Regular villains: I guess it’s jail time for me. Disney: D e a t h Those companies: That’s a little vio- Disney: *D I E* The audience: I’m disturbed... Disney: *M u r d e r t h e m* Us: Meme potential! Disney: K I I I I I I I L L L L L L L L L L
The ironic thing about Clayton’s death is that throughout the film he was always mocking Tarzan as a “Savage” while pushing him to be a “Man”. Yet in his final moments it was Tarzan who was the real man for still trying to help Clayton, while Clayton himself was screaming like a savage beyond help
@@TPOTfan406 if u don’t know what this guy said is that Gaston’s eyes show a skull for a brief second and i didn’t know until i saw a video about it hope this helped
I felt bad because he tried to save Clayton even though he tried to kill Tarzan’s family, Tarzan tried to save but was too late…Imagine what the body looked like…
7:49 I still think Facilier’s death is the most disturbing. This guy has demons watching his every move, always breathing down his neck, and the literal second he screws up he’s dragged to hell, screaming and begging for his life.
dr. facillier’s death is just… so incredible. it’s disturbing, satisfying, ironic, and a whole ass bop. homeboy literally gets dragged to hell all because of his own actions and ego. the way it was executed was absolutely perfect. the way he immediately realises what’s about to happen and starts pleading with the friends to give him more time… it’s chilling yet so satisfying and fitting for him. simply brilliant.
Not only is Facillier dead but so is his shadow and all his evil magic and friends are gone for good changing fate of New Orleans and all living there back to karma
Bill Sykes' death is very underrated, not only it's one of the most realistic ones (Besides Clayton's) but also the fact of instead of screaming "NOOOOOO" like most villains when defeated, he just looks at the train and goes like "Welp, I'm dead"
@@Pink_pr1ncessto be fair they were probably each going about 60-70 mph, so a closing speed of about 140 mph to the central point of impact. Yeah, no point in even reacting, just accept death then and there
Frolo’s death is the perfect definition of dramatic irony because in the end he was right: “And the Lord shall cast down the Wicked into the eternal Lake of Fire!” And that’s exactly what the Lord did in the end.
Zira fell *INTO a raging river!!* So, she more likely drowned, OR, smacked her head on a sharp, jagged rock at some point. Died? Yes. From Falling?? Not on your life!!
I love how ironically enough, Disney has some of the most messed up and violent villain deaths I have ever seen. Without any blood they manage to be creepy.
3:10 mauled to death by hyenas. One of the worst things about it is that they don’t wait until Scar is dead to start feasting, so it’s also possible for Scar to’ve been eaten alive while being mauled
Well, if Scar didn't betrayed his companions saying that they were his and Simba's enemies, he would die by a fire, or he would survive, but not for long.
3:17 god i got chills frollo has his own tier of evilness, nothing can compete he’s straight up evil .. he doesn’t have powers like Ursula or jafar, he’s just a normal person. He can exist in real life.
Funny enough, given that I haven't watched The Hunchback of Notre Dame original animated film, the first time that I saw Frollo's death scene, was through Kingdom Hearts: Dream Drop Distance. And having seen this compilation, I'm impressed that Frollo's last moments in KH3D were the same as that of the original. Only this time, in 3D.
no one falls onto ice like Gaston (yes ik it was prob summer but it makes sense for the movie as blue stuff was down at the bottom where Gaston falls, idk maybe he drowned)
i know gravity falls isn’t a traditional disney classic, but i’m happy it was included. bill’s death never ceases to give me chills. the entire premise of stan giving up all his memories to defeat him makes me tear up every time! alex hirsch truly is a genius.
0:00 Queen Grimhilde 0:17 Maleficent 0:39 Bear (Which is the mascot for my school) but black wawa 0:53 The Horned King 1:14 Professor Ratigan 1:28 Bill Sykes 1:39 Ursula 1:56 Percival C. McLeach 2:09 Gaston 2:25 Mr. Oogie Boogie 2:45 Jafar 2:59 Scar 3:17 Claude Frollo Hades 3:40 Maestro Forte 4:06 Shan Yu 4:24 Zira 4:40 Hopper 4:49 Sabor Leopard 5:05 Clayton 5:25 The Jack in the Box 5:40 Morgana 5:56 Carnotaurus 6:10 Helga Sinclair 6:23 Lyle Tiberius Rourke 6:49 Scroop 7:01 Syndrome Kazar 7:19 DOR-15/Doris 7:36 Charles F. Muntz 7:49 Doctor Facilier 8:09 Mother Gothel 8:41 King Candy/ Turbo 9:00 Mor’du 9:12 Thunderclap 9:23 Griffany 9:41 Bill Cipher Ernesto De La Cruz Arthur/ Ralph Clones King Ruenard Curse Dragon
@@DRpePPer1300 Yes, never realized it as a kid here, either. And actually, it wasn't during a rewatch of the movie for me, but during a youtube video with commentary on it.
