Disney Scene It 2nd Edition Dvd Game
Posted in HomeBy adminOn 25/11/17Add the magic of Disney to your family fun time! Deluxe Disney 2nd Edition features more classic characters, more unforgettable songs, more favorite scenes from your most beloved Disney treasures, old and new -- including Pirates of the Caribbean, Cars and The Incredibles!
You can fly around the game board racing to answer trivia questions and solving puzzles fit for a Cave of Wonders! We can show you a whole new world of fun with Scene It? Deluxe Disney 2nd Edition. Pixie dust not included!
Oct 13, 2007. Test your Disney trivia skills with this fun DVD board game for 2-4 players, or an entire party! We review it here.
—,: Mark of the Assassin It appears that villains in the have an especially curious tendency to exit the film by falling off or out of things. Unfortunately for them, even though they are animated characters,.
The varied list of things to fall from includes cliffs, over, out of trees, and off the tops of. There is at least one case of a Disney villain meeting his end by falling up (), and once sideways (). A surprising number of Disney villains have also been dragged to their doom by demons (from three to five depending on how you're counting).
Note that none of these cases have to involve a, though it may involve a transformation beforehand (which is by far the second-favorite trope of Disney villains). Sometimes, a fatal wound will be inflicted upon the villain just before taking the plunge (whether caused by the hero or by ) just to ensure that he or she is definitely dead. Or, they could have a boulder or similar heavy object falling down with them, which will surely crush them when they land, or fall into a deadly environment like lava or molten metal, a pit of savage beasts, fire, Hell itself, or even, as.
As with other, this is often invoked to. Heck, they may even cry '!' As they fail to. Their hands left bloodless, the hero and heroine can get married and live happily ever after and whatnot. This is usually invoked in order to dispatch the villain which might upset the kids (or the ). Please ignore the that having the villain meet his or her end as an unquestionably ghastly mess on the floor isn't any less violent than. Keep in mind that you don't have to be a Disney villain to meet your end this way — many villains and other characters in action movies, cartoons, books, and other works have also met with this fate, although it's fair to say that most heroes.
Extremely apparent in Disney's 'Bronze Age' (the string of - hits). Not to be confused with. It seems only good guys get to have those (there is a villainous variant, but Disney doesn't use it often). There is also the non-villainous, non-conflict related variation of the trope, where a character decides to jump off a high ledge due to some stupid idea they have (e.g., thinking they'd fly). A subtrope of.
May involve a. See also and, as well as. As a, all Spoilers will be unmarked ahead. • Here's an obscure early one.
An old Sunday comic serial had a and his get an early version of this! • The Queen/Witch in gets the ground she's standing on struck by lightning and falls off a cliff and the huge boulder she was trying to use to kill the Dwarfs instead falls down the cliff after her and she gets. • Subverted in, where Ronno actually survives being pushed off a cliff and into a river by Bambi while they are both fighting over Faline. • In the 'Mickey and the Beanstalk' part of, Willy the Giant falls to his death, just like in the original story. However, in its theatrical release (as part of Fun and Fancy Free) and at least one television rebroadcast, Willy is shown to have survived.
And made it to Los Angeles somehow. • In the 1948 comic 'The Golden Christmas Tree', Donald and the nephews encounter an evil, shape-shifting witch. Donald manages to trap her, and later kicks the witch/can off a cliff during one of his trademark tantrums. It's a pretty bizarre story. • A strange thing happens in.
Lady Tremaine and Cinderella's step sisters (in the film, anyway; all three are () killed in, and Drizella and Lady Tremaine are implied to have been forced into servitude in, while Anastasia is ). But their, who, terrorizing the and committing petty evil when Lady Tremaine isn't watching, falls from the window of Cinderella's tower. (The comics and sequels, however, show him still alive, ). It's best to take the sequel's word for it. Cats (a) can right themselves in midair, and (b) go limp upon reaching terminal velocity, at which point their legs splay out and their skin stretches into a makeshift parachute, meaning their odds of survival are better from a long fall than a short one. • Subverted at the end of; the wolf actually ends up being bumped off a cliff by the titular lion. However, it's then revealed that the wolf actually survived the fall since he immediately grabbed onto a nearby branch with berries growing on it.
