Pixar's Turning Red contains numerous hidden details including cross-movie connections to Inside Out and Soul, cultural references to early 2000s Toronto life, personal tributes to production staff like Susan Fong (diabetes tribute via insulin patches) and Domee Shi (Bao dumpling logo), and scientifically accurate red panda behavior, demonstrating how animated films often embed deeper meanings and personal stories beneath their surface.
Inmersión profunda
Prerrequisito
- No hay datos disponibles.
Próximos pasos
- No hay datos disponibles.
Inmersión profunda
12 Hidden Details In Turning Red You COMPLETELY MISSED! 😱Añadido:
From the real reason Priya never shows emotions and it's not what you think to the insane secret connection between [music] Turning Red and another Pixar movie that directors actually confirmed to the animation mistake so wild Pixar hoped you'd never pause at the right moment. Today we're breaking down 12 hidden details you completely [music] missed in Turning Red. But first, if you love Mei Lee, drop a comment right now.
And if you're a Abby Park fan, make sure you hit that subscribe button. [music] Number one, here's the hidden Pixar connection in Turning Red that most fans completely walked past. There's a quick scene where Mei runs to the bathroom in her panda form. Normal enough, but look closely at the background. There's a girl standing [music] next to a boy holding a trombone. And here's where it gets crazy. That girl looks exactly like Riley Andersen from Inside Out. Same hairstyle, same face shape, even a nearly identical outfit. Now think about this. Both Turning Red and Inside Out take place in the early 2000s, which means the timelines actually line up.
Some fans believe this is Riley after growing up just a little, quietly placed in the background where almost nobody would ever notice. But Pixar didn't stop there. When Mei and her friends walk through the Daisy Mart, they pass a pack of Triple Dent gum. [music] That's the exact same brand from the annoying gum commercial stuck in Riley's head in Inside Out. Pixar secretly [music] planted the same fictional brand across two completely different movies. And there's even more. After people find out Riley [music] likes 4*Town, someone makes fun of the fan reaction. The same wild screaming energy you see from Mei's group throughout the whole film. That's a direct cross-movie reference hidden in plain sight. Pixar has been building a connected world this whole time and most people never noticed. Did you catch any of these? Some show or did they all fly right past you? Number two, what if I told you Turning Red is actually a secret sequel to Soul? And this isn't just a [music] fan theory. Directors confirmed that 22 from Soul becomes a Pixar character after the events of that movie. But here's where the research goes deeper. [music] Some fans believe 22 actually becomes Mei. And once you see the evidence, it's hard to unsee.
First, [music] 22 starts her new life in China, the same place Mei's family is originally from before moving to Canada.
Second, [music] their personalities are nearly identical. Both are passionate, chaotic, and deeply connected to music.
And that passion for music in both characters traces back to the same source, Joe Gardner. Not to mention both movies are connected by the same theme of a ritual tied to music at the most important moment. Soul is about finding your spark. Turning Red is about what happens when that spark takes over completely. Two movies, one character's journey hidden across two completely different stories. Does that change how you see Mei now? Number three, Priya [music] is the calmest character in the entire movie and nobody ever questioned why. But here's the theory that actually makes sense. [music] Mei transforms into a red panda at 13 because of her family's magical curse. The transformation is triggered by strong emotions. Now think [music] about Priya, she's 13. She speaks in a dry, flat, monotone voice. She almost never reacts with big emotions, even when she clearly loves her friends and is obsessed with 4*Town. So why is she suppressing everything? The theory is simple, Priya already knows. She's already experienced her own family's transformation and she's been controlling her emotions ever since to keep it from happening in public. the detail that makes it even more convincing. [music] Priya is obsessed with vampires, werewolves, and mythical creatures. [music] Not just as a hobby, as research. She's trying to understand what she is. So while everyone was focused on Mei's red panda curse, Priya might have been quietly carrying her own secret the entire [music] time, hiding it in plain sight behind a calm voice and a deadpan expression. So what do you think? Is Priya hiding a secret transformation or is this just a coincidence? Number four, did you notice this crazy mistake that happened right at the start of the movie? When Mei gets to school and her friends notice she smells bad, watch Priya closely. She already has deodorant in her hand, ready to hand it over before anyone even says a word, like [music] she knew. But that's not even the weird part. The deodorant kind of just appears out of nowhere in her hand.