It’s also brilliant because the focus of the shot is the machete, where most people would focus on. Completely unaware that the shadow Clayton’s lifeless body is shown.
@@nyabis8044 Thinking back to when I first saw the scene as a kid, I never saw the body it wasn’t until it was pointed out to me when I was like 15 that I saw it
@@CharizardMaster69 I'm 30 and only noticed it today after having seen the movie as both a kid and a teen and having watched this video around five times
What I find interesting is that most of these villains were the architects of their own destruction. Really sends the message home that if you succumb to evil, it will consume you.
Yep. Gaston could have lived, if he had just let go of his obsession with Belle, but he just had to get in one more shot against the Beast. Scar could have lived, if he had accepted Simba’s offer to run away and never return, but he refused. Frollo could have lived if he had recanted his obsession with Esmeralda, but he wasn’t willing to let her go.
Fun Fact: Gaston was originally supposed to survive the fall, shout "if I can't have Belle, no one can", then he was mauled by the wolves. They cut this due to its brutality. They later reused this idea for Scar's death in the Lion King. edit: To everyone saying about the skulls, I know that, but one can theorize. I didn't say it was canon. I was just stating their original plan for his death, or lack thereof, as well as an opinion from the original cast.
Clayton, Facilier, and Scar stuck in my mind for the longest time as a little kid. Being hanged, getting dragged into hell, and being eaten alive… Disney may not show blood, but they sure don’t pack their punches lol
I love how the Horned King’s death is literally like those horrifying 80’s horror movie deaths where it’s some semi-quick and brutal death of a character before they disappear into whatever evil had killed them (like Nancy’s Mom in Nightmare on Elm Street), without any trace or evidence of their previous existence.
Syndrome’s cape in the engine death is just beautiful, sweet poetic justice. Also, the way Tarzan scrambles to keep Clayton from sabotaging himself and the way it’s like… knife falls, Tarzan falls, Clayton’s silhouette in succession. The animation is incredible in that sequence. The impact is huge.
My favorite thing about Syndromes death scene is the multiple layers of irony to it. Obviously the cape getting caught in the turbine is what most people think about, but there’s another detail. What gets Syndrome caught in the turbine in the first place is Bob throwing the car that Syndrome GAVE him. Syndrome was the architect of his own demise from every angle.
Dr. Facillier had the worst fate of all, seeing how he is dragged into what can be hell in such horrific fashion. The first disney scene that scared me as a kid.
The horned king is literally exactly the same but we actually see what happens after he gets dragged to the cauldron unlike facillier, the horned king’s skin legit gets ripped apart right before because covered in fire and then causing a massive explosion
He was also the last Disney villain that died in a 2D movie, because the next villains that died in 2D such as the sorcerer (Randy Cunningham 9th grade ninja), Bill Cipher (Gravity falls), Toffee (Star vs the forces of evil), Zhan Tiri (Tangled: the series), The core (Amphibia), The Chairman (the ghost and Molly Mcgee), or emperor Belos (The owl house) were in TV shows.
Eaten Alive, Burned, Turned to Dust, Run over, Electrocuted, Fell, Hanged, Punched, Drowned, Stabbed, Crushed, Blown up, Impaled, Froze, Ripped up, and Dragged to Hell by Angry Voo-Doo Gods. Damn Disney scares me sometimes.
*I think y'all forget how brutal Syndromes death was. I mean other than Clayton's. He has the most brutal and possibly the most painful death in Disney history*
My favourite and the death that most traumed me as a kid was Facilier’s death. And personally I think they made visually beautiful such a tetric scene it’s amazing
I find Zira's death very ironic because she was so eager for revenge and died the same way Scar killed Mufasa except someone actually tried helping her but refused because it was by "an enemy" so she met the fate that Scar dished out
Fun fact: scar’s death was originally meant for Gaston. When he fell into the gorge he survived but got attacked by the wolves. But then, they changed it, and seeing how it played out for Scar, we can see why.
Really? You were supposed to see Gaston killed /eaten alive (not literally obviously) by the wolves!? If so then that's nature's karma on a killer of nature etc. 😌
3:28 The gargoyle animated itself infront of Frollo because these were placed on churches and cathedrals to scare off demons and evil spirits. This Gargoyle came to life specifically to scare off Frodo. Also shoutout to the creativity of Mother Gothelle's death who decomposed midair so fast she got reduced to dust before hitting the ground.
It took me way too long to realize that Mother Gothel had de-aged herself so much to the point where her entire body rotted away mid-fall due to its inability to sustain any form after quickly catching up with her true age
@@bigboomer1013 When it comes to European buildings (especially old religious ones like Notre-Dame) nothing is made "just" to look cool. If an architect can make something as practical and symbolic as possible, they will.
