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Faerie Tale Theatre
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Faerie Tale Theatre (full name: Shelley Duvall's Faerie Tale Theatre) is an hour-long live-action children's anthology series created by Shelley Duvall. It aired on Showtime from 1982 to 1987, though it was actually produced over 1982-85. Showtime had a small subscriber base at the time, so it was also one of the first television shows that, with the exception of a Clip Show, was released episode by episode on VHS — many made their video debuts long before they aired on pay cable.The show brings to life many traditional fairy tales, from standbys like The Three Little Pigs, Cinderella and Snow White to more obscure ones like The Snow Queen, The Boy Who Left Home to Find Out About the Shivers and The Dancing Princesses. Some adaptations are Played for Drama, others are Played for Laughs; some are extremely faithful to the original stories, some are playfully loose. Many were directed by such luminaries as (then a mere upstart) Tim Burton and (then certainly well-known!) Francis Ford Coppola, and — owing to Duvall's professional and friendly associations with many major Hollywood performers — often featured an All-Star Cast.Once available to view on Hulu, the series' entirety is viewable on YouTube. | |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_121b3725 | type |
Age Lift | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_121b3725 | comment |
Age Lift: Many of the characters are portrayed as older than they were in the source tales. For example, Pearl, the Little Mermaid, swims to the surface for the first time on her twenty-first birthday instead of her fifteenth, the title character of Sleeping Beauty is twenty instead of fifteen or sixteen, and Pinocchio, Little Red Riding Hood, and The Snow Queen's Gerda and Kai are all teenagers instead of children. | |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_1495d0e6 | type |
Non Sequitur | |
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Non Sequitur: In "The Snow Queen" an otherwise normal reindeer is apparently able to fly. This is never addressed. | |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_15177ded | type |
The Runaway | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_15177ded | comment |
The Runaway: In Goldilocks and the Three Bears, when Goldilocks gets home after running from the bears' house, her father punishes her for sneaking out into the woods by making her weed the garden. So she runs away, and when she meets the bears again, she lets them think she's a poor orphan so she can live with them. In The Princess and the Pea, Princess Alecia has run away from home, looking for "...I don't know... life, I suppose." | |
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Relatively Flimsy Excuse | |
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Relatively Flimsy Excuse: Inverted in "Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp": the evil magician that convinces Aladdin to delve into the cave and retrieve the lamp does so by pretending to be Aladdin's long lost Uncle. Aladdin's mother calls him on it, stating that her deceased husband never mentioned having a brother, but the magician plays it off. | |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_17a45ff5 | type |
Misplaced Wildlife | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_17a45ff5 | comment |
Misplaced Wildlife: The Pied Piper mentions dealing with vampire bats in Asia (this is a mistake carried over from the source poem). In "Rumpelstiltskin" (an episode set in an ambiguous medieval European kingdom), one of the protagonist's animal friends is a raccoon. | |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_1b711f57 | type |
Faceplanting into Food | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_1b711f57 | comment |
At the beginning of The Princess Who Had Never Laughed, the narrator says that the King's only child was raised "as a serious-minded young prince." The opening scene then shows the royal court celebrating the 21st birthday of the heir, whom the King addresses as "Hank." Hank is dressed in a full-body suit of armor, a "princely" birthday gift from the King, and finally faceplants into the birthday cake because the armor is too heavy. The King has the helmet taken off... and reveals that Hank is actually a pretty girl with long blonde hair, who asks her father to stop calling her Hank because she prefers her real name, Henrietta. | |
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Bedlah Babe | |
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Bedlah Babe: In Sleeping Beauty, the prince is at one point being flirted with by a princess called Debbie, who wears this kind of outfit. | |
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Framing Device | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_1e1afc1b | comment |
Framing Device: Several episodes have them; for instance, the pea in "The Princess and the Pea" is now in a modern museum — a direct reference to the ending of the original story! | |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_1e8f4221 | type |
Fingore | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_1e8f4221 | comment |
Fingore: In Rapunzel, the witch threatens to cut off Claude's fingers after she catches him stealing from her garden. When he tells her he was stealing for his wife's benefit, she threatens to cut off her fingers too. | |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_20a14df0 | type |
Wrong Genre Savvy | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_20a14df0 | comment |
Wrong Genre Savvy: In Sleeping Beauty, much of the humor comes from the fact that almost all the characters seem aware that they're in an Affectionate Parody of a fairy tale, but the princess and prince both think they're in a fully earnest, old-fashioned fairy tale. | |
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Adaptational Villainy | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_20f689e9 | comment |
Adaptational Villainy: In the original Rapunzel story, the witch was a fairly ambiguous character, but she's made outright evil here. She causes Rapunzel's mother to have her cravings so that she can give herself an excuse to take the baby girl. She also shows signs of misandry, of being physically abusive to Rapunzel, and is all but stated to be a murderer and a cannibal. | |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_225d4412 | type |
PlayedStraight | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_225d4412 | comment |
An even more absurd Played Straight example in "Beauty and the Beast": Apparently the Beast was cursed because his parents didn't believe in faerie tales. (This is a lift from the 1946 film version.) | |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_23473ae7 | type |
Adaptation Expansion | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_23473ae7 | comment |
Adaptation Expansion: The Tale of The Frog Prince introduces the prince's parents and fairy godmother, reveals how he came to be transformed, and extends the ending when the king catches his daughter and the (naked) prince in bed together, misunderstands, and separates them until the whole truth is revealed. In Goldilocks and the Three Bears, the familiar story is only the first half, while the second half deals with Goldilocks running away from home and moving in with the bears. The Three Little Pigs fleshes out the pigs' and the wolf's personalities, and adds a female pig love interest, Tina, who starts out pursued by Paul (the stick house pig) but ends up with Larry (the brick house pig) instead. Little Red Riding Hood gives the heroine an overprotective father and a young apprentice woodcutter love interest, and spends a while with the characters before the main storyline starts. The Princess and the Pea adds a court fool as the prince's confidant and introduces the princess early on to give her a slow-burn romance arc with the prince. Sleeping Beauty includes how the king and queen conceived their daughter, an attempted Arranged Marriage for the princess before she falls under the spell, and some of the exploits of the prince before he came to rescue the princess. | |
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Related in the Adaptation | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_24067bb9 | comment |
Related in the Adaptation: In Villeneuve's original version of Beauty and the Beast, Beauty was the daughter of a king and a good fairy. A wicked fairy had tried to murder baby Beauty so she could marry her father, and Beauty was put in the place of the merchant's deceased daughter to protect her. In this version, as in most retellings starting with Beaumont's, this backstory is cut and Beauty is the merchant's biological daughter. In The Snow Queen, the Lady of Summer (the sorceress with the eternal summer garden) is the Snow Queen's sister. They're not related in the original Andersen tale. | |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_264a140b | type |
Fat and Skinny | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_264a140b | comment |
Fat and Skinny: The stepsisters Arlene and Bertha in Cinderella. Ironically, it's the skinny one, Arlene, who stuffs her face with food at the ball. | |
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Balloon Belly | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_264b8f4c | comment |
Balloon Belly: In Little Red Riding Hood, the Wolf has a small one after eating Granny and a huge one after eating Mary (Red Riding Hood) too. | |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_26673a22 | type |