She wasn't holding anything a second before and it gets wilder [music] from there. Look at Miriam's left hand during another scene. First she's just holding her wrist, then suddenly [music] a 4*Town CD appears in her hand, fully materialized. She didn't reach into her pocket, she didn't pull it from her bag, it just showed [music] up. the same CD disappears just as magically. Mei tries to put it into her backpack in one quick move, but her backpack is completely zipped shut. There is no opening and yet somehow the CD goes in perfectly.
[music] Now here's the thing, these aren't really accidents. Animators do this on purpose to keep scenes fast and smooth so your eye never gets bored. But if you pause at exactly the right moment, you catch all of it. Did you ever notice any of these or did Pixar fool you completely? Number five, here's a detail [music] so small and so thoughtful that most people never even registered it was there. In Mei's classroom, two girls have tiny blue patches on their arms, easy to miss. You'd think [music] it was just background detail, but those patches are actually insulin infusion sets used by people with type one diabetes and they weren't placed there randomly. That detail is a direct tribute to Susan Fong who worked on the production of Turning Red and was diagnosed with type one diabetes as a child. Pixar put her story into the background of the film so quietly that almost nobody caught it. But here's the part that gets even more interesting.
Those insulin patches shown in the movie, they're actually the modern compact kind, the ones that weren't invented until around 2015 [music] and Turning Red takes place in 2002. So technically, it's a mistake. But Pixar almost certainly did it on purpose because [music] making kids with diabetes feel seen in a movie mattered more than historical accuracy. A quiet, deliberate choice hidden in the background that most people walked right past. Did you know this was there?
Number six, nobody noticed this, but Turning Red is absolutely packed with early 2000s references and they go way deeper than just the fashion. First, when Mei friends start charging kids to take photos with the red panda, look at the phones everyone is using. They're called Jokiya. That name is slightly changed, but the design is unmistakably Nokia. Those classic brick phones everyone had in 2002. And then there's Tyler. He almost always has a band-aid on his face throughout the movie. That's not random. [music] That's a direct reference to Nelly, the rapper who wore a band-aid on his cheek as his signature look in that exact era. And when Tyler plays basketball, he's wearing a purple jersey, a clear nod to the Toronto Raptors uniforms that were everywhere in the early 2000s. movie is set in Toronto. Then there's the handshake.
When Mei and Priya do their special handshake at school, it's actually a reference to the iconic one from the Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. Pixar layered the entire world of this film with real cultural references from that specific moment in time. Most people just thought it was aesthetic. [music] It wasn't.
Every detail was intentional. How many of these did you actually catch while watching? Number seven, did you catch what Pixar hid inside the 4*Town [music] concert scene? During the big performance at the SkyDome, which is a real place in Toronto now called Rogers Centre, look closely at the outfits.
[music] Every member of 4*Town is wearing a different all-white outfit for the show and that's not [music] just a style choice. That's a direct tribute to the Backstreet Boys. In their legendary music video for I Want It That Way from 1999, [music] the entire group performs in iconic white outfits in an airport scene. Pixar took that exact visual and rebuilt it for the concert. But it goes even further. Look at the crowd during the performance. Some of the fans are recreating the exact same screaming, crying, completely losing their minds reactions that real fans had at late '90s and early 2000s boy band concerts.
Pixar wasn't just referencing one music video, they were [music] capturing an entire cultural moment.
The full energy of what boy band mania actually felt like during that era, hidden inside what looked like a fun animated concert sequence. Did you recognize the Backstreet Boys reference or did it just look cool to you at the time? Number eight, here's a detail about Abby that connects her to one of Pixar's most beloved characters. In Monsters Inc, Boo is obsessed [music] with Sulley, the big fluffy monster.
She's drawn to him instantly and never stops loving how soft he is. Now look at Abby in Turning Red. The moment she first sees Mei's red panda form, her exact [music] reaction is, "You're so fluffy."
>> [laughter] >> Not scared, not confused, instantly obsessed [music] just like Boo. But the connections go further. Abby's outfit has flower designs similar to the ones on Boo's door in Monsters Inc. They both have brown eyes, bangs, and similar facial structures. And they both share a soft pink and purple color palette throughout their appearances. [music] Now obviously, they're probably not the same person since the timelines don't perfectly line up, but the more popular theory, Boo is Abby's younger sister.