• Subverted in; Captain Hook does fall, directly into the jaws of a crocodile, but he bursts out. He makes it into the sequel, too. Played straight with one of his henchmen, however, after he messes up Hook's song at one point. • Maleficent in pulls her act, is killed by Prince Philip with a (), and falls off a cliff into blazing brambles.
The brambles were Maleficent's own creation and rather clearly •: Cruella de Vil crashes her into her goons' truck, sending them both plummeting off the cliff they were on. Oddly, despite the fact that the cars are totaled at the bottom of the ravine, all three are alive and Cruella is in good enough shape to throw a hissy-fit.
She survives in as well. • Although this has been debated, Barnaby in (the 1961 film) is stabbed by Tom during their swordfight, sending him falling over the edge of a stack of boxes (acting as a cliff) and into an empty toybox below, from which he never emerges and is presumed dead. The only reason this was even debated was because publicity stills show him being forced into and imprisoned in a birdcage at the fight's end in place of the stabbing, which really is an alternate ending and therefore means nothing to the plot of the film itself.
• The Horned King in is sucked into. Once inside,. Hey, no fuss, no muss. Of course, in the book, he.
•: • Ratigan —. He gets taken out after his by Big Ben's bells ringing, causing him and Basil to fall from the clock tower. Of course, considering Ratigan's direct inspiration,, also got taken out by a fall, it's not much of a surprise. • Basil falling with him is a definite to the Sherlock Holmes story 'The Final Problem'. The difference is Sherlock's fate is left ambiguous as to whether or not he survived; Basil definitely does thanks to. • Also happens to his sidekick Fidget, who is ironically a bat (with a crippled wing), although he gets thrown into the River Thames.
That didn't stop from doing a comic story where he had apparently survived and also did a, though. • Exceptions to this in the Disney movies tend to be very extreme. In one year, we got the of Judge Doom in (dissolved by his own Dip) and Sykes in (just saying he's run over by a subway train doesn't even cover it). Sykes' henchdogs also get freakin' electrocuted on a third rail. It's played straight in, though — Ursula's sister • Played straight in with Merlock as a result of him losing his talisman. While in., meaning in theory he would've received.
• Percival McLeach in Down Under escapes a group of crocodiles only to prove no match for the that is the death of him. This is followed immediately by a when the heroes face the exact same chain of events.
(It helps to have a on your side). •: • Beast initially goes out of his way to spare Gaston from this. Then Gaston goes and brings it on himself anyway, after pulling a on the Beast. Some fans, citing how there was a river at the bottom of the ravine, and citing how LeFou managed to survive much worse, such as being stuck in the snow for what was implied to be several months and being crushed by a chair/bench, and his voice actor expressed doubts about Gaston's death.
It actually necessitated the Disney company to make it clear in the commentary that he died. (He got impaled on a wrought-iron fence.) It was to be subverted: similar to Scar's death in note as a matter of fact, Scar's death was actually reused from that concept, he was to have survived the fall from a cliff after being knocked off by Belle with a rock, albeit with a broken leg, only to encounter,. Apparently, it was revoked because it would have been far too gruesome even for a character like him. • has Gaston falling from a bridge that is collapsing as he shoots the Beast.
To make sure everyone is clear this time that he's dead, we hear a at the moment where he stops screaming as he falls. Mestrenova Serial Mac. • Forte, on the other hand, is smashed into bits in.