Pinocchio Nose | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_26673a22 | comment |
Pinocchio Nose: The Trope Namer appears in Pinocchio, of course. In this version, his nose grows not only when he lies, but when he does anything naughty: for example, when he spends the money Geppetto gave him for schoolbooks to see a puppet show instead. | |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_267ce120 | type |
Dirty Old Man | |
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Dirty Old Man: The mole in "Thumbelina" shows signs of this. | |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_2f52c0af | type |
Accidental Pervert | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_2f52c0af | comment |
Accidental Pervert: In The Tale of The Frog Prince, the frog asks the princess if he can sleep with her (as in sleep next to her on a pillow). It goes about as well as expected. | |
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It Will Never Catch On | |
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It Will Never Catch On: Stereo, according to the royal musician in "Tale of the Frog Prince". | |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_33d5b7f2 | type |
Adapted Out | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_33d5b7f2 | comment |
Adapted Out: Pinocchio omits the Talking Cricket. The Tale of The Frog Prince omits the title character's servant Faithful Henry, as most adaptations do. Thumbelina omits the episode where the heroine is kidnapped by a beetle. The Snow Queen omits the two crows, the Prince and Princess, the Robber Girl's mother and the rest of her robber band, and the Lapp and Finn women. The Twelve Dancing Princesses is changed to just The Dancing Princesses and the number of princesses is reduced to six. | |
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Femme Fatalons | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_3cd3a0f1 | comment |
Femme Fatalons: The witch in Rapunzel has a rather impressive set of these. She puts them to good use, clawing out the prince's eyes. In Sleeping Beauty, the evil fairy Henbane sports enormous nails in her giant One-Winged Angel form, which she uses like claws to fight against the Prince. | |
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Misplaced Accent | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_3e086ab9 | comment |
Misplaced Accent: In Beauty and the Beast, due to being played by Klaus Kinski, the Beast has a German accent, while Beauty and all the other characters have American accents. Possibly justified, since he's the prince of a far-off kingdom. | |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_3e74b72e | type |
The Pollyanna | |
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The Pollyanna: The miller's daughter from "Rumpelstiltskin". She has to marry a Psychopathic Manchild who threatened to kill her multiple times, but she's just happy to be alive, skipping merrily down the halls of the castle. It helps that she's played by Shelley Duvall. | |
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Adaptational Heroism | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_3f45f1e6 | comment |
Adaptational Heroism: A minor case for both the frog and the princess in The Frog Prince: unlike in the Grimms' tale, the princess doesn't throw the frog against a wall. (Although she contemplates throwing him out the window.) Instead, he battles and kills a scorpion to save her from being stung, and this makes her apologize for how badly she treated him before and give him a kiss, which breaks his spell. The Snow Queen is a morally ambiguous figure in her original tale, and there's implied to be something demonic about her, since angels have to appear to help Gerda rescue Kai. The Faerie Tale Theatre version is The Mentor to Kai, who also gets rid of the evil goblin that made the magic mirror at the end. | |
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Unicorn | |
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Unicorn: One shows up in "Rumpelstiltskin" (in the form of a miniature pony wearing a rubber horn). | |
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Bittersweet Ending | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_40cc0c7e | comment |
Bittersweet Ending: "The Little Mermaid" and "Rip Van Winkle" are both rather faithful adaptations of their source material, down to retaining their bittersweet endings. The former is notable as the last major adaptation of the work prior to the Disney version and its Happily Ever After ending, which many subsequent adaptations would copy due to both Lost in Imitation and the feeling that Andersen's ending is too bitter as is. | |
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Not Even Bothering with the Accent | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_43b154c9 | comment |
Not Even Bothering with the Accent: Most of the characters in Pinocchio have thick, stereotypical Italian accents, but Pinocchio himself and the two con artists Mario and Vince have American accents. | |
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Would Hurt a Child | |
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Would Hurt a Child: Fairy tales, what do you expect? But the Witch from Hansel and Gretel earns a special place, given she eats children and bakes their heart into gingerbread. She even eats one boy offscreen. | |
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Informed Attractiveness | |
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Informed Attractiveness: Klaus Kinski as a handsome prince in "Beauty and the Beast". | |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_4881cda1 | type |
Ãœberwald | |
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Ãœberwald: The setting of "The Boy Who Left Home to Find Out About the Shivers" complete with variations of Dracula and Igor (see above). | |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_48c99e19 | type |
Death by Adaptation | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_48c99e19 | comment |
Death by Adaptation: In "Rapunzel", the witch is mentioned to have died of "hardening of the heart" by the narrator. The original never mentions her fate. The wicked fairy from Sleeping Beauty is also killed off when the prince throws an axe at her while she's in her One-Winged Angel form. | |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_49d59be9 | type |
Scenery Porn | |
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Scenery Porn: "Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp" and "Beauty and the Beast" are both prime examples of this. | |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_4b86a724 | type |
Getting Crap Past the Radar | |
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Getting Crap Past the Radar: Paul in "The Three Little Pigs" tells the salesman about the building material he desires for his house. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_4b86a724 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_4b86a724 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_4b86a724 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_4e3d253b | type |
Downer Ending | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_4e3d253b | comment |
Downer Ending: "The Pied Piper of Hamelin", as it is a direct adaptation of the Robert Browning poem down to all the narration and dialogue being in rhyme. (A man implied to be Browning telling the poem to a young boy is the Framing Device.) The Piper spirits the children of Hamlin away and their parents never see them again. This is probably why it's one of two episodes available on DVD only in the full-series set (the other being the creepy-fun "The Boy Who Left Home to Find Out About the Shivers"), rather than any of the compilation discs — it's tough to match it with others thematically. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_4e3d253b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_4e3d253b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_4e3d253b | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_50b05d30 | type |
Disproportionate Retribution | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_50b05d30 | comment |
Disproportionate Retribution: Lampshaded in Sleeping Beauty, when Henbane curses the Princess, and then makes every possible effort to stop any Prince from coming to wake her, just because the King and Queen didn't invite her to the christening and then had no golden dish dome for her plate when she arrived unexpectedly. An even more absurd Played Straight example in "Beauty and the Beast": Apparently the Beast was cursed because his parents didn't believe in faerie tales. (This is a lift from the 1946 film version.) In The Princess Who Had Never Laughed, the King has banned joking and laughter from his kingdom, even having his courtiers address him as "Your Seriousness," all because a joke and laughter started the chain of events that led to the accidental death of his wife. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_50b05d30 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_50b05d30 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_50b05d30 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_52d1f46e | type |
Not What It Looks Like | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_52d1f46e | comment |
Not What It Looks Like: In "The Tale of [[The Frog Prince", when the king discovers his daughter in bed with a naked man. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_52d1f46e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_52d1f46e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_52d1f46e | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_53833817 | type |
