Random villain fact: Al from Al's Toy Barn is the one who tried to buy Woody in Toy Story of Terror. You can see it on the package address very briefly.
@@rolandspeak Apparently there's even a deleted scene where they show him celebrating the purchase and he's also now living in his mom's basement and Al's toy barn closed down, Yeah, life has not been kind to the guy
It’s stated in promotional material & even implied in the film that the Queen can control the weather. It starts raining as soon as Snow White hits the floor & her death is basically the old evil will do themselves in. Non of the other characters in the film were strong enough to stop her. Good stuff. I’ll stop nerding.
@@AntifearnI dunno. I think “The Hunchback of Note Dame” and the “Night on Bald Mountain/Ave Maria” segment of “Fantasia” fit the bill a bit more. Even their adaptations of “Pinocchio” and “Sleeping Beauty” have some strong Christian symbolism going on.
Fun Fact: Apparently Gaston's death was supposed to end with him surviving his fall from the cliff but shortly afterwards would mauled by the wolves. The executives thought it was to gruesome for him, but they would end reusing this concept for Scars death in The Lion King.
Poor Auto didn’t even deserve to get turned off. he was even on a lower plane sentience than most robots in the movie, unlike Wall-E, and Eve, who have lots of personality. They laugh and giggle, which clearly that they DO have personality. Auto on the other hand has a text to speech voice, and while he does react to things, he shows no emotion while doing it. In all Auto never had the ability to change his mind, even when life would come back to earth because his entire existence is based around, keeping the ship, not returning to earth! his mental capacity could never expand upon disobeying a order he was told by BnL.
Fun fact: The original ending of Bambi was supposed to have a shot of Bambi and his Dad encountering Man’s dead body after they escape the burning forest, but it was cut out because the Hollywood Film Code didn’t allow human corpses to be shown on screen in any films (the scene was part of Felix Salian’s original story). In the scene shown at screenings, neither Bambi or his Dad show remorse for Man’s dead body and they just walk away. I think the removal of the scene is effective in the story because it implies that man could still be out in the world and could return. Plus, his lack of a physical appearance on screen makes his presence in the story more unsettling, while being less pandering to real life hunters.
I think the likelihood of a Disney Villain’s death mostly boils down to just how likable they are as individuals. If they’re sympathetic, mistakenly antagonistic, and/or too silly, it seems their likelihood of survival is very high. And that’s pretty understandable; no body wants to see the character audiences feel sorry for or get enjoyment out of receive too cruel a fate. It’s the villains that are far more cruel and/or irredeemable that are more deserving of their fate - though even that can vary between death or punishment (or in Facilier’s case, both?) The rarest ones are the Disney villains who don’t have any discernible fates. The villains/antagonists in “Pinocchio” come to mind, which is surprising given the film’s overall moralistic theming. But I guess it’s an effective way of telling audiences that not all evils in the world can be resolved; that some get away with their deeds and you just have to live with it.
Even though AUTO technically didn’t die (more like put into an indefinite coma), GO-4 on the other hand certainly did die (he was accidentally kicked out of a window and splatted dead on the ground). Would that be in the death category (even if their a robot and technically they are a secondary antagonist)? Also I have not seen Lady and the Tramp, but did they make a literal rat as the main antagonist?
I forgot about GO-4! They would be death for sure since the movie treats artificial intelligence as life, I just kinda side stepped a lot of the secondary villains. As for Lady and the Tramp, kinda sorta. The rat is weirdly present throughout, but not like a focus of the narrative if that makes sense
@@rolandspeak Oh ok, another secondary villain murder I can think of is Mini-Doris from Meet the Robinsons, who was basically kidnapped by the frogs and likely tortured and murdered offscreen. You remember that?
Well some Villains did deserved to die like Ursula Scar Frollo and so on if Ursula didn't die she would still make these impossible deals so that she can transform more meerpeople Scar cause he would seek revenge and he has way to much hateress that he cant be redeemed and Frollo he ficking burned whole Paris