And while he was a huge freaking organ at the time, he was also a transformed human. One shudders to think what he looked like when the curse was broken. • A variation occurs in the live-action movie: Neville Sinclair, a Nazi agent, voluntarily flies out of the zeppelin with the rocket pack, but its fuel leak causes it to burst into a massive fireball in which he becomes engulfed, causing Neville to crash into the Hollywoodland sign and explode spectacularly. • An article titled 'The Drinking Game' instructed players to take a shot for every trope common to (e.g. Or every time Elisa's is seen). Disney Villain Death was not included because the sheer number would cause people to succumb to alcohol poisoning.
Specific examples, for the curious: • The Captain and Hakon, in the Middle Ages part of '. Demona, at the end of 'Awakening', though she turned out to have survived. The Archmage, in 'Long Way to Morning', who also later turned out to be alive because David Warner is just that awesome. Subverted in 'The Journey' with John Castaway, who had a helicopter ready.
• In the 'City of Stone' arc: In part one, a villain killed the hero's father by causing him to fall off a castle. In part two, the villain himself was killed by falling off the same castle. That could be justified as poetic justice, but the creators didn't want to have to do it again in part three for the other villain. So, Macbeth gets a magical ball of. Something that causes the villain to be electrocuted. And after he's burned through, his body..
• And the modern Hunters' vendetta against Demona specifically? A fight between their father and the Gargoyle led to the Hunter falling off Notre Dame cathedral. To his death. • In (from Disney's Hollywood Pictures), evil revenge-obsessed babysitter Peyton is shoved out of the attic window by Claire, and lands on the house's picket fence which Solomon had built earlier. • Tabaqui in the live action version of, when he attempts to crush Mowgli with a rock, but loses his balance and falls off a huge cliff near a waterfall.
•: • Jafar's defeat in the original plays with this a bit, since he technically does fall. Into his own lamp prison.
• Averted in the sequel, however, where he after some fairly graphic. • Subverted with Saluk in, who seems to die after losing his footing and falling off a cliff, but (even taking out a friggin' shark in the process). Later, he dies by, because he inadvertently touched the Hand of Midas without any protection. • In, we see three examples of this trope. D'Artagnan fights one of the Cardinal's men on top of some ruins, and knocks him off to his death. Lady De Winter, the femme fatale, chooses to fling herself off a cliff rather than suffer a beheading. Later in the film, D'Artagnan surprises the King's assassin on the palace roof, and the fight ends with the assassin getting a crossbow bolt to the heart and falling to the ground below.
• Averted with Rochefort's death; he is clearly stabbed and dies in full view of the audience. • Cardinal Richelieu is only a partial example, as he could conceivably have survived falling into the waterway (and, indeed, must have if both history and the original story is taken into account). • Subverted in the original film. Scar survives his fall off Pride Rock. He meets down there, and they're not too happy about being blamed for all his wrongdoings.
Let's just say that Scar would probably have preferred the falling death. It is heavily suggested by shadows that they maul him to death.
In the novelization, it is worse, describing Scar as a 'king fit for a meal', and judging by the hyenas' ravenous appetites throughout, it is highly probable that he was. The sequel further implies that he burned to death. • Also inverted: The actual 'death by falling' went to Mufasa.
• Zira in falls off a cliff into rapids and drowns. Note that, in the original ending, she was intended to be seen letting go (some argue that this is still the case in the release — it's a bit ambiguous), and laughing on the way down. • Her son Nuka suffers a similar death, but it's that kills him: the logs that fall after him are definitely a factor as well. •, the live action version of, changes Injun Joe's death from starving to falling down a seemingly bottomless pit. • In the video game version of, Pinocchio knocks. • Since he's one of the most downright evil Disney villains of all (although he wasn't too bad in the book), demise in is particularly spectacular. He stands atop a gargoyle and is about to kill Quasimodo and Esmeralda — but the gargoyle's head cracks, causing him to lose his balance.