Rip Van Winkle | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_53833817 | comment |
Also, Rip Van Winkle, as in the original Washington Irving story. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_53833817 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_53833817 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_53833817 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_565106b3 | type |
Women Are Wiser | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_565106b3 | comment |
Women Are Wiser: In Jack and the Beanstalk, apart from being easily fooled by Jack's disguises, the Giantess has normal human intelligence, while her husband the Giant is Dumb Muscle. In The Princess and the Pea, Queen Veronica is the real ruler of the kingdom, while King Frederico is an idiot who just occasionally makes inane comments. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_565106b3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_565106b3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_565106b3 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5a852047 | type |
Sliding Scale of Adaptation Modification | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5a852047 | comment |
Sliding Scale of Adaptation Modification: Anywhere from 2 to 5 depending on the episode. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5a852047 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5a852047 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5a852047 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5aa60027 | type |
Tell Me About My Father | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5aa60027 | comment |
Tell Me About My Father: In Jack and the Beanstalk, Jack's mother tells him about how wonderful his Disappeared Dad was, but she can't remember how he died. (See Trauma-Induced Amnesia below.) In Hansel and Gretel, Gretel asks Hansel to tell her about their Missing Mom, since he remembers her but Gretel doesn't. He says that she was very beautiful and very kind... unlike their stepmother, who is also beautiful, but wicked. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5aa60027 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5aa60027 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5aa60027 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5c5ac0e2 | type |
Really 700 Years Old | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5c5ac0e2 | comment |
Really 700 Years Old: The witch in "Rapunzel" claims to have been around for centuries. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5c5ac0e2 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5c5ac0e2 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5c5ac0e2 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5ca80293 | type |
Pragmatic Villainy | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5ca80293 | comment |
Pragmatic Villainy: This is one of the few versions of "Cinderella" where the stepmother realizes she'd still be in-laws with the Prince if Cinderella marries him. The Fairy Godmother immediately turns her and the stepsisters (temporarily) into rabbits. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5ca80293 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5ca80293 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5ca80293 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5cbb2384 | type |
G-Rated Sex | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5cbb2384 | comment |
G-Rated Sex: The series as a whole does not shy away from implied sexuality, but there is one odd example in "Rapunzel" where the title character apparently manages to give birth to twins after one visit with the Prince where they merely confessed their love for each-other and made out for a bit. Although by the time the Witch finds out, Rapunzel is almost finished making the ladder to escape with the Prince, so presumably some time has passed that could have included more visits where the twins were conceived. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5cbb2384 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5cbb2384 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5cbb2384 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5f5b7872 | type |
Little Miss Con Artist | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5f5b7872 | comment |
Little Miss Con Artist: Goldilocks from "The Three Bears". | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5f5b7872 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5f5b7872 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5f5b7872 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5f930b19 | type |
Named After Somebody Famous | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5f930b19 | comment |
Named After Somebody Famous: The Three Little Pigs are named Peter, Paul, and Larry, punning on The '60s musical group Peter, Paul and Mary. Larry even suggests they could form a folk music group early on! | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5f930b19 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5f930b19 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_5f930b19 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_69681e01 | type |
Big Brother Instinct | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_69681e01 | comment |
Big Brother Instinct: In Hansel and Gretel, as in the original tale, Hansel is always looking out for his little sister Gretel, and stays optimistic even in the darkest times to keep her from despair. She finally gets to return the favor at the climax when she saves his life by pushing the Witch into the oven. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_69681e01 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_69681e01 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_69681e01 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_69fb91e8 | type |
Chewing the Scenery | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_69fb91e8 | comment |
Chewing the Scenery: The Genie of the Lamp enjoys screwing around with Aladdin's head by making empty death threats every chance he gets, even though he knows he can't kill him and enjoys Aladdin's company. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_69fb91e8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_69fb91e8 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_69fb91e8 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_6bcfbc7e | type |
Fantasy Gun Control | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_6bcfbc7e | comment |
Fantasy Gun Control: Averted in "Rapunzel" where the title character's father teaches his wife how to shoot a musket. Unfortunately, it does no good against a witch. Also averted in Little Red Riding Hood when Granny threatens the Wolf with a rifle. She realizes too late that it's not loaded. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_6bcfbc7e | featureApplicability |
-1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_6bcfbc7e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_6bcfbc7e | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_6edc54d5 | type |
Here We Go Again! | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_6edc54d5 | comment |
Here We Go Again!: The ending of The Boy Who Left Home to Find Out About the Shivers: Martin and Princess Amanda are living Happily Ever After, when one day Amanda is depressed and says she has "the blues." Martin realizes he's never experienced this before, so he sets off on another journey, "to find out about the blues." | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_6edc54d5 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_6edc54d5 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_6edc54d5 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_71748a39 | type |
Named by the Adaptation | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_71748a39 | comment |
Named by the Adaptation: Quite a few episodes invoke this as so many of the original stories went with No Name Given. For example, Rapunzel's prince is named Henry, and her parents are named Claude and Marie. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_71748a39 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_71748a39 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_71748a39 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_722171e7 | type |
Straw Character | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_722171e7 | comment |
Straw Character: The mole in "Thumbelina" is a straw conservative, being a stuffy antiquarian who hates the very concept of progress. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_722171e7 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_722171e7 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_722171e7 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_722b3319 | type |
Camp Gay | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_722b3319 | comment |
Camp Gay: The wizard from "Rumpelstiltskin" and the one male fairy from Sleeping Beauty. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_722b3319 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_722b3319 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_722b3319 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_723606c4 | type |
Adaptational Early Appearance | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_723606c4 | comment |