I only realized only now that the birds watching with a sinister smile as the evil witch in Snow White falls to her death is that she's now a free meal for them to eat.
@@youknowwhoitis.itsmyname4746 It did. Just that, well...in the law of physics, material will find a way to escape one another, and because she's lighter and...uh,ess dense, her body will splatter from underneath
Not gonna lie Gaston’s death at 2:18 cracks me up how he screamed like a little girl as he was falling 🤣😆😂. And then Scar’s death also cracks me up too 💀🤣😆
What gets me about Clayton/Tarzan Main Villian is that most of the time the heroes forget about the Villain as soon as they witness their death and it didn’t seem like Tarzan buried him or anything. He just left his body left to hang and flies and stuff to get to it and his body slowly decaying and stinking.
Yeah I also noticed Disney never wants the main character to defeat the villain, but some other person/force of nature.(typically gravity) Aladdin is one exception I can think of where Aladdin's cunning tricked Jafar into trapping himself.
Writer: So, how should we kill the villa-- Disney: Falls to his death. Writer: But how about-- Disney: He falls to his death. Writer: But maybe-- Disney: He. Falls. To. His. DEATH.
So fun fact: the reason they do that in so many of their films is because they don't want their heroes to become murderers. Even if they attack the villain in some way to lead to their end, they never directly deal the killing blow by their own hands. It also kinda shows that the villains were done in their own evil ways.
I love it how if a main character falls down a waterfall they don’t die or get hurt. However if a villain falls down they splat into a million pieces. Edit: momma im famous
The meaning behind the falls is that bad people will eventually fall. No matter how high up they get they end up falling. That’s why most villain movies they have the bad guy fall from somewhere high
In Zira's death scene, anyone else ever notice the weird editing, and how she seems to be smiling as she falls to her death? Well, you see, the original scene, which very, VERY nearly made it into the final cut, played out like this: Zira starts slipping, Kiara offers to pull her back up, and Zira seems to consider it...before snarling out a firm refusal and throwing herself off the rocks, laughing all the way down to the raging water. Yeah, her expression makes a lot more sense now, doesn't it? Why the sloppy cuts and obvious replacement of her laughter with an unfitting scream? Apparently this was considered "too dark" by the company that, the very next year, gave us a movie where the main villain ends up accidentally hanging himself AND WE'RE SHOWN HIS CORPSE'S SHADOW TO DRIVE IT HOME.
@@jamesjohnson6358 i guess maybe the spiteful suicide was the part considered dark, rather than the nature of death, whereas clayton's was caused by him neglecting to pay attention to his surroundings in his anger
Also: Kovu originally WAS going to be Scar's son until they realised that'd make him and Kiara cousins, which is why it's never really explained where his family came from or why he was chosen for heir 😂
@@BROXBasher Considering how much of a fanboy he is, I come to two conclusions: Either he completely passed over the fact so many people died by capes, or he did indeed know Edna because of his obsession, as he might have stalked or otherwise learned about her through other means
@@gavinziozios1431 The former sounds more likely. His fanboy days WERE in the golden age of superheroes, and I'm guessing the no-capes thing was something he never found out about because of his obsession with making superheroes obsolete.
It’s amazing that the the Queens death from snowy white was done in the 30s. It has to be the most iconic of all. Maybe not the most brutal. But the most iconic.
I always thought it was interesting how in the hunchback, Frollo clings to a gargoyle who comes alive as he falls. Gargoyles were originally made and added to buildings due to the superstition that they would act as guardians and protectors to the places and buildings they were build for...so for it to come alive at the sight of Frollo it really speaks to how far he has fallen...no pun intended
I mean... cool theory but it is a little undercut by the fact that Quasi makes three gargoyles come to life for the entire film (And yes, one could possibly argue that he imagines them)
I'm just putting out the lore I heard, and who knows, maybe they came to life as HIS guardians? Protecting him from the demon who dressed in black robes
Fun fact: they say that those who stare into the eyes of the devil have commited terrible sins. The gargoyle only screamed at Frollo once he looked into it's eyes.