As he grabs onto the gargoyle for dear life, it starts glowing and snarling at him, as if himself was saying he deserved it. It finally breaks off and he plummets to his doom, landing in molten lead. (Note that in, Quasimodo threw him off.) Mere seconds before the gargoyle cracked, as he was about to slay Esmeralda and Quasimodo, Frollo gave some dramatic last words. Panic: Pain: Panic: • In, the writers shot Shan Yu with a giant firework (in a kid-friendly way) specifically because they didn't want to have another falling death in a Disney movie (in a further subversion of the norm, this was in no way an accident; Mulan and/or Mushu deliberately planned it). • Clayton's death in. Falling out of a tree and accidentally hanging oneself with jungle vines.
Greg And Steve We All Live Together Volume 2 Download. We even get to hear his neck snap. The storm makes it possible to, just to drive the point home that.
An alternate ending averts the trope. In this ending, Tarzan confronts Clayton on Clayton's junk. A small fire breaks out when Tarzan frees all the gorillas that the hunter had captured. Tarzan then pins Clayton's shirt sleeve to an oil barrel with a knife (after choosing not to simply cut out his heart) and leaves him there as the oil from the barrel seeps towards the flames. The last shot is of the ship exploding.
(This ending was cut because the filmmakers felt it went against Tarzan telling Clayton 'I'm not a man like you'). • Subverted in. Emperor Zurg falls down an elevator shaft, apparently to his doom, yet somehow survives to play catch with his son. • has Aladar ram one of the off a cliff. Under circumstances that are very similar to those in The Land Before Time (detailed below). • Yzma falls in — but there's a hilarious twist to that. Guard: For the last time, we did not order a giant trampoline!
Delivery Man: You know, pal, you could have told me that before I set it up! * BOING!* • The Evil Jack-In-The-Box from the 'Steadfast Tin Soldier' segment of is a half-example. He charges the soldier, and is flipped over by him off the table, falling into a hot stove. • This is the fate of some bosses in the Donald Duck video game, depending on the version. • Bernadette the Bird falls to her doom after being defeated in the remake for PlayStation 2 and GameCube. • All console versions have the Beagle Boy/Beagle Boys fall to his/their doom after Donald defeats him/them.
• In the Nintendo 64, Dreamcast, PlayStation, and PC versions, Magica De Spell falls from her broomstick after she is beaten. • The of the game, Merlock, who somehow survived his Disney Villain Death in the DuckTales movie, dies this way in the PlayStation version, with other versions of the game giving him a different fate (He does a in the Nintendo 64, Sega Dreamcast, and PC versions, he becomes a child in the remake for PlayStation 2 and GameCube, and the Game Boy Color and Game Boy Advance versions leave his fate ambiguous). •: The Rourke's death is surprisingly fall-free, especially given that the final struggle takes place on an airship. He crystallizes and EXPLODES. It's played straight with Helga, although unlike most examples, we actually see her afterwards, and she lives long enough to. It's also heavily implied that, since Helga lay at the bottom of the chimney when the airship blew up, she would have been crushed by the flaming debris whether she had survived the fall or not.
Whitmore: What happened to Helga? Cookie: Weeeeeell, we lost her after a flamin' zeppelin come down on her — ( Packard whacks him with her umbrella) Uh, missin'. Whitmore: And Rourke? Sweet: Nervous breakdown. You could say he went all to pieces. Cookie: In fact, you could say he was, and then — ( Packard threatens him with her umbrella again) Uh, he's missin' too.
• A neat variation occurs in: • The truly nasty Scroop dies by falling when the ship's gets turned off. This is obvious for his murdering the First Mate Mr. Arrow (one of the few heroes who dies by falling —, no less) through similar means. • A bunch of other unnamed pirate mooks die by falling as well, a number when Doppler breaks the catwalk they're on and they fall to the planet below.
More when the planet's core is being sliced up by jets of plasma during its self-destruct and some pirates fall into one of the fiery chasms. • At the end of, falls into a below the entrance to an ancient temple, but lands on a small island. Then a giant stone tiger head falls directly on him, subverting this trope. Seemingly subverting, that is. The stone head was hollow.