Adaptational Early Appearance: In the original tale of The Princess and the Pea, the titular princess doesn't arrive at the castle until after the prince has searched for a bride and been dissatisfied with all the princesses he's met. In this adaptation, she arrives near the beginning and spends several days at the castle recovering from a twisted ankle, during which she and the prince gradually fall in love, while the prince's meetings with the other princesses take place simultaneously. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_723606c4 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_723606c4 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_723606c4 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_72455542 | type |
Adaptational Intelligence | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_72455542 | comment |
Adaptational Intelligence: Rapunzel is outed either for asking the Witch why her dress is getting tight around the tummy (implying the prince had gotten her pregnant and she didn't know) or the more famous kid-friendly version - asking in a moment of sheer stupidity why it's easier to let the prince climb her hair. This adaptation gives Rapunzel a pet parrot who unexpectedly says "Come at night, my prince," and "I think I love you. Rapunzel, will you marry me?" in front of the Witch. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_72455542 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_72455542 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_72455542 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_72852a93 | type |
Henpecked Husband | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_72852a93 | comment |
Henpecked Husband: Buck Wolf in "The Three Little Pigs"; the whole reason he's trying to capture one of the pigs is that his seen-but-not-heard wife Nadine demands one since a coyote couple is coming over for dinner and "They like pork!" Also, Rip Van Winkle, as in the original Washington Irving story. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_72852a93 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_72852a93 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_72852a93 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_743437c4 | type |
Chroma Key | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_743437c4 | comment |
Chroma Key: Frequently used for special effects work. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_743437c4 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_743437c4 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_743437c4 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_7453bc5b | type |
Spared by the Adaptation | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_7453bc5b | comment |
Spared by the Adaptation: In Little Red Riding Hood, the Wolf doesn't die in the end, but is just left very uncomfortable with a stomach full of stones. (Although since he's now unable to eat, it seems unlikely that he'll live much longer.) In Hansel and Gretel, the Witch's previous child victims, whose hearts she preserved in child-sized gingerbread cookies, all come back to life after the Witch is killed (a detail borrowed from the opera adaptation). In Beauty and the Beast, which is based more on Jean Cocteau's film version than on the original tale, Beauty's suitor Jacques doesn't die the way his Cocteau counterpart Avenant does, because his storyline of venturing to the castle to kill the Beast is cut. In The Three Little Pigs, the first two pigs escape from the Wolf, as they often do in retellings. Nor is the Wolf boiled to death, but just knocked out and delivered back to his nagging wife on a platter with an apple in his mouth. In The Dancing Princesses, the princes who fail to learn the princesses' secret aren't executed, just sent back to their kingdoms. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_7453bc5b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_7453bc5b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_7453bc5b | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_762b9223 | type |
Played for Laughs | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_762b9223 | comment |
Played for Laughs: Quite a few episodes, such as "The Tale of [[The Frog Prince", "The Three Little Pigs", and "Pinocchio". In general, the simpler the original story is, the more likely it ends up played as comedy. It's also common for the adaptations of stories that prominently feature anthropomorphic animals to play up the humor. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_762b9223 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_762b9223 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_762b9223 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_767f84ea | type |
Does Not Like Men | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_767f84ea | comment |
Does Not Like Men: The witch in Rapunzel doesn't like men; she claims they lie, deceive, and "steal what's most precious from you", and says she keeps Rapunzel in the tower to protect her from them. It doesn't work. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_767f84ea | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_767f84ea | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_767f84ea | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_7d7a5f3 | type |
Carpet of Virility | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_7d7a5f3 | comment |
Carpet of Virility: The Frog Prince when he becomes human again, because Robin Williams. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_7d7a5f3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_7d7a5f3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_7d7a5f3 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_7eb49b31 | type |
Almost Kiss | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_7eb49b31 | comment |
Almost Kiss: In The Princess and the Pea, Prince Richard and Princess Alecia are about to kiss in the garden when Queen Veronica comes out of the castle and catches them. This leads to Alecia being put to the test with the pea to prove that she's a real princess. In the penultimate scene of The Dancing Princesses, after Princess Jeanetta accepts the Soldier's proposal, they're about to kiss, when the Soldier sneezes, having caught a cold from getting soaked the night before. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_7eb49b31 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_7eb49b31 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_7eb49b31 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_823c6e3e | type |
Large Ham | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_823c6e3e | comment |
Large Ham: At least one in every episode. Henbane from "Sleeping Beauty" and the Genie of the Lamp from "Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp" are just two examples. The most spectacular is probably the frog played by Robin Williams. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_823c6e3e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_823c6e3e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_823c6e3e | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_82a64c4b | type |
Adaptational Nice Guy | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_82a64c4b | comment |
Adaptational Nice Guy: In Pinocchio, as in the Disney version and several other adaptations, Pinocchio is much less of a Bratty Half-Pint than in the original book, and instead is just very naïve because he Really Was Born Yesterday. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_82a64c4b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_82a64c4b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_82a64c4b | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_84764598 | type |
Dramatic Thunder | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_84764598 | comment |
Dramatic Thunder: As the Pied Piper prepares to spirit away the children of Hamelin, he causes the sky to cloud over and thunder to peal. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_84764598 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_84764598 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_84764598 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_8605f0c0 | type |
Promoted to Love Interest | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_8605f0c0 | comment |
Promoted to Love Interest: Little Red Riding Hood's love interest, apprentice woodcutter Christopher, turns out to be the woodcutter who rescues her and Granny from the Wolf in the end. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_8605f0c0 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_8605f0c0 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_8605f0c0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_863fa679 | type |
What Happened to the Mouse? | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_863fa679 | comment |
What Happened to the Mouse?: Averted in "Thumbelina", which ends with the title character reuniting with her mother on the way to getting wed to the fairy prince (since she wants her to bless the union). | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_863fa679 | featureApplicability |
-1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_863fa679 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_863fa679 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_86daf505 | type |
Parental Bonus | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_86daf505 | comment |
Parental Bonus: A lot, especially in the comedy-centric episodes. These range from the theme naming of the Three Little Pigs (see above) to cheeky anachronisms in the dialogue to occasional references to the performers' other work (Goldilocks' mother is working on a needlepoint project that reads "My life is a tapestry" — she's played by Carole King). | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_86daf505 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_86daf505 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_86daf505 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_86f2d483 | type |
