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Feels Good Man

  • 2020
  • TV-MA
  • 1h 32m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
5.8K
YOUR RATING
Feels Good Man (2020)
Artist Matt Furie, creator of the comic character Pepe the Frog, begins an uphill battle to take back his iconic cartoon image from those who used it for their own purposes.
Play trailer2:27
1 Video
20 Photos
ComedyDocumentary

Artist Matt Furie, creator of the comic character Pepe the Frog, begins an uphill battle to take back his iconic cartoon image from those who used it for their own purposes.Artist Matt Furie, creator of the comic character Pepe the Frog, begins an uphill battle to take back his iconic cartoon image from those who used it for their own purposes.Artist Matt Furie, creator of the comic character Pepe the Frog, begins an uphill battle to take back his iconic cartoon image from those who used it for their own purposes.

  • Director
    • Arthur Jones
  • Writers
    • Giorgio Angelini
    • Matt Furie
    • Arthur Jones
  • Stars
    • Matt Furie
    • Aiyana Udesen
    • Chris Sullivan
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    5.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Arthur Jones
    • Writers
      • Giorgio Angelini
      • Matt Furie
      • Arthur Jones
    • Stars
      • Matt Furie
      • Aiyana Udesen
      • Chris Sullivan
    • 30User reviews
    • 46Critic reviews
    • 79Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 9 wins & 10 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:27
    Official Trailer

    Photos20

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    + 15
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    Top cast46

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    Matt Furie
    Matt Furie
    • Self - Artist, Creator of Pepe the Frog
    Aiyana Udesen
    Aiyana Udesen
    • Self - Artist, Matt's Partner
    Chris Sullivan
    Chris Sullivan
    • Self - Matt & Aiyana's Housemate
    Johnny Ryan
    Johnny Ryan
    • Self - Typical Cartoonist, Angry Youth Comix
    Lisa Hanawalt
    Lisa Hanawalt
    • Self - Artist & Writer, Tuca & Bertie, BoJack Horseman
    Emily Heller
    Emily Heller
    • Self - Comedian and TV Writer
    Susan Blackmore
    Susan Blackmore
    • Self - Psychologist and Memetist, Author, The Meme Machine
    • (as Dr. Susan Blackmore)
    Dale Beran
    Dale Beran
    • Self - Artist & Writer, Author, 4chan: The Skeleton Key to the Rise of Trump
    Pizza
    Pizza
    • Self - 4channer
    Mills
    Mills
    • Self - 4channer
    Peder Riis
    Peder Riis
    • Self - Cartoonist
    Aleks Krotoski
    Aleks Krotoski
    • Self - Psychologist & Journalist, Author, Untangling thes Web
    • (as Dr. Aleks Krotoski)
    Ursala Furie
    • Self - Matt and Aiyana's Daughter
    Brian McMullen
    • Self - Editor & Art Director, MeSweeney's
    Joel Finkelstein
    Joel Finkelstein
    • Self - Director, Network Contagion Research Institute, Princeton University
    Aaron Sankin
    Aaron Sankin
    • Self - Journalist
    Matt Braynard
    Matt Braynard
    • Self - Executive Director, Look Ahead America
    John Michael Greer
    John Michael Greer
    • Self - Occultist and Scholar, Author, Encyclopedia of Natural Magic
    • Director
      • Arthur Jones
    • Writers
      • Giorgio Angelini
      • Matt Furie
      • Arthur Jones
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews30

    7.55.8K
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    Featured reviews

    6numenorsniper-66396

    Feels ADL Man

    I went into this film hoping for the vibe of the title, but it just felt really uncomfortable and honestly cringey, like the filmmakers and possibly Matt Furie himself felt they had to try to appease the Anti-Defamation League, who are a bunch of genuinely evil kunts, as the one scene with the ADL guy further shows.

    There was a line by one of Matt's friends in the film that he suggested they sue the ADL for putting Pepe on the hate list, which is exactly what they should have done. Pepe is an awesome character and internet icon that has entered the public domain, and any attempt to wrangle control back of how the meme is used is an exercise in hubris and futility. Matt and his friends should have just legally destroyed the ADL for even daring to label Pepe a hate symbol.

    It's sad how the ADL has zero sense of humour, even self-appointing themselves to go after cartoon characters and their creators for simply having fun. What right do they have to hold someone's creation hostage like that? They are a private organisation with no legal authority whatsoever. If I were Matt Furie, I would go ahead and sue the ADL right now. You can still do it!
    6OdinsRagnarok

    An artist who didn't understand his creation

    It's a well made documentary with nicely animated segments. Largely following the perspective of the creator and what happened to pepe. All through an extremely narrow and biased view.

