What captivated normies so much about this song?
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Nothing. This is an obvious marketing tactic.
Fuck if I know. There are Latinx people in it I guess? Within the context of the movie it's the only song that actually moves the plot along but as it's own song it's not good.
Pablo Escobar.
>only white female in the movo
>marries a black man
Of course.
This, nobody is playing this song and nobody cares. I remember when Frozen came out every kid in the country was singing let it go, there was Frozen merch everywhere. With Encanto you wouldn't know it existed if you didn't read news articles telling you how popular it was. Post truth reporting.
mexicans ruined california
I have no idea what this sounds like in any way, nor do I want to. How long do you realistically think I can go without ever hearing something so popular?
>Light skinned Hispanic
>White
I don’t think so Juan
It's a plot-driven song, so it's not really fit for the radios. If you stay away from certain corners of youtube/twitter/tiktok you should be fine.
>Within the context of the movie it's the only song that actually moves the plot
Nah, most of the songs are pretty plot-heavy, if you skip them you miss considerable chunks of the character development.
The flower girl's song was better.
Is this movie the anti The Incredibles?
seems really basic like something that could be in an MLP episode
Im not a big fan of Frozen and think it’s massively overrated but I can’t argue that Let It Go isn’t a fucking banger and works as it’s own song outside of the film so it’s great for radio play. I can’t imagine We Don’t Talk About Bruno without any context of the film or the visuals.
I also don’t even think Let It Go is the best Disney song of the 2010s, I’m a Shinychad myself.
Because normies love latino music like this
Bruno is voiced by John Leguizamo
>We don't talk about chu-u-u-u-uck
jesus, it sounds like the worst part of the 90s
The character development is shallow and you can piece it all together using the scenes before and after the musical numbers.
Okay but then why this song out of all of them? Surface Pressure is and you'd expect it to have broad appeal because of how poppy it is and the subject matter seems more relatable. Dos Oruguitas is the Oscar hope.