Frying Pan of Doom | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_86f2d483 | comment |
Frying Pan of Doom: Tina in "The Three Little Pigs" pulls this on Buck Wolf. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_86f2d483 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_86f2d483 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_86f2d483 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_8797239c | type |
Bait-and-Switch | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_8797239c | comment |
Bait-and-Switch: At the beginning of Sleeping Beauty, King Boris is lying in bed eagerly waiting for Queen Natasha to join him. Adult viewers will think they know what he's looking forward to... but it turns out that he's waiting for his wife read him a bedtime story. By the end of the scene, it's clear (at least if you pick up on the innuendoes) that they don't even know what sex is, and need a fairy to explain it to them so they can conceive a child. In Beauty and the Beast, after Beauty comes home to her family, her sisters are twice shown admiring her magic ring behind her back. It seems to be Foreshadowing that the sisters will steal the ring and prevent her from getting back to the Beast at the end of the seven days he granted her. Indeed, when Beauty is ready to go back, she finds the ring missing, and assumes her sisters took it. But it was actually her father who stole the ring to prevent her from going back to the castle. When he sees how unhappy she is, he admits the truth. At the beginning of The Princess Who Had Never Laughed, the narrator says that the King's only child was raised "as a serious-minded young prince." The opening scene then shows the royal court celebrating the 21st birthday of the heir, whom the King addresses as "Hank." Hank is dressed in a full-body suit of armor, a "princely" birthday gift from the King, and finally faceplants into the birthday cake because the armor is too heavy. The King has the helmet taken off... and reveals that Hank is actually a pretty girl with long blonde hair, who asks her father to stop calling her Hank because she prefers her real name, Henrietta. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_8797239c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_8797239c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_8797239c | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_8871bbd8 | type |
Eye Beams | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_8871bbd8 | comment |
Eye Beams: The witch in "Rapunzel" has them. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_8871bbd8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_8871bbd8 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_8871bbd8 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_88933ad4 | type |
Parental Favoritism | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_88933ad4 | comment |
Parental Favoritism: Beauty's father in "Beauty and the Beast" obviously favors the title character over his other two daughters. Why else would he name her "Beauty"? | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_88933ad4 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_88933ad4 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_88933ad4 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_8bb316cf | type |
Video Inside, Film Outside | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_8bb316cf | comment |
Video Inside, Film Outside: The scenes at and around Beauty's home in "Beauty and the Beast" are shot on film, while the scenes in the Beast's domain are shot on videotape. This is the only episode in the series that uses film at all — all other episodes are shot on video. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_8bb316cf | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_8bb316cf | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_8bb316cf | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_8c9e724c | type |
Big Beautiful Woman | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_8c9e724c | comment |
Big Beautiful Woman: The Blue Fairy ("Pinocchio"), as played by Lainie Kazan. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_8c9e724c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_8c9e724c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_8c9e724c | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_90e31482 | type |
Laser-Guided Karma | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_90e31482 | comment |
Laser-Guided Karma In "Cinderella": Cinderella's stepfamily immediately try to weasel in on her marriage once they realize they're in-laws with the Prince. The Fairy Godmother turns them into rabbits. A sad twist on this in "The Pied Piper of Hamelin" with regards to the lame boy. He never realizes it, but he was left behind as a reward for being courteous to the Piper when he first arrived. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_90e31482 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_90e31482 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_90e31482 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_9437509e | type |
TwoShorts | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_9437509e | comment |
Finally, Shelley Duvall's Bedtime Stories was an animated series with celebrity narrators that adapted popular children's picture books in a Two Shorts format. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_9437509e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_9437509e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_9437509e | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_997ce6ad | type |
Boyfriend-Blocking Dad | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_997ce6ad | comment |
Boyfriend-Blocking Dad: Little Red Riding Hood has a budding romance with her father's young apprentice Christopher, but her overprotective father fires Chris and chases him away when he catches them kissing. He changes his mind in the end when both his daughter and his mother are rescued by Chris from the Wolf's belly. In The Boy Who Left Home to Find Out About the Shivers, the "haunting" of the castle turns out to have been staged by King Vladimir to get rid of his daughter's suitors. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_997ce6ad | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_997ce6ad | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_997ce6ad | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_99ab4e84 | type |
Hand Blast | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_99ab4e84 | comment |
Hand Blast: King Vladimir in The Boy Who Left Home to Find Out About the Shivers has this power and tries to use it against Martin at the climax, but Martin deflects the beams back at him with a metal plate, temporarily blinding him. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_99ab4e84 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_99ab4e84 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_99ab4e84 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_9a182042 | type |
Princesses Prefer Pink | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_9a182042 | comment |
Princesses Prefer Pink: Snow White's outfit is pink and yellow, and in The Princess and the Pea, Princess Alecia's pink nightgown is one of the few pops of color in the episode's otherwise black and white aesthetic. In a trope inversion, however, Cinderella's sooty rags are pink, while the "princess" gowns she wears to the balls are white. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_9a182042 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_9a182042 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_9a182042 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_9d12bbc1 | type |
Foreshadowing | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_9d12bbc1 | comment |
Foreshadowing: In "Rapunzel", the title character tells the Prince that the witch told her the day her hair got cut would be the worst day of her life. Indeed, when it actually happens, it's a horrible day for her. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_9d12bbc1 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_9d12bbc1 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_9d12bbc1 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_9dd2cbc2 | type |
CloudCuckooLander | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_9dd2cbc2 | comment |
Cloud Cuckoo Lander: The Miller's Daughter in Rumpelstiltskin, who, even after becoming queen, skips through the castle halls like a little girl, and talks to animals. Jack in Jack and the Beanstalk, who from the beginning has all sorts of wild dreams and Zany Schemes to try to lift himself and his mother out of poverty. His long-suffering mother is the Cloud Cuckoo Landers Minder. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_9dd2cbc2 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_9dd2cbc2 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_9dd2cbc2 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_a3912d0e | type |
Sexy Discretion Shot | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_a3912d0e | comment |
Sexy Discretion Shot: The King and Queen get one in "Sleeping Beauty", after a fairy tells the Queen what they need to do to have a child. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_a3912d0e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_a3912d0e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_a3912d0e | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_a3c0d670 | type |
