That's All, Folks!: Difference between revisions

→‎Anime: -> Anime and Manga
(fixed section order)
(→‎Anime: -> Anime and Manga)
 
(8 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown)
Line 2:
[[File:ThatsAllFolks.jpg|link=Looney Tunes|thumb|400px|Now g-g-g-g-g-go home.]]
 
{{quote|''"That's all, folks!"''
{{quote|''"That's all, folks!"''|The [[Trope Namer]], <s> [[Porky Pig]]</s> [[Bosko the Talk Ink Kid]], as you can see [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v{{=}}5kPhP3ZNw6A#t=7m44s here].}}
 
In a nutshell, this is telling the audience the show is truly over. They can either wait for the next attraction or go home if that was the final one.
Line 14 ⟶ 15:
See also [[The End]] and [[Game Over Man]].
 
{{endingtrope}}
{{examples}}
== Anime and Manga ==
 
* The ending theme for ''[[Nerima Daikon Brothers]]'' is basically summed up as "Yeah, it matters to our characters, but we're just actors. Thanks for buying the DVD so we can get beer. Now watch the next episode!" [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YiW8MZi8MbA&feature=related You can hear the dub version here].
Line 34 ⟶ 36:
* The Finnish film ''Kummeli Stories'' used this as an elaborate pseudo-[[Brick Joke]]: About halfway through the movie, a topless woman walks into the scene for no reason other than the fact that the movie wouldn't be complete without a pair of naked breasts, with the other characters promising "more titties after the credits". This continues into the actual credits, with "more titties after the credits" shown once or twice as a reminder... and after the credits finally finish, another character shows up, scolds the audience for being a bunch of perverts, and tells them to go home.
* At the end of ''[[The Muppet Movie]]'', Animal tells the audience to "Go home! Go home! Bye, bye!"
* At the end of ''[[Looney Tunes: Back in Action]]'', Porky Pig attempts to deliver his famous catchphrase. Unfortunately for him, his stutter gets even worse than normal and after the lights go out he stops trying and, in an irritated tone, tells the audience to "Just go home, folks!"
* ''[[Who Framed Roger Rabbit?]]?'' ended with Porky saying his line, followed by Tinkerbell blanking the screen with her wand, ''Disneyland''-style.
* Also done after the end credits in ''[[Space Jam]]'' when Bugs Bunny says the line. Porky Pig shows up and protesting Bugs, then Daffy Duck shows up saying it his way, then the five aliens pushed Daffy away and saying the line, and finally, Michael Jordan pushes up the curtain saying, "Can I go home now?"
Line 45 ⟶ 47:
* ''[[Deadpool (film)|Deadpool]]'' parodied ''Ferris Bueller'' with the title character appearing in a similar hallway wearing a similar robe to inform the audience that the movie was over and they weren't going to get a standard [[Marvel Cinematic Universe]] [[Stinger]] with "Sam Jackson in a saucy leather number", before singing a bit of [[Standard Snippet|Yello's iconic "Oh Yeah"]].
 
== Live -Action TV ==
 
* From ''[[All That]]'':
Line 63 ⟶ 65:
* [[Mickey Mouse Club]] had the "Now it's time to say goodbye to all our company" variation of its opening theme.
* Roundhouse: "Reprise the theme song and roll the ending credits!"
* Nearly every episode of ''[[Top Gear]]'' ends with Jeremy Clarkson saying "And on that bombshell, it's is time to end it" or a variant thereof.
* The ''[[M*A*S*H (television)|MashM*A*S*H]]'' episode "The Nurses": Klinger says this after the home movie of Frank's wedding runs out.
* The [[Vanity Plate]] for Ronald Moore's company for ''[[Battlestar Galactica Reimagined(2004 TV series)|[Battlestar Galactica]]''. Each one was different and usually wacky and violent, which resulted in a gradually increasing case of [[Mood Whiplash]] as the series progressed.
* The final episode of ''[[Dinosaurs]]'': "This is Howard [[Punny Name|Handupme]] signing off for the very last time. [[Tear Jerker|Goodnight... And goodbye..."]]
* One episode of the ''[[Mary Tyler Moore Show]]'' actually ended with Mary saying "Th-th-th-th-th-th-that's all, folks!"
 