0:00 Snow White and the Seven Dwarves (1937) 0:17 Sleeping Beauty (1959) 0:38 The Fox and the Hound (1981) 0:53 The Black Cauldron (1985) 1:14 The Great Mouse Detective (1986) 1:27 Oliver and Company (1988) 1:38 The Little Mermaid (1989) 1:56 The Rescuers Down Under (1990) 2:09 Beauty and the Beast (1991) 2:24 The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993) 2:45 The Return of Jafar (1994) 2:58 The Lion King (1994) 3:16 The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996) 3:40 Beauty and the Beast: The Enchanted Christmas (1997) 4:05 Mulan (1998) 4:24 The Lion King II: Simba's Pride (1998) 4:39 A Bug's Life (1998) 4:49 Tarzan (1999) 5:25 Fantasia 2000 (1999) 5:40 The Little Mermaid II: Return to the Sea (2000) 5:55 Dinosaur (2000) 6:10 Atlantis: The Lost Empire (2001) 6:49 Treasure Planet (2002) 7:01 The Incredibles (2004) 7:19 Meet the Robinsons (2007) 7:35 Up (2009) 7:49 The Princess and the Frog (2009) 8:09 Tangled (2010) 8:41 Wreck-It Ralph (2012) 9:00 Brave (2012) 9:12 The Good Dinosaur (2015) 9:23 Gravity Falls
There's something... Simple about Charles' death at 7:36 that makes it the one that sticks with me the most. Sure most other deaths on here where the villain falls to their doom are more gruesome and dramatic like Frollo's or Clayton's, with over the top screams, striking visuals, and bombastic music, but Charles' overall simplic fall just makes it more unsettling to me. He just... Plummets. No real dramatic music, no hearing him scream until he's finally dead, just a quick shout, a quick music chord, and he's gone. The quickness of it all also just sells it I feel. It feels less like a triumphant moment of the villain being defeated and more of a "This didn't have to end this way" feeling, I guess. Also the Shadow Man's death from TP&TF is still the best one overall. Literally gets dragged to hell by voodoo dolls. It's so visually amazing and disturbing.
I like how the protagonist is remorseful in most of these scenes, and the villains bring about their own end. Then there's the Good Dinosaur, who mows them down in cold blood as they try to flee.
EVER HEARD OF AN EARTHQUAKE. Like how Scar made the ground split when he was singing "Be Prepared" I can see ice cracking and falling under. (Unfortunately you could still be rescued, i mean in reality its a toss up of surviving but for movies you NEED TO SINK. Its just quicker that way for cinematic reasons. Kill em off)
6:55 This is the most horrifying death on here. He isn't going to plummet into anything, he's just going to be trapped, hurtling through space until he starves to death. And being an insect-type creature, that could potentially take _months._ He isn't screaming at his _impending_ death, he's screaming knowing that death is a long, torturous distance away. At least Mr Arrow got spaghettified into a black hole Edit: I suppose Facilier might have it worse, being tortured by voodoo demons is probably worse.
@Sengo Muramasa also known as one the most underrated gems ever created that was purposefully shafted by Disney so they could have a excuse not to do 2d animation anymore
Fun fact: Zira's death was intended to be different. Originally, she was going to intentionally let go of the cliff face, but this was changed because suicide is too heavy a topic for a Disney film. The original death was fully-animated and voiced, but as you can see, was edited rather sloppily.
BNSF1995 Disney really doing the most. A character falling to her death because of her unwillingness on letting go of her pride is considered « too dark », but a villain planning a whole ass genocide in the name of God and then falling in the pits of Hell is just fine. Plus, call it the Mandala Effect, but I always kind of remember Zira actually let go of the cliff willingly. In my memory, this scene was longer, with Kira begging her to accept her help and Zira just being stubborn and stuff.
Nastasia Kubrick I actually remember it the same way. She let go and kinda fell to her death. Although her paw showing was kind if heartbreaking as kid because it seemed like she let go, yet decided last second to change her mind but what was done was done.
This has only brought to my attention just how *absolutely horrifying* Disney villain deaths are. Yes, most of them die from a massive fall. While relatively tame compared to others, if anyone were to find their bodies, they would most likely be flattened or maybe even in pieces. There's also a chance that they never actually reach the bottom. There's a possibility that on the way down they got impaled by a jagged rock or something. Then you've got deaths like Ursula who was impaled, Scar who was mauled to death and possibly eaten by hyenas, Facilier who was literally dragged down to Hell, Zira who drowned, Frollo who not only fell from the top of a church but fell into a pit of fire, Clayton who accidentally hung himself from vines (most likely his neck was broken from the force of the vines very abruptly stopping his very long fall), Syndrome who was ripped to shreds from the propeller of a plane, the list goes on. Then ofc you've got possibly the most tame deaths like Mother Gothel who turned to dust. Disney has a knack for villain deaths to very incredibly violent, messy, and terrifying, all without showing gore or anything like that.
The death I like the most is Clayton's - especially as Tarzan saw the danger and tried to warn him only for Clayton to be to lost in rage to listen - as it was his own actions that caused his death though it would have been mercifully quick as the vine going taught like that would have snapped his neck killing him instantly.
yes, i can also relate to when I activate explosive fireworks in order to kill the chief of a mongol horde during a war around the 15th century running in panic to get off the roof of a 40ft building
7:19 this particular death is underrated. At first it seems a little anti-climactic, but it actually makes sense, and the more I watch this scene, the more satisfying it is that he could defeat Doris that easily by saying the magic words.