Evil Chancellor | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_a3c0d670 | comment |
Evil Chancellor: The vizier in "Aladdin" isn't the Big Bad, but he is an enemy to Aladdin because he (the Vizier) was trying to marry the princess before Aladdin showed up. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_a3c0d670 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_a3c0d670 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_a3c0d670 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_a3f1531b | type |
Standard Snippet | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_a3f1531b | comment |
Standard Snippet: Also sprach Zarathustra is used in "The Tale of [1]" when the frog retrieves the ball from the well (in a shot similar to the opening scene of 2001: A Space Odyssey no less). | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_a3f1531b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_a3f1531b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_a3f1531b | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_a4c37cbe | type |
Mood Whiplash | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_a4c37cbe | comment |
Mood Whiplash: Some of the lighthearted episodes can turn dead serious in a hurry. Likewise, some of the more dramatic episodes can suddenly turn goofy. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_a4c37cbe | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_a4c37cbe | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_a4c37cbe | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_ad66049e | type |
Inspiration Nod | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_ad66049e | comment |
Inspiration Nod: The climax of "The Pied Piper of Hamelin" manages to be both faithful to the poem and an extended Played for Drama homage to Poltergeist (1982), perhaps inspired by the fact that the nature of the Piper's music (which "tells" its targets that if they follow him they will reach their idea of Paradise) is not unlike how Carol Anne is lured to the Other Side. When the Piper enchants the children of the town to follow him, a disembodied female voice cries "He's heeeeere!" as they suddenly and obediently leave their schoolwork, etc. behind. From there, when they reach Koppleberg Hill and the portal opens in the rock, all that can be seen is a blinding white light that the Piper and the contentedly smiling children file into. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_ad66049e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_ad66049e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_ad66049e | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_afbc041a | type |
Montage Ends the VHS | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_afbc041a | comment |
Montage Ends the VHS: A compilation trailer previewing the whole series ended the original VHS releases. It was moved up to the start of the videos when CBS/FOX subsidiary Playhouse Video rereleased them at the end of The '80s. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_afbc041a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_afbc041a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_afbc041a | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b032e4ed | type |
Ms. Fanservice | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b032e4ed | comment |
Ms. Fanservice: Princess Debbie in "Sleeping Beauty". Her role is fairly minor, but... well... just see for yourself. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b032e4ed | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b032e4ed | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b032e4ed | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b1346878 | type |
Fate Worse than Death | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b1346878 | comment |
Fate Worse than Death: The Queen in Snow White. Rather than dying or being forced to dance in red-hot iron shoes, the Magic Mirror tells her that from now on she'll never be able to see her face in a mirror. Indeed, every time she looks in one of her mirrors (and she has many) from that moment on, it turns black, which causes a Villainous Breakdown. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b1346878 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b1346878 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b1346878 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b1814b1d | type |
Wanted a Son Instead | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b1814b1d | comment |
In The Princess Who Had Never Laughed, the King tries to compensate for his lack of a son by giving his daughter Princess Henrietta a masculine upbringing. In the opening scene, for her 21st birthday, he gives her a suit of armor, which is too heavy for her to wear and causes her to faceplant into the birthday cake. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b1814b1d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b1814b1d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b1814b1d | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b1ff5bba | type |
Offscreen Karma | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b1ff5bba | comment |
Offscreen Karma: At the end of "Rapunzel", the narrator mentions that the Witch died of "hardening of the heart". | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b1ff5bba | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b1ff5bba | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b1ff5bba | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b57a1db3 | type |
Cold Snap | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b57a1db3 | comment |
Cold Snap: "The Snow Queen". | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b57a1db3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b57a1db3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b57a1db3 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b66a24a7 | type |
Trauma-Induced Amnesia | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b66a24a7 | comment |
Trauma-Induced Amnesia: in Jack and the Beanstalk, Jack's mother can't remember how her husband died, because it was "too horrible." In the end, the magic harp's music reminds her: he was killed by the Giant, who stole all their money and property too, meaning that everything Jack has stolen from the Giant was rightfully theirs all along. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b66a24a7 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b66a24a7 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b66a24a7 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b97c2cfb | type |
Maybe Ever After | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b97c2cfb | comment |
Maybe Ever After: The Emperor and the Kitchen Maid at the end of The Nightingale. Geppetto and Sophia the Blue Fairy at the end of Pinocchio. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b97c2cfb | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b97c2cfb | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_b97c2cfb | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_ba236071 | type |
It Makes Sense in Context | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_ba236071 | comment |
In The Princess Who Had Never Laughed, the King has banned joking and laughter from his kingdom, even having his courtiers address him as "Your Seriousness," all because a joke and laughter started the chain of events that led to the accidental death of his wife. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_ba236071 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_ba236071 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_ba236071 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_bc00493f | type |
Precision F-Strike | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_bc00493f | comment |
Precision F-Strike: From the first episode! And from Little Red Riding Hood: And from Beauty and the Beast, doubling as a Wham Line: | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_bc00493f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_bc00493f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_bc00493f | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_bc74ef27 | type |
Berserk Button | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_bc74ef27 | comment |
Berserk Button: When in the presence of the mole in "Thumbelina", don't mention the word "progress". In "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs", don't refer to Bubba or his ideas as stupid. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_bc74ef27 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_bc74ef27 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_bc74ef27 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_bdf0640e | type |
You're Not My Father | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_bdf0640e | comment |
You're Not My Father: Inverted in Hansel and Gretel, where the Wicked Stepmother refuses to let Hansel and Gretel call her "Mother." | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_bdf0640e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_bdf0640e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_bdf0640e | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_bee8baee | type |
Faint in Shock | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_bee8baee | comment |