== Music ==
* "[[Elvis Presley|Elvis]] has left the building." (So he won't be coming back on stage for another encore, so you may as well go home now.)
 
* [[The Beatles (band)|The Beatles]]' ''Let It Be'' was the last album the group released, and John's final quip "I'd just like to say thank you on behalf of the group and ourselves and hope we pass the audition" would certainly be bittersweet. But since ''Abbey Road'' was the last the group recorded, that distinction would go to the last line of "The End":
* "[[Elvis Presley|Elvis]] has left the building."
* The Beatles' ''Let It Be'' was the last album the group released, and John's final quip "I'd just like to say thank you on behalf of the group and ourselves and hope we pass the audition" would certainly be bittersweet. But since ''Abbey Road'' was the last the group recorded, that distinction would go to the last line of "The End":
{{quote|And in the end,
The love you take
Is equal to the love you make. }}
* [[Paul McCartney]] has done this in recent{{when}} concerts - in one he held at Abbey Road (which might air on a [[PBS]] station near you{{verify}}), he wrote a song in front of the audience, and the lyrics included "That's all for now! You've got to go home!" (Done very sweetly and melodically.) Since Paul recently{{when}} has been known to try to continue concerts after the mike has been turned off, a formalized goodbye is necessary.
* An ironic example by the band [[Genesis (band)|Genesis]] [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-F_BRaK301A "That's All"]. The song title is the final lyrics and the rest is instrumental until it fades out.
* Unusual example: the final song of the [[Type O Negative]] album ''October Rust'' cuts off abruptly (after 10 minutes of epicness) and then the lead singer says "Well, that's about it. That's all we have. I hope it wasn't too disappointing. We will see you on tour. Until then, take it easy."
* [[Big & Rich]]'s debut album ''Horse of a Different Color'' included a nearly minute-long goodbye after the last song which was obviously unscripted.
* Eric Idle and Neil Innes' "Rutland Weekend Times" has an instrumentalless finale which includes this couplet:
{{quote|[The budget] is how much we've got to make you bleeders smile
Line 88 ⟶ 89:
* [[Joseph Haydn]]'s Symphony No. 45 is known as the "Farewell" Symphony - he and his musicians were kept at Prince Nikolaus Esterházy's summer palace much longer than expected, so at the end of the last movement, each musician stopped playing and left the stage, snuffing out their candle, until there were two violinists left. The prince got the hint and let them go the next day.
* ''[[Sesame Street]]'' sing-along or play-along cassettes from the 1980s invariably ended with a stern male narrator announcing: "The tape is over. Please press the STOP button. Push it now." If you still hadn't pushed it after that, you got Oscar the Grouch sarcastically yelling: "WILL YOU PUSH IT NOW ALREADY?!"
* The [[Blue Öyster Cult|Blue Oyster Cult]]: The song "Shooting Shark" ends with, "Fourth time round is the last time round; I have nothing else to say." Likely a subversion as this song is about repeatedly breaking up and getting back together.
* A cappella novelty band ''[[Instant Sunshine'']] had a song called ''"[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tVGfbk7y8Is#t=23m40s Fleeting Time Now Bids Us Go]''", a song about how they had to stop singing now. The joke was that it slowly built to a grand chorus, after which one of the singers didn't get the hint and kept going.
 
== Newspaper Comics ==
Line 193 ⟶ 194:
== Real Life ==
 
* [[Mel Blanc]]'s [http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/76/Mel_Blanc_4-15-05.JPG tombstone].: [[Grave Humor|That's All, Folks!]]
* Standard bar or pub line at closing time: "This is the last call. You don't have to go home, but you can't stay here." There was even a pop song with lyrics almost exactly like the above ("Closing Time" by Semisonic).
* [[Microsoft Windows|Windows 95]], upon being shut down, would "end" on a blank screen except for the message "It is now safe to turn off your computer." Newer versions of Windows would probably do the same, if not for the advent of PCs that could just turn themselves off instead of waiting for the user.
* Certain phones on Virginmobile Mobile servicephones, such as the Kyocera Jax, print "BYE" to the screen when turned off. More than a few DVD players or recorders display "HELLO" on power-up and "GOODBYE" on shutdown.
* Virtually all data transmission standards specify "End of Stream" or functionally similar code. Data that, for whatever reason, comes after such code are treated as though they don't exist.