Bartok the Magnificent: Difference between revisions

m
Reverted edits by Gethbot (talk) to last revision by Robkelk
m (→‎top: clean up)
Tag: Reverted
m (Reverted edits by Gethbot (talk) to last revision by Robkelk)
Tag: Rollback
 
Line 29:
* [[Leitmotif]]: An instrumental of "Bartok The Magnificent" plays pretty much every time Bartok does something heroic, or gets a heroic idea.
* [[Lions and Tigers and Humans, Oh My!]]: Bartok is a [[Talking Animal]], his [[Grotesque Gallery|grotesque]] bear companion is ''almost'' [[Funny Animal|anthropomorphic]], there are a couple of monsters and [[Ugly Cute]] [[Cartoon Creature|oddities of indeterminate species]], and everyone else is human.
* [[The Mind Is a Plaything of the Body]]: Sort of happens to Ludmilla at the end. Baba Yagas potion makes anyone who drinks it "ten times the person" they are inside. Ludmilla drinks it thinking it will turn her into what she thinks she is: beautiful, sweet and graceful as a flower, but since inside she's rotten and villainous she instead turns into a monstrous dragon. Her manner of speaking noticeably becomes much less sweet and controlled—andcontrolled -- and more manic and aggressive - over the course of her [[Villain Song]], but she doesn't even realize anything's changing until she gets a look at herself in the mirror. Up until that point she was still talking about how she's going to be the golden ruler to the people of Russia - by the time Bartok gets to the city she's a rampaging beast setting everything on fire, and she doesn't talk at all or act like anything but a feral monster for the rest of her appearances. Since she's the villain anyway it's less noticeable - and it's more of a "''mind is a plaything of the body which is a plaything of the inner self''" type deal - but it's definitely an example.
** If you interpret the events to mean that Baba Yaga knew Ludmilla would steal the potion and therefore she made it a "turn into dragon" poison from the outset, then it's a completely straight version of ''Mind Is A Plaything of The Body.''
* [[Misunderstood Loner with a Heart of Gold]]: Baba Yaga.
Line 48:
[[Category:Animated Films]]
[[Category:Western Animation]]
[[Category:Bartok the Magnificent{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Western Animation of the 1990s]]
[[Category:Films of the 1990s]]