Slippery Skid

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Slide on the soap! (runs up soapy slope, slides back down)
Slide on the soap! (runs up soapy slope, slides back down)
Slide on the soap! (runs up soapy slope, slides back down)

Slide on the soap! (runs up soapy slope, slides back down)

Something slick like oil, or slippery like a jar of marbles, is poured out on to a floor, and a targeted character or vehicle slips, skids and falls/crashes, typically backwards.

Seen often in broad physical comedy, as well as vehicular action sequences. In chase scenes, it is guaranteed that when small spherical objects are scattered, the enemy in chase will step on them and immediately fall down, giving the hero ample time to escape.

A standard cause of The Pratfall. In more cartoonish variations it's accompanied by a common Stock Sound Effect.

Banana Peel is a subtrope of this. When done from a car against another car, it's usually an Oil Slick.

Examples of Slippery Skid include:


Comic Books

  • Tintin cracks open an abacus in a chase scene from The Secret of the Unicorn. He also does the same thing with a barrel of oil in Tintin and the Lake of Sharks.
  • During an earlier issue of Daredevil (specifically pre-Darker and Edgier era), the floor gets covered in pool balls. Daredevil's radar senses lets him manuever effortlessly while his opponent is left to fumble around; he remarks in thought captions that it's easier to recover from defeat than humiliation.
  • Sexton sets up some marbles as a trap for his and Death/Didi's captor in Death: The High Cost of Living, hoping he'll slip and break his neck, but it ends up being (nonlethally) sprung on the wrong person.
  • Averted in Sin City despite a few chase scenes happening in the snow.

Fan Works

  • During the climax of With Strings Attached, John instantly coats the rooftop of the warehouse with wet ice, causing everyone except him to lose their footing and go crashing down, thus rendering them incapable of casting spells at him while he races to the trap door in the roof.

Film

  • In Animal House, they used marbles during the end parade.[context?]
  • In The Transporter, Frank pours motor oil onto the garage floor (and all over himself) to fight a gang of Mooks, using cleats improvised from bicycle pedals to keep his footing.
  • In Home Alone, Kevin sprayed water on the outside steps that froze into ice, in addition to placing Micro Machines in front of the inside stairway.
    • In the sequel, he bought some cheap necklaces from a street vendor and spilled their beads onto the sidewalk, which the bandits promptly slipped on. Later, Marv stepped onto a slippery floor (courtesy of Kevin), struggled to keep his balance, managed to stop himself for just a moment, and then finally lost his balance... propelling him forward into a shelf loaded with paint cans in spite of the laws of physics. Finally, Kevin himself slipped on ice, getting himself caught.
  • Who Framed Roger Rabbit? has several examples:
    • In the opening cartoon, Roger slips on both a rolling pin and a bar of soap.
    • Judge Doom pours "the dip" on a road at one point, causing Benny the Cab to skid as his wheels burn off.
    • Later, Judge Doom himself slips on some Toon "Eye Balls" and falls.
  • Used with gumballs and basketballs in the 1998 Godzilla.
  • In the film Pokémon Ranger and The Temple of The Sea, the Pokémon Ranger of the title causes several Evil Minions to slip and fall by overturning a basket of potatoes (yes, potatoes!) under their feet.
  • The Goonies. Data's "Slick Shoes" lead to some nut-crunching acrobatics by the Fratelli brothers.
  • The 2008 Get Smart movie did this with a fallen hanging bead curtain.

Maxwell Smart: "I set that up."

  • In Jumanji, it turns out the spilt detergent that almost sends Van Pelt into a skid is actually intended to allow a rocket-mounted canoe to slide across the floor.
  • Hook features an elaborate marble/bead-shooting apparatus.
  • Three Ninjas does this with an oiled wooden floor and jelly beans.

Literature

  • Subverted in The Dresden Files. Harry spreads marbles out in front of his supernatural enemy. It steps on them and crushes them underfoot rather than going slipsliding away. His ally badly hurts her ankle, and is not amused.
    • "That's not a plan, Harry, that's a Looney Tune."

Live Action TV

  • Subverted in the Doctor Who serial "Robot". The Doctor tosses ball bearings into the path of the titular robot, only for it to squash them flat.
  • Jackass has done it a few times. [context?]
  • Happened to Wesley on Angel after the titular character attempts - and fails - to use his superstrength to crush coffee beans still in the bag. Results in a classic pratfall, something Wesley's actor is apparently quite fond of.
    • He'd have liked Graduation then, when Angel tries to sneak into where Buffy is searching for clues he slips and stumbles through the door. Buffy lampshades both his smooth moves and David Boreanaz's clumsiness as Angel feebly makes excuses.