And then the vultures show up to mock the inevitability of his doom (). • Syndrome of subverts this by getting. Note that Mr. Incredible meant to kill him, as it was a result of chucking a car at him.
Just not in that particular way. This is actually made somewhat humorous when in the movie when Edna Mode was giving her reasons for refusing to give Mr. Incredible's new outfit a cape — one super died by getting her cape caught in a jet engine. • Subverted in:, where Kim kicks Shego into a building, where she gets electrically shocked and the entire thing falls on top of her.
She survives, and, though. • And fitting an of other Disney movies. In, Queen Narissa falls off New York City's Woolworth Building. After, yes, going.. She explodes into glitter on impact. • In the series, while there are a few falling villains (which subverts by being thrown off into the ocean with the crocodile chasing him.
Only to survive the ordeal and return in the interquel ), most Disney Villain Deaths are replaced with 'Beaten to death with a '. Amusingly, of all the Disney villains in the series, the three who did not fall off something in their source material (and they still don't in the games) technically originate from outside of the: (gets his skin ripped off and crumbles in the movie, beaten to death and crumbles in Kingdom Hearts), (shot as his curse of immortality is lifted), and (he's an AI represented as a giant red cylinder with a face in. This might be telling you something. • dies after his heart is stabbed, and he falls into the Maelstrom in. Averted with Cutler Beckett, who is blown up with his ship, and has his remains on the water. • In, Shaw gets the distinction of being the only character to die in the entire movie by plummeting through an ancient staircase. • The online game had a boss fight that ended with the Cog VP being pushed off the roof of his HQ building.
• An early episode of actually has this happen with Dr. Of course, since he's the main villain, he subverts this by landing on a mattress (which then folds up). • Played straighter in 'Phineas and Ferb Get Busted', when this happens to.
However, it was (). • GO-4 gets a messy one (for a machine) in.
• Charles Muntz in. Those balloons tangled to his feet don't seem to have helped him any.
Is that they wanted to try and avoid this trope, but it was the only satisfying ending they could come up with. • Averted in. Facilier is very creepily to reveal his screaming and terrified face sealed up in a tombstone.
• gently plays with this trope. While Mother Gothel did fall from the tower, she was already dying from and had become nothing but dust by the time she hit the ground.
Also, she was intentionally tripped. • The first two both get their chance to indulge in this in some surprisingly disturbing examples for Mickey Mouse games; the first game has the villain, the Blot, implode from the inside after having fireworks shot at him from the towers of a castle, while the second game's Mad Doctor is dragged to his death in a pit of acid by a load of green spirits after his evil robot vehicle topples over the edge of a platform. Oh, and then all this causes a huge acid geyser to blast everyone out of the cave and into the sky, where the robot promptly explodes, taking the Doc with it (while Mickey and Oswald casually glide to safety, no less). Also ventures into territory in that Oswald ACTUALLY TRIES TO SAVE HIM (despite the fact that he'd been playing them all for suckers and tried to kill them) but ultimately fails. The Blot's death can be seen here:, and the Mad Doctor's here:. • The Mad Doctor's death is optional; there is an alternate version of the ending where Oswald actually does save the Doctor and he makes a genuine. • Averted in.
Does not lose his grip and fall to his deresolution. Rather, his creator Kevin Flynn reabsorbs his program and as and make it to Flynn's Arcade in the real world. A tragic inversion with Tron himself, who falls into the abyss after remembering who he is and his purpose. His only managed to buy the party a little extra time. • In one album of the Italian comic series, Ethan dies this way by falling from the top of a dam. The man who is the closest thing he had to a father tries to extend his hand to him, but Ethan declines and says 'Sorry pa, not this time.' • A blink-and-you'll-miss-it example actually happens during the first fight scene between Finn McMissile and the Lemons at the very beginning of: As McMissile is attempting to escape the Lemons' oil.