And if you look at everything [music] side by side, the design choices, the personality, the colors, it doesn't feel like a coincidence. Pixar put this [music] together deliberately and waited for someone to notice. Do you think this is a real connection or just a crazy coincidence? Number nine, [music] this detail about Mei's red panda behavior is something most people assumed was just animated for comedy, but it's [music] actually scientifically accurate. During one scene where Mei gets startled in her panda form, she throws her hands up above her head suddenly. It looks hilarious, but that move is 100% real red panda behavior. In the wild, when red pandas feel threatened, they stand up tall on their hind legs and raise their arms above their head to make themselves look bigger and more intimidating to potential threats.
Pixar's animation team studied actual red panda behavior and built it into Mei's transformation scene so accurately that it works as comedy and biology at the same time. And while you were laughing at how funny it looked, you were actually watching a nature documentary moment. That's how deep Pixar goes with their research. [music] Did you think that was just a funny animation choice or did you already know it was real? Number 10, [music] here's a mistake so specific that it proves Pixar did their research and then accidentally got one detail wrong anyway. In the opening scenes, when we first meet [music] Mei, there's a streetcar passing by in the background. And here's the impressive part, it's not just any generic streetcar, it's the CLRV model, the exact type of streetcar that actually ran through Toronto in 2002, the year the movie is set. Pixar nailed the specific vehicle, but then look at the driver. He's using a round steering wheel just like you'd find in a regular car. And here's the problem, streetcars don't steer like [music] cars, they run on fixed tracks. There are no turns to make with a steering wheel. The direction is controlled by the rails, not the driver. So Pixar got the right vehicle from the right city in the right year and then animated it being driven completely [music] wrong. They researched so specifically that getting one small detail wrong almost makes it funnier. [music] Did you catch this or were you too focused on May to notice the street car driver? Number 11, there's a hidden personal tribute [music] inside Turning Red that most people completely missed and it connects to one of Pixar's own short films.
During a scene where May is running through the city, if you look carefully at the background, you can spot a logo with a small dumpling on it. Easy to walk past, but that dumpling logo is a direct reference to Bao, the Pixar short film from 2018 directed by Domee Shi, the same Domee Shi who directed Turning [music] Red. a reference to her own previous work inside her own feature film. A personal signature buried in the background of a busy street scene where almost nobody would ever think to look.
And when you connect [music] that to the insulin patch tribute to Susan Fong, it becomes clear that Turning Red is full of quiet personal [music] moments from the people who made it layered underneath everything the audience sees on the surface. How many of these hidden personal tributes do you think are still in the movie that nobody has found yet?
Which detail from today hit you the hardest? Drop it in the comments right now. And that's it. Details hiding inside Turning Red this whole time. From Pixar's secret cross movie connections to personal tributes buried in the background to animation mistakes so [music] fast your brain never registered them. This movie is so much deeper than it looks on the surface. [music] Which one genuinely surprised you? Was it number two, the Soul connection, or number three, the theory about Priya?
Let me know in the comments. And if you want part two where we go even deeper into [music] details nobody caught, hit that like button right now and make sure you're subscribed because we are just getting started. Let's go.
Videos Relacionados
TailorShop (2021) - An Award-Winning Short Film
gsp222
149 views•2026-06-04
Maa Behen Review by Baradwaj Rangan | Madhuri Dixit, Triptii Dimri, Dharna Durga, Ravi Kishan
GalattaPlus
4K views•2026-06-04
Maa Behen Review: Madhuri Dixit, Triptii Dimri, Dharna Durga film is a deliciously chaotic dramedy
indiatoday
1K views•2026-06-04
It Takes Two 💞
barefootandindependent
1K views•2026-05-31
These Doctor Who episodes worked brilliantly with the Doctor barely there
lovarzi
574 views•2026-05-31
Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed: We speak to David Gordon Green and David J. Rosen
GogglerMY
211 views•2026-05-29
🎬 Across the Line (2000) 4K | Brad Johnson Neo-Western Thriller 🔥 | Crime & Border Justice
BabelWestern
734 views•2026-05-30
An Anime For Every Letter In LGBTQIA
KrisPNatz
2K views•2026-05-31











