The Film Theorists - Is The Red Man Really Defeated?

The episode starts with MatPat watching Cartoon Network. He then sighs and turns the TV off. He turns to the audience and laughs. The Film Theorists theme then plays. The Looney Tunes theme plays. The Scooby-Doo theme then plays. The classic The Powerpuff Girls theme then plays. The pictures of the respective franchises, companies and channels are shown as he speaks. He shows a clip. He plays a scene from the film. Matthew is frightened. Another excerpt is played. Coco meows. A dramatic sound effect plays. He rewinds the film. It cuts to his defeat.
 * Matthew: A lot of awesome cartoons they have and they insist with Teen Titans Go! all day long? I remember when CN had variety. Where's Looney Tunes? Where's Scooby-Doo? Where's the classic The Powerpuff Girls? Where's the good DC shows? Most importantly, Where's Waldo?
 * Matthew: Hello, internet and welcome to another Film Theory! Today we are tackling Warner Bros.' biggest animated franchise.
 * Matthew: No, it's not that one.
 * Matthew: It's not that one either.
 * Matthew: That's not even a franchise. Anyway, like it was for Disney and Nickelodeon, the 1990s were the golden decade for Warner Bros. Entertainment.
 * Matthew: The studio turned 75, Bugs Bunny turned 50, DC was back in the animation map, we saw new concepts like Tiny Toon Adventures, Animaniacs, Freakazoid!, Collin the Speedy Boy, Free Willy, ER and, of course, Friends. Yet, their biggest step was taken in 1997 when they merged with Turner, giving them the ownership of New Line Cinema, CNN, TNT, Hanna-Barbera and, of course, Cartoon Network. But in 1998, they made a good animated film franchise, possibly the only successful one from the 1990s after some previous fiascos like Cats Don't Dance and Quest for Camelot or before later fiascos like The Iron Giant. No, I'm not saying that I don't like them. I’m saying they didn't do well. From the animated films that Warner produced in the 1990s, this one and Space Jam were the only ones that were box-office successes. Yet, Space Jam was criticized by some, including frickin' Chuck Jones. But this film isn't. I'm talking about The Mystic Woods.
 * Matthew: The Mystic Woods was Warner Bros.' response to Disney's blockbusters from that decade, at a time DreamWorks started to show his claws. It even includes one of the stars of one of its movies. Robin Williams, who starred as the Genie in Disney's Aladdin earlier that decade, voiced the protagonist's comedic imp partner. And that protagonist was voiced by no one else than Drew Barrymore. Most precisely in her post-Scream and pre-Charlie's Angels phase. The plot is really simple, it follows a teenage girl that discovers she has the abilitity to communicate with the supernatural. But there's one important character: the big bad himself, the Red Man, voiced by John Glover. (notices) Wait, you don't know who John Glover is? Remember when Smallville aired on The WB and then on The CW? He was Lex Luthor's father. He also voiced the Riddler in the Batman animated series.
 * Red Man: (archive footage) You want to know the real reason I'm here, you foolish hero? Simple, to kill you.
 * Miranda: (archive footage, gasps) There's a lot of questions, but I'm going to pick the most obvious one: why?
 * Red Man: (archive footage) I want to. Especially since you tried to ruin my goals to create a perfect world where there's eternal peace and no war.
 * Matthew: Sorry, it's just that... (sighs) childhood nightmares. If Finding Nemo wasn't bad enough... this is five times worse. Especially in a PG-rated movie. But now to get on topic. The Red Man might be an antagonist, but he has a good goal: to make a perfect world. The problem is... that’s completely impossible. But that's a theory for another day. Like every film villain, he gets defeated. But what if he actually assumed a new form? Two years later, Cartoon Network premiered an animated series set after the film's events. Neither Drew or Robin reprise their roles on it as they are busy. As a result, their characters are voiced by sound-alikes. Miranda is now voiced by that chick who voiced other characters on TV like Lola Bunny from Looney Tunes, Princess Sally from Sonic SatAM, Phil and Lil DeVille from Rugrats, Fifi La Fume and Lil' Sneezer from Tiny Toon Adventures amongst others as Implo is now voiced by the same guy who is usually Robin's voice double, also voicing Ultron in Avengers Assemble. But let's focus on the theory at hand.
 * Miranda: (archive footage, sighs) Oh my... Is he...?
 * Implo: (archive footage) Yep. He's dead.
 * Matthew: Oh, is he?!
 * Matthew: I think not! Let's take a closer look to the supposed death scene.
 * Matthew: Look at his hand. Suspicious, right? It is red. If you watched the cartoon series, the Red Man still appears through Miranda's nightmares and hallucinations. What if they weren't? What if I told you that the Red Man entered Miranda's mind? Let me explain. While the Red Man seems to be dead physically, his spirit could have always assume a different form or he might even possessed her and she didn't notice. I'm shedding light on the second one for many purposes. In the cartoon series and later sequels, Miranda slowly stops to be a lazy, scaredy and somehow dumb girl and becomes a mature TBD.