    Around the 45min mark, it becomes just crystal clear how he doesn't understand his creation. How he, together with ADL, Hillary Clinton, Maddow and rest of left wing media helped enable this to become a "far right hate speech symbol". It never was that, until these people decided to make pepe into that. It seems completely out of touch with trolling and getting a rise out of people, and going against the mainstream and political correctness. The more these people wish to silence and censor people, the more crazy pepe memes they would get in response. They themselves are the enablers.

    The 4chan guy they mainly choose to focus on was such a stereotype fitting 100% the narrative they attempted to persuade. While they did talk to a girl who also roamed 4chan, she was left too much out of the documentary so they could push their view on the audience.

    As they show Hong Kong demonstrators towards the end who embrace Pepe, the creator and movie makers seems to not understand that them embracing pepe comes from similar reasons as why it was embraced in the US by Trump supporters. In both cases it's used as anti-leftists, anti-censorship, anti-establishment memes. If they happen to side with the Chinese government, I'm sure they would have labeled their use of it as "hate speech" also.

    But all of this being said, it's not a bad documentary, as long as the biased view doesn't annoy you too much. Still a nice capsule of most of the pepe events and how the character grew beyond the grasp of it's creator.
    7zackerman24

    Captivating Story With A Darker Conclusion Than The Filmmakers Let On

    Feels Good Man, the directorial debut of Arthur Jones, centers around the cultural transformation and appropriation of an innocent cartoon character: Pepe the Frog. The film follows Pepe's creator, Matt Furie, as he tries to comes to terms with all that is happening to his creation and eventually fights back to regain control of what was once his; meanwhile, we are also treated to a full unravelling of how Pepe was meme'd into internet infamy among fringe, alt-right groups, discovering just how powerful a tool the Internet can be and how hard it can be to turn back what's been done. The film's pacing is very good, the story is captivating, and the people brought in to break it all down are very interesting; however, while being well worth the watch, I think it falls short in its overall takeaway and message.

    The film does a great job of bringing in a diversity of interviewees to help detail both the personal story of Matt & Pepe, as well as the digital journey that transformed Pepe into a profound hate symbol. Insight into Matt's life is drawn primarily from discussion with his wife and housemates, as well as from getting to see him interact with his daughter. It all draws a very quaint portrait of a guy who seems nice and, to be honest, pretty average, which makes Pepe's journey all the more startling while also helping to explain Matt's initial reluctance to act and rather just lay back. For deconstructing the underbelly of the web, we're introduced to a 4chan lifer (or a NEET - this guy's reality may in fact have been the scariest part of the film), my first-ever sighting of a memetist, an occultist scholar / magic librarian (can we talk about how this guy used the force to pull a book off of a shelf???), and the director of the Network Contagion Research Institute at Princeton - all these just to name a few. While the story itself is captivating at parts, what really pushes the movie towards success is the people you meet; the most interesting part of the film may in fact be when Matt meets up with a 20ish person group in San Fran composed of people who have devoted themselves to deconstructing and understanding these sort of internet phenomena; the sheer fact that these groups exist was quite eye-opening, and the juxtaposition of their deep concern and worry for what has happened to Pepe versus Matt's laidback nature was both hilarious and a little tragic. All these people understand something that Matt is seemingly still fully unaware of: he has completely lost control of his beloved character, and frankly, there is almost no turning back. This is not to say that every interviewee lends value - the two female cartoonists / writers seemed to contribute very little and felt more like a "We've already recorded the interviews so let's just use them" situation.

    The film should also be given enormous credit for its efforts in trying to trace the origins and gradual transformation of Pepe. I think we all know how difficult it can be to find any "starting points" or sources of actual truth online, but the crew seem to have done very well in their research; likely helped, and perhaps influenced, by their interviews with members of these Internet hordes. Another short note is that the animation throughout is very solid and felt like a strong tool to complement the film's narrative. It wasn't overdone and tied nicely to the scenes where it was used.

