice)
Brian Koch
- Fan
- (voice)
- …
Casey Landman
- Cabby
- (voice)
Featured reviews
10julbella
Genuinely! Amazing. I got into this show two months ago, but I grew to it immediately! This movie was the cherry on top for the series entirely. Adam Katz made this amazing show, and did a great job. Brian Koch is SUCH A GOOD WRITER! Justin Chapman is such a good voice actor and director! The main three are amazing at what they do, making this show and movie shine. This movie made me cry, both a mix of happy and sad. It taught me lessons, and touched my heart more than anything. Thank you, Animation Epic. Thank you Adam, Brian, and Justin. This was absolutely phenomenal and breathtaking!!!!!!!
10frakgirl
Honestly, this show has literally been one of the best things ever. Whenever anything new about it comes out I get extremely excited because this was the best show of my life. I seriously hope this piece of media is history, because it deserves to be. It was perfect and i was shaking from happiness. Although i did not see it in theatres, I genuinely enjoyed watching it on YouTube. This show has been my life and the whole community surrounding all of these shows are so amazing and I truly appreciate all of it, I just wish I could say, thank you. For helping me in stressful times, Making me feel better whenever I was down, and overall making my life more enjoyable, And I dont even know If I would be alive, because through these shows Ive met people that are also in the community, Who genuinely have made my life better. Thank you, for all of this. <3.
10adapeek
I thank the directors so much for the work that went into this show. The final act was released the day of my 18th birthday, which felt especially impactful as a viewer of nearly a decade now?? Wow! Time flies! But regardless it was everything I hoped, and everything I believe the show deserved. This show was built off of a pure passion and want to create. From its first episode to a movie concluding a story built over the course of 15-ish years later, I can feel that passion in every moment. Every scene, every piece of dialogue, every story beat, and every action has meaning. It's seeping with the love, passion, and commitment the directors gave it. I do not hesitate to say that this is the most impressive piece of indie media I have ever seen. Not just impressive because of its quality, but impressive because of the journey that got it here. I doubt anyone else could've done what they've done. Very few would have that want to commit to a show for this long, but I think that goes to show their belief in their own creations. It is so incredibly inspiring to see something that started off so small get so far. That is, to say, this hit different for me. I think seeing the end credits just made me realize how much this thing means to me. I'm not active online, on socials or in fandom, but I've always been around. Inanimate insanity was the first time I had every heard about the concept or queer-genders. It introduced me to communities of animators, actors, writers, all making independent media. For me, it was an example of how you improve. You don't make the same things better, but build off of what you made and go further.
Whether anyone who worked on this show sees this or not, I hope they know just how much their art means to us, and they are amazing at what they do!
Whether anyone who worked on this show sees this or not, I hope they know just how much their art means to us, and they are amazing at what they do!
Don't get me wrong, I really like the rest of Inanimate Insanity (apart from season 3), and I get that this finale is a homage to the over a decade old series, but to me this just felt unrecognisable from where the show started, and I think that's a bad thing. Think of season 1, a season obviously made by kids with the low quality animation and the childish sense of humour. To me, that's what I want from an object show, for it to feel childish and fun and silly and nothing else. It doesn't have to be made by a large team, it doesn't have to have perfect writing and it definitely doesn't need the seemingly constant reminders that this show is made by adults, not kids and that it is so deep and intelligent; because really, no matter how much older the creators may be, or how many impossibly long ramblings about morals or life lessons that never seem to make their point, object shows are made to be fun. They're made to be silly. The whole concept of a show with talking objects is just crazy and hilarious, so why does inanimate insanity seem to try so hard to be serious and to be realistic when that's the opposite of what it's meant to be? I'm not saying that no one can ever branch out from this or that no shows can ever be serious at all, I'm just saying that it doesn't feel right. It feels like inanimate insanity is trying to be something that it's not. When it shoves it down your throat so hard that this show is so emotionally mature and clever, you get sick of it really quickly. On the contrary, early season 2 was great, the funny faces, silly jokes and overall goofy tone was really entertaining, along with some messages sprinkled throughout that actually felt important because they weren't constantly shoved in your face and weren't the defining factor of the episodes. I do appreciate the amount of effort that goes into this show and the quality is amazing but that isn't important when you are lacking a lot of other things that make a show special. I wouldn't usually criticise an object show this much but if inanimate insanity begs to be taken seriously then that's what I'm gonna do.
