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{{quote|''"If you have an important point to make, don't try to be subtle or clever. Use a pile driver. Hit the point once. Then come back and hit it again. [[Rule of Three|Then hit it a third time - a tremendous whack.]]"''|'''[[Winston Churchill]]'''}}
An [[Anvilicious]] work is one that has [[An Aesop|a moral message]] and makes it as subtle as an anvil dropped on the viewer's head. But sometimes, a work can be Anvilicious [[Tropes Are Not Bad|without suffering in the process]]. Some works not only pull it off gracefully, but are effective ''because'' of the Anvil—and not in a [[So Bad It's Good]] way, either. Often seen in [[Reconstruction]]s.
Other times, the anvil comes across very blatant, which might turn off some viewers, but in the era which the story is told, the message itself is more important than the story or allegory it is presented in.
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When an anvil needed to be dropped, but it wasn't, you have [[Lost Aesop]]. If they just dropped the wrong one, it's a [[Broken Aesop]].
Remember, this is not whether or not you agree with the moral, it's about how a story is improved because the message is so blatant. A genuinely anvilicious
[[I Thought It Meant|Has nothing to do with]] [[Anvil on Head]].
{{examples on subpages}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Audience Reactions]]
[[Category:
[[Category:Sturgeon's Tropes]]
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