Treasure Planet



"There were nights when the winds of the Etherium, so inviting in their promise of flight and freedom, made one's spirit soar."

Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island - IN SPAAAAACE!!!!!

With great gusto at that, containing: Space-sailing ships, aliens, robots, cyborgs and Space Pirates. Telling: one boy's search for the treasure of the evil pirate Flint, the Loot of a Thousand Worlds. Starring: The human Jim Hawkins, the spry cat-lady Captain Amelia, a bookish dog-like alien named Dr. Delbert Doppler, the fiendish cyborg Silver, and a metamorphosing pink blob named Morph in a Steampunk alternate pirate universe.

This Disney film was released in an overcrowded market--right on the heels of the second Harry Potter Film. For that matter, it opened less than a week after Die Another Day arrived in theaters. It may also have suffered due to the Disney Marketing Department's decision to advertise it primarily during time slots occupied by kids' shows, when its premise and content are more suitable for older audiences. Also notable for an extreme case of Dueling Movies, in its race with the similar film Titan A.E. to be released.

Whatever the reason, many fans blame this film for rudely ending Disney's confidence in hand-drawn animation for features, and which is what started the decline in their production of such films, closing their studios until 2009. Today, it's become a Cult Film thanks to its intricate blend of CGI and traditional animation.

An important point of the design of absolutely everything, was that the universe had a 70/30 ratio of the blend between Victorian-era style, and its technological capacities. In places where the two might have clashed, Cyberpunk and Steampunk technology were used to merge them together. Nowhere is this more obvious than in the designs of the ships themselves, and the design of John Silver.

It portrays a father-son bond between the two main characters and some amazingly choreographed action sequences. According to Word of God, this film was made to be Disney's big film for "single parent, Generation X" kids, as reflected in the darker family subtext. While it performed well with critics, the film flopped and flopped hard financially. As said previously, though, the film has gained a new lease on life thanks to DVD and television. Who knows? Maybe this film could someday replicate the eventual success The Nightmare Before Christmas enjoys now.

""... And you know how smart he is. He built his first solar surfer when he was eight! And yet he's failing in school...""
 * Abnormal Limb Rotation Range: Mr. Turnbuckle.
 * Accidental Aiming Skills: Subverted, see Improbable Aiming Skills below.
 * Action Girl: Captain Amelia, combining it with Lady of War and Hot Amazon.
 * Adorkable: Dr. Doppler, even The Captain thinks so.
 * All for Nothing: After Scroop, there isn't much point to disabling the laser cannons.
 * All There in the Manual: A good chunk of exposition is provided by the art book, "A Voyage of Discovery"; who built Treasure Planet, how Flint got B.E.N, Silver's early life, why Leland Hawkins left his family; very useful information and leaves just enough to the imagination to write a prequel fanfic. (Then again, that last part may not be a good thing.)
 * Ambiguously Human: Silver looks human at first glance but his nails are pointed like claws, his ear is pointy and his face and chest are a continuous light tone rather than his actual hair colour (brown). He looks more like a literal shaven bear, which may actually be true.
 * Anti-Hero: Jim, as far as Disney Animated Canon will allow it. Post-Time Skip, he's constantly running afoul of the law. His mother tells Doppler outright that the solar sailor sequence was a violation of his parole, he is failing all of his classes, and he is starting to become more withdrawn.
 * Anti-Villain: John Silver. He's supposed to be the main antagonist, and he remains so for any part of the film where Scroop doesn't show up, but it turns out he's even better at being a father figure to Jim.
 * Artificial Gravity: Oddly played straight in a world where, among other things, people can breathe in space. Perhaps too straight, as . And people start getting actively sucked into space if it's off, even if the ship is rising.
 * Artistic License Astronomy: "Does an active galactic nucleus have superluminal jets?" No, Dr. Doppler. While they are relativistic, the particles do not exceed the speed of light. Being such a self-styled genius, he really ought to know better. Though, considering Doppler is also something of a Know-Nothing Know-It-All, this may have been intentional.
 * One can not quite underline enough how inaccurately the film portrayed Supernovas.
 * Ax Crazy: Scroop. To a ridiculous extreme.
 * Babies Ever After:
 * Badass Adorable: Both Morph and B.E.N. have their moments.
 * Batman Can Breathe in Space: But, really, how do characters in space suits convey a father-and-son relationship so perfectly?
 * Belly Mouth: A feature of one crew member. What appeared to be his head was actually another chap sitting on his shoulders, with dreadlocks-like legs.
 * Beneath the Earth: The centroid of the mechanism.
 * Big Dumb Object:
 * Book Ends: Jim riding his homemade solar surfer and being brought to the Benbow Inn by the police.
 * Brilliant but Lazy: Jim Hawkins, according to his mother in an overheard conversation.