Faint in Shock: Beauty faints in Beauty and the Beast when she sees the Beast for the first time, just like in Jean Cocteau's film version. In The Boy Who Left Home to Find Out About the Shivers, Princess Amanda faints when a giant axe swings from the ceiling in the haunted castle. In The Three Little Pigs, Mr. Mann the junk dealer faints after his encounter with the Wolf. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_bee8baee | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_bee8baee | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_bee8baee | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_c1944f9 | type |
Getting Eaten Is Harmless | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_c1944f9 | comment |
Getting Eaten Is Harmless: Little Red Riding Hood and her grandmother both get eaten alive. After Chris cuts open the wolf's stomach, they're both completely unharmed. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_c1944f9 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_c1944f9 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_c1944f9 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_c1b7d6e2 | type |
Wizard Classic | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_c1b7d6e2 | comment |
Wizard Classic: A rather flamboyant example appears in "Rumpelstiltskin". | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_c1b7d6e2 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_c1b7d6e2 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_c1b7d6e2 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_c2ecf3b8 | type |
Show Some Leg | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_c2ecf3b8 | comment |
Show Some Leg: Princess Debbie, in her attempt to seduce the Prince in "Sleeping Beauty". | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_c2ecf3b8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_c2ecf3b8 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_c2ecf3b8 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_c3b40ab8 | type |
Evil Redhead | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_c3b40ab8 | comment |
Evil Redhead: The Queen in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_c3b40ab8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_c3b40ab8 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_c3b40ab8 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_c75df49a | type |
Shout-Out | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_c75df49a | comment |
Shout-Out: In Sleeping Beauty, which takes place in Russia, the king and queen's names are Boris and Natasha, and later, this dialogue occurs: In Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Snow White's chin-length hair with a ribbon in it looks very much like the hairstyle of her Disney counterpart. In The Three Little Pigs, the title characters are named Peter, Paul and Larry, and when they first leave home, Larry suggests that they form a folk music trio. Later, the lady pig Tina tells the Wolf that she demands respect: "R-E-S-P-E-C-T." In the opening scene of Jack and the Beanstalk, Jack and his mother have just one bean to eat, much like Mickey Mouse and his friends in Mickey and the Beanstalk. In the climactic scene of The Pied Piper of Hamelin, a girl's voice is heard saying "He's here..." just as the town's children begin to be entranced by the Piper's music. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_c75df49a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_c75df49a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_c75df49a | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d001c42c | type |
Anti-Villain | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d001c42c | comment |
Anti-Villain: King Vladimir from The Boy Who Left Home to Find Out About the Shivers is only doing what he does because he does not want to lose his daughter. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d001c42c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d001c42c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d001c42c | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d0c13631 | type |
Mrs. Robinson | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d0c13631 | comment |
Mrs. Robinson: The Queen in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs meets the much-younger Prince while on her way to poison Snow White, and comes on to him, forgetting that she's enchanted herself to look like an ugly old peddler woman. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d0c13631 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d0c13631 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d0c13631 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d5921e22 | type |
Prince Charmless | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d5921e22 | comment |
Prince Charmless: Sleeping Beauty has the prissy, snobbish and cowardly son of King Murray, to whom the princess nearly faces an Arranged Marriage. Ironically, he's played by Christopher Reeve, who doubles as the story's genuine Prince Charming a hundred years later. Prince Richard in The Princess and the Pea starts out as a bit of a sulky Royal Brat, but he gets better thanks to Princess Alecia's influence. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d5921e22 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d5921e22 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d5921e22 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d62dd556 | type |
The Chessmaster | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d62dd556 | comment |
The Chessmaster: The witch in "Rapunzel". The first scene she's in shows her bewitching Rapunzel's mother from afar, thus being the one responsible for the mother's craving for radishes. Which led to Rapunzel's father stealing them from the witch's garden, the witch catching him, and stating that she's going to take his daughter as compensation for her stolen vegetables. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d62dd556 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d62dd556 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d62dd556 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d7b34c31 | type |
Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep" | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d7b34c31 | comment |
Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep": The miller's daughter from Rumpelstiltskin. Even her own father just calls her "daughter". | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d7b34c31 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d7b34c31 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d7b34c31 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d7c3ba61 | type |
Race Lift | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d7c3ba61 | comment |
Race Lift: "Puss in Boots" has an all-black cast with the exception of the Farmer, who is played by John Schuck. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d7c3ba61 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d7c3ba61 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d7c3ba61 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d848560f | type |
Unusual Euphemism | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d848560f | comment |
The Frog Prince's younger brother, Hal. "He doesn't take much for Princesses. He just likes to meet up with the boys, and go off after dragons." | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d848560f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d848560f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d848560f | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d9eee868 | type |
Spin-Off | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d9eee868 | comment |
Spinoff: Shelley Duvall's Tall Tales & Legends, which aired on Showtime from 1985-87 and alternated between American folk characters such as Johnny Appleseed and real-life figures like Annie Oakley and Ponce de Leon. Nightmare Classics retold horror stories. Only four episodes were produced, covering The Turn of the Screw, The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Carmilla, and The Eye of the Panther. The Made-for-TV Movie Mother Goose Rock 'n' Rhyme took a funky approach to nursery rhyme characters. Notable as the only one that didn't air on Showtime, but rather The Disney Channel. Finally, Shelley Duvall's Bedtime Stories was an animated series with celebrity narrators that adapted popular children's picture books in a Two Shorts format. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d9eee868 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d9eee868 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_d9eee868 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_dbfd6b8 | type |
Lyrical Dissonance | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_dbfd6b8 | comment |
Lyrical Dissonance: The miller's daughter gently singing her baby a lullaby over ominous background music as Rumpelstiltskin climbs through the window to claim him. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_dbfd6b8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_dbfd6b8 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_dbfd6b8 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_dc835463 | type |
The Big Bad Wolf | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_dc835463 | comment |
The Big Bad Wolf: Played straight in "Little Red Riding Hood" with Malcolm McDowell's Faux Affably Evil take. Humorously zig-zagged in "The Three Little Pigs"; Jeff Goldblum's Buck Wolf is powerful and loves to intimidate others, but he's also a grouchy, lazy Henpecked Husband who's only pursuing the pigs because his wife wants one for visiting coyotes, and is all too easy to trick. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_dc835463 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_dc835463 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_dc835463 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_dd3d1f69 | type |
