Disney Acid Sequence - TV Tropes. The musical number in an animated musical in which the animation stops pretending to depict things that are actually happening in the world of the movie and becomes a more abstract illustration of the music. The Disney Acid Sequence is not as common as it first seems — they only belong here if they are not explainable — usually a whacked- out moment of lighting and choreography, sometimes caused by hallucinations. If it is caused by a dream, see Dream Ballet. If it is caused by substance abuse, see Mushroom Samba. The Disney Acid Sequence can be used to good comedic effect in movies which break the Fourth Wall. In general though, if the switch is too pronounced, be prepared for some genuine Nightmare Fuel. Named for the most prolific offender and trend setter, although the phenomenon is not limited to the Disney Animated Canon. It's not even necessarily limited to animated musicals; live- action musicals can also contain one if a musical number goes more surreal than just a random song and dance routine. Some examples here are likely to be inspired by Busby Berkeley Numbers. Frozen Movies - Frozen Fever Movies 2015 - Animation Movies For Kids, Film Theory: Disney's FROZEN - Anna and Elsa Are NOT SISTERS?! Frozen Fever Official Trailer. Download or print these amazing Candyland coloring pages at your own will and spread the news to your fellow Candyland fans too! Happy coloring. The Disney Acid Sequence trope as used in popular culture. The musical number in an animated musical in which the animation stops pretending to depict things …. ![]() All examples here are prone to contain Deranged Animation. Subtrope of What Do You Mean, It Wasn't Made on Drugs? Download or print these amazing Candyland coloring pages at your will and spread the news to your fellow Candyland coloring page lovers too! Happy coloring.![]() The Teletubbies site doesn't live on pbskids.org any more. For more information, please contact the program producers: [email protected] Use the pull down menu below. For those who did not care for the narrative complexities of “Teletubbies” but still long for the internal logic of “The Oogieloves in the Big Balloon Adventure. Results 961 - 1020 of 1318. Find sexy Halloween costumes for women, plus-size, and couples right here! The perfect sexy costume is sure to make your Halloween or. The What Do You Mean, It Wasn't Made on Drugs? trope as used in popular culture. Any work whose creation seems to have involved large amounts of …. Still not a huge fan of this game, maybe give me some tips or something, if I was better at it might be funner, I dont know. :l Comment, rate, and. Now Playing Movies. Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015) The Revenant (2015) The Hateful Eight (2015) Joy (2015) The Big Short (2015) Sherlock: The Abominable Bride (2016). ![]() For trippy music videos which are not part of a larger and less surreal work, see Surreal Music Video. Compare Drunken Montage. Disney Examples, in rough chronological order The Hallucinogenic Scene in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs seems mostly fueled by fear (as she's running through the scary, dark woods). But it's certainly trippy. Being the first animated full length movie, it sets up a great precedent for Disney movies to contain a whole realm of further trippy scenes, even if all we're seeing is the main character's perspective when something gets overwhelming - positive or negative. Somewhere in the movie's early stages, Snow White was actually supposed to have a dream sequence of her future with Prince Charming. Judging by the remaining concept art, they were going to be floating in midair against a starry technicolor rainbow sky. It got scrapped, but was eventually used to end Sleeping Beauty. Fantasia is not actually an example, as each musical number is its own separate and self- contained animated sequence and not an insert in a larger plot. Nevertheless, it deserves mention for containing many of the usual elements, since each of its segments is to greater or lesser extent an abstract illustration of the music being played. Some segments are more abstract than others. The opening number, "Toccata and Fugue in D Minor", is easily the strongest example. Compare the very straightforward animation for Beethoven's "6th Symphony". Dumbo has the most shocking and probably most infamous example, with Pink Elephants on Parade. Dumbo and Timothy Mouse drink water spiked with discarded champagne and hallucinate all these freaky- looking elephants. I can stand the sight of worms And look at microscopic germs But technicolor pachyderms Is really too much for me! Evil Laugh]I am not the type to faint when things are odd or things are quaint but seeing things you know there ain't can certainly give you an awful fright! What a sight! Ironically, "seeing pink elephants" is the slang term for what happens when an alcoholic abstains from drinking for a long time. Aquarela do Brasil" in Saludos Amigos, being constantly manipulated by a paintbrush. The wartime cartoon "Der Fuehrers Face" has one, set to the title song going faster and faster while, among other things, ammunition flies around and Donald has to make himself into a swastika shape by dancing. Luckily, it was All Just a Dream. The last act of The Three Caballeros involves Donald Duck going through one strange animated/live- action musical number after another before climaxing in a mock bullfight, with a costumed Donald as the bull and Panchito as the bullfighter. One DVD edition even calls the closing sequence of the movie "Donald's Surreal Reverie". After You've Gone" from Make Mine Music, featuring lots of crazy dancing musical instruments. The "Too Good to Be True" segment from Fun and Fancy Free somewhat counts. Two examples from Melody Time. Bumble Boogie" is a nightmarish journey through