"''And you know how smart he is. He built his first solar surfer when he was eight!"
 * By the Lights of Their Eyes: Justified, since BEN's eyes are light-up displays.
 * Catgirl: Captain Amelia, though she's much more stoic than the average cat girl and doesn't have a tail either.
 * Chance Activation: After the Benbow Inn has been burnt down and the Hawkinses are staying with Dr. Doppler, the good doctor is explaining that he has no clue of function of the "odd little sphere" which Jim now possesses. Cue Jim fiddling around with the sphere and unlocking it, thereby discovering its function:
 * Chekhov's Gun:
 * Chekhov's Gunman:
 * Chekhov's Skill: Solar surfing, and this quote:

"Jim Hawkins: If I'm not back in five minutes, leave without me.
 * Click Hello: Dr. Doppler does this to a pirate after being captured.
 * Combat Stilettos: Captain Amelia dons a thigh-high pair of these as part of her outfit.
 * Composite Character: Doctor Delbert Doppler fulfills the roles of both Doctor Livesey and Squire Trelawney.
 * Conspicuous CG: The ships, the zoom-in on the spaceport, and the gratuitously CG'd space whales. Averted with Silver's cyborg parts and BEN, which were both CG'd, but the only clue is that nobody would want to draw all that by hand.
 * Cool Starship: The RLS Legacy.
 * Creator Cameo: John Musker and Ron Clements appear giving Jim and Doppler directions during the scene at the spaceport.
 * Cryptic Conversation: B.E.N.'s patchwork memory about the planet.
 * Cyberpunk/Steampunk: A nice blend, with designs for the costumes, machinery, and ships that look distinctly Steampunk in origin mixed with power, concepts, and designs from Cyberpunk.
 * Death Glare: A very nicely done one from Jim to B.E.N.

Ben: I am not leaving my buddy Jimmy!

(Death Glare)

Ben: ... Unless he looks at me like that. Bye Jim!"