    With regards to the film's overall goals and purpose, Matt Furie's story is interesting and he is a generally likeable guy, but the real meat of this film is its examination of internet culture and how it can basically turn anything on its head and morph it for its own use or gain, without almost any repercussion. The way in which we see an innocent frog cartoon slowly become a symbol of hate and bigotry is enthralling, but also terrifying as we realize that it all happened through the efforts of people sitting right at home and operating under the anonymity given to them by the Internet and its platforms (e.g. 4chan). Once they took hold, there was really no going back. Sure, Matt's been able to win lawsuits with public figures that have appropriated the character, such as Alex Jones, but almost nothing can be done to the thousands (or millions) of people still using it for their hateful purposes online. While the film tries to end on a positive note by displaying how Pepe went from an alt-right symbol in the US to a symbol of freedom in the Hong Kong protests, it feels like a lackluster solution and rose-colored view, frustratingly trying to give the viewer a hopeful message while denying the harsher truth and reality that it itself has painted. While it's great to see that Pepe can still be a symbol of hope and positivity, the true conclusion is much more ambiguous, demonstrating how we can project almost any emotion onto a character or piece of media, meme-ing it into "this" or "that". Everything comes with a dark side or at least the potential of evil - while we can hope that good is the stronger force, it doesn't really make it any easier to put a stop to the bad.
    8Jeremy_Urquhart

    Surprisingly good- 93 minutes goes by really quickly

    This is a really good documentary, only let down slightly by a part near the end regarding the 'rare Pepe's'- they didn't explain it very well and I was super confused. It also wasn't very relevant to everything else, which makes me wonder whether it was added to get the overall film over 90 minutes.

    That being said, everything else was really strong. The presentation is unique, I liked the use of animation, and the music was surprisingly good too. It tells a fascinating story about a meme that got out of the control of its creator, and while I was familiar with Pepe to some extent, I definitely didn't know the whole story, which made this really engaging.

    For me, it started to get really interesting when they began to cover the meme's relation to the 2016 US Election- that was genuinely fascinating.

    If you're interested in meme culture, politics, or just want a good documentary, I can highly recommend this one.
    7thenaves

    Fascinating but Ultimately 2D Exposition of Pepe the Frog

    The first 45 minutes is actually quite informative in following the 4chan adoption and evolution of the meme - the mindset of those who first adopted Pepe and the emotional bond that was made. The next 45 however is essentially the reason Trump won: the lesson the left never learned; a minimization of the bigger conversation to a hyper-focus on the alt-right. In other words, the film does a good job of documenting the battle that took place with the alt-rights use of Pepe. However it's to the exclusion of the bigger campaign of those who do not agree with the alt-right but used Pepe to express hope and belief in a Trump victory over the rise of authoritarian and global Leftism. <-- the conversation that never takes place.

    Much like reading a politifact "fact" check, the documentary quickly moves from history of the origins of Pepe into a breakdown and explanation of liberal narrative. As such, it leaves the 2016 experience of an entire swath of conservative and moderate voices misrepresented and lumped into a single basket of hate and aggression.

    Let be me clear... This seems to be the way that the creator experienced everything and thus as a "Furie" documentary it tells his story quite well and accurately. However, as a "Pepe" documentary it fails to tell the whole story in anything other than a two dimensional, singularly aspected fashion - white supremacists used Pepe to promote their politics. This is of course true but only a small piece of a much bigger phenomena. Netflix will eat this up however and I imagine it will be viewed by millions and seen as the whole story before it's run is over.

    In summary, this was a good documentary experience and I feel better informed after watching it. I would recommend it to just about anyone with the qualifier of its political leaning. But honestly, If you're politically liberal then you already believe the narrative portrayed in the second half of the documentary. If you're politically conservative (or have been since 2016) you are already aware of the narrative bias.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Directorial debut of Arthur Jones.
    • Quotes

      Self - Psychologist and Memetist: The whole idea of memes comes from Richard Dawkins' 1976 book, "The Selfish Gene." Most of the book is about what he called "universal Darwinism," which said, "All of biology is driven by genes, but culture is driven by memes." He said, "Look around you and you'll see, floating about in the primeval soup of culture, is information copied by imitation from person to person." So that would include chairs... trousers... hairstyles. All of these things are only here because humans have copied them, and the ones around us are the winners in an evolutionary battle. And then, gradually, came the concept of Internet memes. And people can easily see that process happening with Pepe. Pepe is a wonderful example of a meme that escaped out there into the meme-osphere and suffered all the things you'd expect of a meme.

    • Connections
      Features Dr. Phil (2002)
    • Soundtracks
      Living In Hell
      Written by Andy Harry and Sarah Rayne

      Performed by Cobra Man

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 28, 2020 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official site (Japan)
      • Official Website
    • Also known as
      • Pepe the Frog: Feels Good Man
    • Filming locations
      • Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
    • Production companies
      • Ready Fictions
      • Wavelength
      • XTR
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 32 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.89 : 1

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