Wicked Witch | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_dd3d1f69 | comment |
Wicked Witch: Played straight numerous times, but averted in "The Little Mermaid". The Sea Witch is presented as a neutral party, but tries to talk Pearl out of wanting legs by describing the pain it'll bring. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_dd3d1f69 | featureApplicability |
-1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_dd3d1f69 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_dd3d1f69 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e040c8f | type |
Romantic Comedy | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e040c8f | comment |
Romantic Comedy: Two different kiddie video critics in The '80s pointed out that the Princess and the Pea'' adaptation, which toplines Liza Minnelli, is effectively a fairy tale version of the then-recent romantic comedy hit Arthur (1981)'' — not least because she was the leading lady in that too! | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e040c8f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e040c8f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e040c8f | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e21faf11 | type |
Friend to All Living Things | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e21faf11 | comment |
Friend to All Living Things: The Miller's Daughter from "Rumpelstiltskin". This saves the day in the end, as she ventures into the forest at night to ask her animal friends if they've seen "the little man," and the unicorn takes her to his house, where she eavesdrops and learns his name. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e21faf11 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e21faf11 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e21faf11 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e303d198 | type |
Whole-Plot Reference | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e303d198 | comment |
Whole-Plot Reference: The "Beauty and the Beast" episode is very much a loving homage to Jean Cocteau's classic film La Belle et la Bête. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e303d198 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e303d198 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e303d198 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e34400ab | type |
Ambiguously Gay | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e34400ab | comment |
Ambiguously Gay: The Frog Prince's younger brother, Hal. "He doesn't take much for Princesses. He just likes to meet up with the boys, and go off after dragons." Also, the wizard from "Rumpelstiltskin". His behaviour is very camp, and he seems a little put out when the King finally chooses a bride. The green fairy in ''Sleeping Beauty' is the only male fairy, and he talks and acts like a sassy gay man. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e34400ab | featureApplicability |
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Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e34400ab | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e3c36782 | type |
Call-Forward | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e3c36782 | comment |
Call-Forward: In Jack and the Beanstalk, when the Giantess urges Jack to hide from her husband in the oven, Jack remarks "You know this is not Hansel and Gretel, don't you?" and she retorts "I'm an ogress, not a witch!" The show would adapt Hansel and Gretel just two episodes later. | |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e3c36782 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e4965307 | type |
Composite Character | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e4965307 | comment |
Composite Character: In Jack and the Beanstalk, the old man who buys Jack's cow and the fairy who tells him the story of how the Giant killed his father are one and the same, with the man Disguised in Drag for the latter role. The Pinocchio episode combines the characters of Mangiafuoco and the Coachman into the villainous Romani played by James Coburn. The adaptation of The Twelve Dancing Princesses composites the twelve sisters into six, with the title changed just to The Dancing Princesses. In The Boy Who Left Home to Find Out About the Shivers, the ghostly old man haunting the castle turns out to really be the King, who has been staging the supposed "haunting" to get rid of his daughter's suitors because he doesn't want to lose her. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e4965307 | featureApplicability |
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Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e4965307 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e5120d | type |
The Igor | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e5120d | comment |
The Igor: Attila from The Boy Who Left Home to Find Out About the Shivers. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e5120d | featureApplicability |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e5120d | featureConfidence |
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Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_e5120d | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_ea24a918 | type |
Lost in Imitation | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_ea24a918 | comment |
Lost in Imitation: In Sleeping Beauty, the evil fairy Henbane turns herself into a fire-breathing giant to fight the Prince at the climax, only to be slain by him, very much like Maleficent's transformation into a dragon and battle with Prince Phillip in the Disney version. As in Disney's Pinocchio, this version has Pinocchio brought to life by the Blue Fairy (here named Sophia) after Geppetto wishes for a son, unlike in the book where Pinocchio is alive as soon as he's carved. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_ea24a918 | featureApplicability |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_ea24a918 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_ea2c4c28 | type |
Rhyming Episode | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_ea2c4c28 | comment |
Rhyming Episode: "The Pied Piper of Hamelin" save for the opening scene, which establishes the justification for it being this. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_ea2c4c28 | featureApplicability |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_ea2c4c28 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_ea2c4c28 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_eb0df85e | type |
Ham-to-Ham Combat | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_eb0df85e | comment |
Ham-to-Ham Combat: A particularly great one occurs between James Earl Jones's Comedic Sociopath Genie of the Lamp and Leonard Nimoy's Evil Is Hammy Evil Magician. No scenery is left unchewed. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_eb0df85e | featureApplicability |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_eb0df85e | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_f66dfb4b | type |
His Name Really Is "Barkeep" | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_f66dfb4b | comment |
His Name Really Is "Barkeep": In "Beauty and the Beast", her name really is "Beauty"! Her two sisters are understandably resentful. | |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_f66dfb4b | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_f8173bd9 | type |
Medieval European Fantasy | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_f8173bd9 | comment |
In "Rumpelstiltskin" (an episode set in an ambiguous medieval European kingdom), one of the protagonist's animal friends is a raccoon. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_f8173bd9 | featureApplicability |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_f8173bd9 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_fc33ff16 | type |
One-Winged Angel | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_fc33ff16 | comment |
In Sleeping Beauty, the evil fairy Henbane turns herself into a fire-breathing giant to fight the Prince at the climax, only to be slain by him, very much like Maleficent's transformation into a dragon and battle with Prince Phillip in the Disney version. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_fc33ff16 | featureApplicability |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_fc33ff16 | featureConfidence |
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Faerie Tale Theatre | hasFeature |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_fc33ff16 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_fcf82917 | type |
Wacky Cravings | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_fcf82917 | comment |
Wacky Cravings: As in most versions of Rapunzel, the title character's pregnant mother has a wild craving for a vegetable from the Witch's garden, in this case for her blue-leafed radishes. This particular retelling has the Witch cast a spell on Marie to make her crave the radishes so her husband will steal them for her, allowing the Witch to claim their child for herself as the price. | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_fcf82917 | featureApplicability |
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Faerie Tale Theatre / int_fcf82917 | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_ff6d8ad9 | type |
Adaptational Nationality | |
Faerie Tale Theatre / int_ff6d8ad9 | comment |
Adaptational Nationality: Sleeping Beauty is set in Russia instead of Charles Perrault's France or The Brothers Grimm's Germany (although the fairies are dressed like Arabs or gypsies). | |
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