"Amelia: Actually, Doctor, your astronomical advice was most helpful.
 * Two, actually. Not surprising, considering where he gets it.
 * Also, Captain Amelia gives Doctor Doppler a quick one before turning around then grabbing his jaw to stop him from babbling.
 * Silver himself gives a non comedic example to Jim. If not for a convenient explosion, he probably would have done more than just glare.
 * Deadpan Snarker: Pretty much everyone aboard the R.L.S. Legacy. Justified in Dr. Doppler's case, considering who his voice actor is.
 * Defrosting Ice Queen: Captain Amelia.
 * Desert Island: B.E.N. is marooned on Treasure Planet.
 * Disappeared Dad: One of the few--if only--Disney movies where the parent
 * Distant Prologue: The opening sequence takes place 12 years before the story's main events.
 * Disney Death: Averted with, which wouldn't be such a big deal if a different Disney-affiliated Treasure Island adaptation hadn't played it straight.
 * Disney Dog Fight
 * Disneyfication: Silver isn't anything like as nice in the original book. And Billy Bones was a most unwelcome guest at the Benbow, staying several months before he died. And Mr Arrow was a drunk.
 * Disney Villain Death: In this case, a villain falls up. So, Inverted Trope?
 * When Fridge Horror kicks in, one realises that Scroop won't die from falling upwards. Since in this universe space is filled with air Scroop won't suffocate, instead he will drift in the interplanetary emptiness until he dies of starvation of dehydration.
 * Dogfaces: Doppler.
 * Dueling Movies: One of the most destructive cases ever, against Titan A.E.. Both films had very similar plots, both films raced to be released first, and both went down to defeat at the box office, causing a financial collapse in traditional Western Animation for the ensuing decade.
 * Emo Teen: Jim is pretty down in the beginning.
 * Everything's Better with Spinning/When Things Spin Science Happens: The map, and the core of Treasure Planet.
 * Exactly What I Aimed At: Even Dr. Doppler seems surprised that this is the case.
 * Eyes Do Not Belong There: The eyes of one particular alien pirate (according to the artbook, his name is Mackriki) are in his throat.
 * Face Heel Revolving Door:
 * Face Palm: No less than three:
 * A Double Facepalm when Jim and Silver give up protesting about having to work together.
 * Doppler's Freudian Slip (see below).
 * Jim also gives us one as B.E.N cheerfully leaves to disable the Legacy's laser cannons.
 * Fake-Out Opening: The movie begins with young Jim reading a book about pirates and treasure.
 * Fairy Companion: Morph (though he/it is also a Small Annoying Creature for some).
 * Fashionable Asymmetry:
 * Silver's one cybernetic eye, arm and leg.
 * Jim's gold earring.
 * Freudian Slip: Oh lawd.

Doppler: Well, u-uh, thank you. Thank you very much. Well, I have a lot of help to offer, anatomically--amanamonically--as...astronomically. *Face Palm*"

"Jim: I've got your "Mr. Mop.""
 * "Friend or Idol?" Decision: Played with in that
 * Fungus Humongous: Treasure Planet's aesthetic.
 * Funny Robot: BEN.
 * Gasshole: Doctor Doppler, who speaks Flatula--a LANGUAGE made up of farting noises.
 * Gender Equals Breed: . Though the spinoff games point towards Bizarre Sexual Dimorphism. They were the same species.
 * Gentleman Snarker: Captain Amelia's most endearing quality.
 * Getting Crap Past the Radar: In chronological order:
 * Amelia's mention of Silver's "spaceport floozies".
 * There is just no way that Silver's jab about Mr. Mop and Mrs. Bucket" was a coincidence.

"Amelia: Did you actually aim for that?
 * Delbert's Freudian Slip (see above).
 * Also, when Amelia first looked at Doppler, look at his eyes. They're looking at her breasts!
 * Gravity Sucks: Most of the deaths.
 * Green Eyed Red Head: Captain Amelia.
 * Hive Mind: The cyborg cops in the beginning show this trait from time to time.
 * Hidden Badass: The bumbling, easily-flustered Dr. Doppler shows off his badassery, impressing more than a few people, most notably
 * Hold Your Hippogriffs
 * Hot Mom: Well, Jim had to get his good looks from someone, and as far as the film's concerned, Sarah Hawkins is the more likely candidate.
 * Hyperspace Arsenal: In his cybernetic arm, Silver has about a dozen cooking tools, a pistol, a sword, a crutch, and a vice, as well as all the necessary gears and other cyborg guts. He also has an Arm Cannon, but half of that appears to be strapped to his leg.
 * I Can Still Fight: . "Nonsense. Cup of tea and I'll be right as rain", anyone?
 * Idiot Ball: Yeah, Jim, go ahead and piss off the spider/scorpion/lobster thing with the obvious big evil yellow eyes. I'm sure all he'll do is go cry in a corner. It's the weakness of a Deadpan Snarker. They use humor as a defense mechanism.
 * Ignored Confession: "You have...wonderful eyes." "...She's lost her mind!"
 * Imported Alien Phlebotinum: The Star Map.
 * Impossible Hourglass Figure: The good captain's got what look like an 18-inch waist and 40-inch hips.
 * Improbable Aiming Skills: Awesomely played straight, and even more awesomely lampshaded. During their escape from the ship, Dr. Doppler screws up his eyes and fires a pistol for the first time in his life (well... for the first time on purpose, anyway)--and the shot hits a hatch, ends up tossing several pirates out into space. Amelia stares, wild-eyed in surprise. Dr. Doppler stares at his gun, every bit as surprised as she is.
 * Impossible Hourglass Figure: The good captain's got what look like an 18-inch waist and 40-inch hips.
 * Improbable Aiming Skills: Awesomely played straight, and even more awesomely lampshaded. During their escape from the ship, Dr. Doppler screws up his eyes and fires a pistol for the first time in his life (well... for the first time on purpose, anyway)--and the shot hits a hatch, ends up tossing several pirates out into space. Amelia stares, wild-eyed in surprise. Dr. Doppler stares at his gun, every bit as surprised as she is.