the music world from the POV of a poor bumblebee. Blame It On The Samba". Man, trippy as hell. Pretty much the entire dream sequence in the latter- day Pluto cartoon "Plutopia". Most of Alice in Wonderland is this. Much of the semi- educational. Donald Duck short "Donald in Mathmagic Land", especially both the opening scene and Donald's mental exercises. The Disney Theme Parks have quite a few, some borrowed from the movies, others original to the parks such as the "Tomorrow's Child" sequence from the Walter Cronkite version of Spaceship Earth or almost the entirety of the original Journey Into Imagination (which was part of why it was so beloved). Some of the ones based on movies include: Alice in Wonderland, Mr. Toad's Wild Ride, Roger Rabbit's Car Toon Spin, and Winnie the Pooh. Babes in Toyland has the song "I Can't do the Sum", during which Mary Contrary (played by Annette Funicello) sings mostly on a black background, with duplicates who flip upside down and sideways while changing colors. Mary Poppins has the street chalk Portal Picture trip. Winnie- the- Pooh has lots of these. The first example that the franchise has to offer is "Heffalumps and Woozles" from Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day. The New Adventures episodes "King of the Beasties", "The Old Switcheroo" and "Eeyore's Tail Tale" each contain one. From the holiday specials, we have "I Wanna Scare Myself" from Boo to You Too, "When the Love Bug Bites" from A Valentine for You and "Easter Day With You" from Springtime With Roo. And in Pooh's Grand Adventure: The Search For Christopher Robin there is Owl's "Adventure Is A Wonderful Thing". Round My Family Tree" from The Tigger Movie. The More I Look Inside" from Piglet's Big Movie. The Horribly Hazardous Heffalumps" from Pooh's Heffalump Movie. The "Too Much Honey" song number from The Book of Pooh story by the same name. Winnie- the- Pooh has two: "The Backson Song", done as a living chalk drawing, and "Everything is Honey", where Pooh is in a world made of honey, including honey clones of himself as backup dancers on the rim of a giant honey pot. The Brave Little Toaster features a song called "Cutting Edge" (aka, "More, More, More"), which involves, among other things, a singing table lamp somersaulting through outer space. Of course, this is a movie where every character is an inanimate object. We're not sure whether that makes it better or worse.). Given that every other musical number happens within the confines of the world around them DESPITE being a shop backroom full of hacked together 'mutant' appliances and the cars in a junkyard being sent to the crusher, Cutting Edge definitely counts as the Acid Sequence. Toaster's clown dream also counts, as a terrifying version of the Acid Sequence. The opening sequence to the Disney Channel show Adventures in Wonderland (made by Eli Noyes, Jr.) certainly qualifies. Beauty and the Beast features "Be Our Guest" .. Commentary tracks provided on the dvd even acknowledge that it throws logic out of the window, but the end result was Worth It. Aladdin has "Friend Like Me". Everything the Genie does in that movie counts as an acid sequence. The Lion King has the "I Want" Song, "I Just Can't Wait To Be King". The Lion King II: Simba's Pride has the love song "Upendi". The Lion King 1½ has Timon's song, "That's All I Need" Lampshading it. The sequence of the 'props' sliding out back to the Savannah and the sarcastic applause of the hyenas makes it very clear that, far from a bunch of animals suddenly displaying amazing choreography skills, this is genuine daydreaming/acid consumption territory, but since Timon is awake, it is not actually a dream. The Lion Guard: The hyenas' Villain Song "Tonight We Strike" shows the hyenas blue and contains weird scenes, like the hyena's leaping through the air with spotlights coming from nowhere shining on them. Pocahontas: "Colors of the Wind". It's difficult to say whether the sequence is actually happening (if so, it happened over the course of several days, considering the changes in daylight), or if it's simply an interpretation of the spirit of nature surrounding them. The Hunchback of Notre Dame: "A Guy Like You". The commentary track references this trope, going so far as to suggest that everything involving the three gargoyles might have been Quasimodo's imagination. Well, when you spend your whole life alone in a bell tower.. On an even darker note, "Hellfire" is a decidedly non- comedic Villain Song version of this. A Goofy Movie: The original had "On the Open Road" which included a bunch of girls popping out of a piano, while it's played in the back of a pick up truck and a corpse dancing on a hearse. Being a Goofy movie of course, it's not impossible that this is actually happening, but it's still pretty trippy. An Extremely Goofy Movie had the nightmare fueling "C'mon Get Happy" sequence, which seemingly suggests an 'experimental phase' when Goofy first went to college in the 7. Mulan: Happens in the song "A Girl Worth Fighting For.". Recess: School's Out: The cast performing "Green Tamborine" during the credits (this movie was also a huge Shout- Out to The Sixties). The Incredibleswas to have a. Dream Sequence set to jazz music where Helen Parr dreamt about her husband cheating on her with hundreds of silhouetted, beautiful women in order to highlight her suspicions about her husband's behavior, but it was cut due to length and the fact that they would never get away with so blatantly stating what Helen's fears were in a Disney movie. Home on the Range: The cattle- rustling sequence. Dancing cows, shifting colors, and Randy Quaid yodeling. The Princess and the Frog has the song Almost There, which is a very sudden Art Shift into the style of Tiana's restaurant folder. There's also the Villain Song.
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