Manga

Music

  • In the video of Pink's "Please Don't Leave Me", it's those darn marbles again. Upstairs. Twice.

Newspaper Comics

  • One Far Side cartoon features a "Ball Bearings, Banana Peel, Roller skates, and Floor Wax" factory.

Tabletop RPG

  • Because of the nature of Tabletop RPGs, smart players can use anything from grease to marbles to set traps.
  • Dungeons and Dragons has first-level 'Grease' spell for this purpose from AD&D1 expansions on. And even magical item—Oil of Slipperiness.
    • The Complete Thief's Handbook recommended "perennially popular" bag of marbles among others tools of the trade.
    • Forgotten Realms of AD&D2 era added 'Grease Slick' that has greater area and duration, is cast silently, and instead of one surface sprays everything. Which sometimes is worth a spell of the same level as fireball.
  • The Champions supplement C.L.O.W.N. has this twice. Merry Andrew's Banana Gun squirts out banana oil that causes opponents to go slip sliding away, and Marbles can throw her marbles into a character's path and send them skidding away down the street.
  • Paranoia does this twice.
    • Adventure Vapors Don't Shoot Back. During Mission 1, while the PCs are fighting in the warehouse boxes will break open and spill ball bearings all over the floor, which will make slipping and falling very likely.
    • Adventure Send in the Clones. During the Sewerworld segment, the PCs enter an old TV studio with boxes of ping pong balls. The boxes break open, spilling the ping pong balls all over the floor and tremendously increasing the PCs' chance of slipping and falling.

Video Games

  • In Dead Rising you can do this to zombies. Yes, it is as funny as it sounds.
  • This is a method of escaping pursuers in Bully.
  • The vintage arcade game Spy Hunter has a car that can deploy oil slicks (see below).
  • A powerup in Backyard Hockey causes the other team to do this.
  • Street Fighter IV character Hakan uses a fighting style based entirely on covering himself with oil and being slippery as all hell.
  • In Machinarium, one of the early puzzles involves throwing some duck shots on the floor so one of the bad guys could slip.
  • In the backstory of Orcs Must Die, the old master War Mage meets his end by slipping on monster blood and suffering a fatal head injury as a result, leaving the defense of the realms to his apprentice.

Western Animation

  • Done hilariously in a Looney Tunes cartoon, where Sylvester greases up Elmer Fudd's stairs and thumb-tacks his walkway in an attempt to deter him from interrupting his caterwauling. The hilarious part is that after having going through all that, Elmer then runs through it again to go inside and get his shotgun, and then runs through it a third time. (Funny how he doesn't bother to put on shoes.)
    • Bugs uses grease in his coup de grace in Bully for Bugs.
    • Wile E. Coyote uses grease either to immobilize the Road Runner or to generate speed for himself - it never works out well.
  • Subverted in the first Superman: The Animated Series crossover with Batman: The Animated Series. The Joker throws a bunch of marbles on the floor to make good on his escape from the pair. Superman thinks he must be kidding, but it's quickly revealed that these are exploding marbles, and the good guys are forced to make a hasty escape.
    • Joker does it again in Justice League, this time to the Flash. First he slips on them, and then they blow up, sending him flying.
  • A subversion in The Simpsons: Homer attempt to injure himself in order to skip work, by slipping on some oil. Instead, he only manages to skid through the entire plant unharmed.
  • Another subversion as The Spectacular Spider-Man unleashes bowling balls onto the floor of a sporting goods store in an attempt to stop The Rhino. "This always works in the cartoons!" It doesn't work.
  • Used in The Movie of Batman Beyond to knock down the Didis.
  • Hanna-Barbera's The Adventures of Gulliver. In the episode where he takes on pirate captain Cutler, Gulliver uses a bar of soap on the ground to send a pirate careening on a long slide into a lifeboat.
  • Jonny Quest TOS episode "Monster in the Monastery". Jonny shoots arrows to break oil bags hanging from the ceiling, and the chief yeti slips in the oil, rolls down some stairs and falls to his death.
  • In the Classic Disney Short Mickey's Service Station, a hydraulic hoist pops out of its shaft with a car on it - Goofy grabs it, and while struggling to hold it up, gets caught on a puddle of spilled oil and goes into a slipping maladroit dance.

Vehicles that can deploy Oil Slick behind them to foil pursuit:

Film

Live Action TV

  • KITT from Knight Rider did this regularly. One spectacular use of it involved causing a pursuing Armoured Assault Vehicle to slide out of control and unable to stop, and at the last minute turbo boosting over a storage depot while the pursuer plowed into it, blowing the depot and itself up in the process.

Tabletop Games

  • The vehicles in Steve Jackson Games' Car Wars have this as an optional extra.

Video Games