Pretty much every object show seems to have the classic 'stereotype' characters (the mean guy, valley girl etc.) And the way these apparent stereotypes were implemented in Inanimate Insanity was really strange. In season 1 the basic characteristics were very apparent in every character. In early season 2 they tried to build off these characteristics whilst also staying true to each character. It worked very well and most characters were simple enough but also had some depth to them to keep things interesting. As season 2 went on, the writers seemed to attempt to make these characters as human as possible. I understand the appeal of this since some people like to relate to the characters I guess but i'm not too fussed either way. To me the idea that Mephone made the contestants and the show as a way to 'rebel against cobs' seems completely ridiculous to me. Sure it might make for a more interesting plot and character development, but as for Mephone's motives in this, his character feels so watered down that it's actually difficult to tell whether he's the good guy or bad guy in all of this, though Mephone is probably the worst case because I do believe some other characters' development is way more clear and handled better; Taco, Knife and Suitcase to name a few. I also think that Cobs works much better as a comedic character rather than a main villian. His personality in his first appearances just felt better suited to him (it's not a big deal though as I enjoy him as a villian despite his lack of motive). One thing I do enjoy are the songs. They've been prominent for a while now and I think they're really fun and entertaining; especially when they are used to express a characters feelings (I'd much rather it happen through song than the dreaded rambling). Although I still love Inanimate Insanity I can't help but spot the many flaws in it's final show-ruining finale like of the lack of charm and cringe worthy forced seriousness and complexity.
Pretty much every object show seems to have the classic 'stereotype' characters (the mean guy, valley girl etc.) And the way these apparent stereotypes were implemented in Inanimate Insanity was really strange. In season 1 the basic characteristics were very apparent in every character. In early season 2 they tried to build off these characteristics whilst also staying true to each character. It worked very well and most characters were simple enough but also had some depth to them to keep things interesting. As season 2 went on, the writers seemed to attempt to make these characters as human as possible. I understand the appeal of this since some people like to relate to the characters I guess but i'm not too fussed either way. To me the idea that Mephone made the contestants and the show as a way to 'rebel against cobs' seems completely ridiculous to me. Sure it might make for a more interesting plot and character development, but as for Mephone's motives in this, his character feels so watered down that it's actually difficult to tell whether he's the good guy or bad guy in all of this, though Mephone is probably the worst case because I do believe some other characters' development is way more clear and handled better; Taco, Knife and Suitcase to name a few. I also think that Cobs works much better as a comedic character rather than a main villian. His personality in his first appearances just felt better suited to him (it's not a big deal though as I enjoy him as a villian despite his lack of motive). One thing I do enjoy are the songs. They've been prominent for a while now and I think they're really fun and entertaining; especially when they are used to express a characters feelings (I'd much rather it happen through song than the dreaded rambling). Although I still love Inanimate Insanity I can't help but spot the many flaws in it's final show-ruining finale like of the lack of charm and cringe worthy forced seriousness and complexity.
I love you Brian, Adam and Justin we all chant in unison. Inanimate insanity changed our lives for the better. This movie was... insane, no pun intended. But yeah, I cried and I threw up in A GOOD WAY!!!,! But seriously, thank you guys for making this. It was better than any film I've ever seen before, who knew inanimate objects could make such a big impact on that little brain of mine. From everything, the songs to the dialogue. It was PERFECT, flawless. I saw no mistakes, no gaps in the plot. Not only was it the best film, but just the best.. sight.. in general. Tears were shed and an hour later I'm still shaking. I don't think I'll ever stop. But it's nice. It'll always be a reminder of how great my life became because of this film. 💕Thank you Animationepic, for all you have done for me.
Did you know
- ConnectionsFeatures Inanimate Insanity: The Reality of the Situation (2024)
- SoundtracksThe Future Is So Yesterday
Lyrics by Brian Koch
Music by Ben Cross (as Benjamin Cross)
Vocal arrangement and editing by Ben Cross (as Benjamin Cross)
Instrumental arrangement by Adam Halpin
Mixing by Hunter Bass
Performed by Joshua Waters
Additional voices by Olivia Ciabattari, Ben Cross (as Benjamin Cross), Taylor Renee Castle, Jazzy Oliver, Dane Trent (as Dane Trent [WoopDoo]), and Ariana Nicole George
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- II2 Movie
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 46 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 16 : 9
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content