Parachute Petticoat: Difference between revisions
m (Mass update links) |
m (update links) |
||
Line 33: | Line 33: | ||
== [[Video Games]] == |
== [[Video Games]] == |
||
* Princess [[The Legend of Zelda|Zelda]] in ''[[Super Smash Bros]].'' can use this to slow and control descents after being hit up. |
* Princess [[The Legend of Zelda|Zelda]] in ''[[Super Smash Bros]].'' can use this to slow and control descents after being hit up. |
||
* [[Super Mario Bros.|Princess Peach]] in ''[[Super Mario Bros 2]]'' uses this to hover in the air and make long jumps. |
* [[Super Mario Bros.|Princess Peach]] in ''[[Super Mario Bros. 2]]'' uses this to hover in the air and make long jumps. |
||
* Rachel Alucard in ''[[Blaz Blue]]''. Ironically, although she [[Parasol of Pain|wields an umbrella]] ([[Equippable Ally|a cat which turns into one, no less]]), she doesn't use a [[Parasol Parachute]], except in her intro poses. |
* Rachel Alucard in ''[[Blaz Blue]]''. Ironically, although she [[Parasol of Pain|wields an umbrella]] ([[Equippable Ally|a cat which turns into one, no less]]), she doesn't use a [[Parasol Parachute]], except in her intro poses. |
||
* Alice of ''[[American McGee's Alice]]'' uses her dress as a parachute to ride steam. |
* Alice of ''[[American McGee's Alice]]'' uses her dress as a parachute to ride steam. |
Revision as of 15:32, 11 August 2014
![](http://static.miraheze.org/allthetropeswiki/c/c1/Baroness_Parachute_HD_4575.jpg)
Falling is a very unladylike activity on the whole. There's lots of tumbling and screaming, your hair and clothes get ruined and there's the danger people below may see your underwear. This trope offers an alternative for the more ladylike and feminine of tumblers especially Princess characters with a Pimped-Out Dress. Basically, a character's dress or skirt flares out in mid-air forming a parachute shape and somehow slowing their descent.
The thicker and more layered the material the better. Don't worry about terminal velocities and drag coefficients (see Puny Parachute), the laws of physics tend to give way to the opportunity to see a slightly comical petticoat exposure.
Often a form of Improvised Parachute, but just as often it's accidental.
Compare Parasol Parachute (often found on similar sorts of characters).
Comic Books
- Jet Dream: In one story, Marlene's dress billows out into a "Tunic Chute" to save her from falling off a cliff to her death. Technically not "improvised," but a piece of spy gear designed for the purpose. It's a pretty goofy design, though, and one of the less "ladylike" examples, as just about any angle other than that chosen by the artist would give Marlene "full exposure." See Marlene's Tunic Chute in all its glory.
- A Liloand Stitch comic from Disney Adventures' Comic Zone has the characters playing with "jump jelly," goop that acts as a super-trampoline if charged with electricity. When Pleakley tries it, he wears one of Nani's dresses as a safety precaution. Stitch turns the electricity up and Pleakley bounces extra-high, using the dress as a parachute to float back down with.
Film-Animated
- The falling scene as Alice falls down the rabbit hole in Disney's version of Alice in Wonderland (seen here).
- It was also used for Brooke Shields's guest appearance on The Muppet Show where she sang as Alice falling down the rabbit hole.
- The few jumps across gaps with uprising wind in American McGee's Alice also make use of the billowing uplift of the dress.
Film-Live Action
- Happens in Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, when the Baroness is launched into the air from Chitty's Ejection Seat.
- During the boxing match at the end of The Adventures of Bullwhip Griffin, one of the fighters is slammed into the crowd with such force that one of the saloon girls is catapulted skyward, only to drift back down. (Then again, since she was dancing the cancan earlier, we'd already seen her petti's...)
Literature
- Happens in the novel Super Folks by Robert Mayer, with the added revelation that the lady in question wasn't wearing underwear.
- One of the reasons Mistborn avoid dresses is the tendency to do this when they're Roof Hopping.
Live Action TV
- In the first episode of Jack of All Trades, Jack rescues President Jefferson's niece from a French fort in Canada. To escape the fort, Jack and the girl jump off a high cliff. They are saved because Jack grabs on to her feet and her skirt billows out to form a parachute. (Jack also gets an excellent view of her petticoats.)
Video Games
- Princess Zelda in Super Smash Bros. can use this to slow and control descents after being hit up.
- Princess Peach in Super Mario Bros. 2 uses this to hover in the air and make long jumps.
- Rachel Alucard in Blaz Blue. Ironically, although she wields an umbrella (a cat which turns into one, no less), she doesn't use a Parasol Parachute, except in her intro poses.
- Alice of American McGee's Alice uses her dress as a parachute to ride steam.
- And in the sequel, three of her four possible jumps involve this trope as a way to cross long distances.
Western Animation
- In the Classic Disney Shorts "Plane Crazy", Minnie Mouse's bloomers deploy like a parachute.
- Baby Piggy in Muppet Babies, as she told her version of the Lewis Carrol story, had this happen to her own Alice character, her dress taking a parachute-like means as she fell down a rabbit-, er, I mean tadpole-hole.
- In Jem, one of the Misfits videos "Lovesick" had Pizzazz do a parachute petticoat.
- At the end of the Kim Possible half-episode "Rufus in Show" Kim presses a button so her spy suit becomes a dress to serve this function.
- Rugrats had Chuckie and Phil try this while wearing dresses for the first time. It actually worked for a second.