Dr. Doppler: You know, actually, I did."

"Delbert: I really really really REALLY want to go."
 * Doubles as a Chekhov's Skill, early in the movie we see his status as a physicist give him spatial/vector awareness required for making those sorts of calculations mentally.
 * Inexplicable Treasure Chests: Explained for the most part.
 * Intergenerational Friendship: Jim and Long John Silver.
 * Interspecies Romance: Maybe. Given the Gender Equals Breed facet mentioned above, it could be that and  are actually members of the same sexually dimorphic species.
 * The PC game Battle at Procyon offers more evidence for this, as you can have a number of dog and cat people join your crew. All the males are canine, while the females are all feline.
 * Ironic Echo: "All my life I've dreamed of an adventure like this."
 * Jumped At the Call: Delbert has been waiting for an adventure like this to happen all his life.

"We are wanting to move!"
 * Just in Time: The escape from Treasure Planet.
 * Karma Houdini: Silver may be a much better person by the end, but he still gets away with theft, mutiny and a lot of child endangerment.
 * Kubrick Stare: Both Jim and Silver have their fair share of this throughout the film.
 * Leitmotif: Several. Jim has a very prominent one, as well as Silver - or, particularly, Silver's good side.
 * Lethal Chef: B.E.N. tries to serve Amelia and Delbert "drinks" that appear to consist of machine fluids, although that's more the old "robots drink motor oil" gag coupled with a robot who hasn't had any contact with carbon-based lifeforms in over a century. Apparently, he gets better once he starts working at the new Benbow Inn in the finale.
 * Like a Son to Me: John Silver's relationship with Jim, especially at the end, definitely invokes this trope along some Parental Substitute.
 * Limited Wardrobe: Apparently no one aboard the Legacy bothered to take an extra change of clothing for the voyage. Except for Silver, who changed his pants halfway through (because the stripes were too time consuming to draw)
 * Living MacGuffin: Only Jim can read the star-map.
 * Logo Joke: The second trailer has the Disney star streak morph into the spaceport.
 * Lost Technology: Any mother's son calling himself a troper can recognize this one, even if it's only hinted at remotely: The Treasure Planet, the map and are on a whole different level from anything is the film, and promotional material makes reference to some really smart aliens having built them. Supposedly Flint stumbled upon them and had a really profitable idea.
 * Loveable Rogue: Silver.
 * Lzherusskie: One of the gunners.

"Silver: Morph, I have a job for you. Keep an eye on this here pup.
 * Mad Oracle: The hermit robot, B.E.N., is a bit scatterbrained from being marooned on a desert island... Er, planet. Literally having lost his "mind" helps too.
 * Malevolent Architecture:
 * Match Cut: The "I'm Still here" sequence has many of these.
 * Meaningful Echo:

And

Jim: Yeah, but I'm gonna change all that."

""I just wanna hug ya and squeeze ya and hold ya close to me!""
 * A Minor Kidroduction: We see three year old Jim and his pop-up book before jumping twelve years later and getting on with the plot.
 * Mistaken Identity: Dr. Doppler mistakenly, but understandably, assumes that Mr. Arrow is the captain of the RLS Legacy.
 * Mr. Fanservice: Why else would Jim have flippy hair, have so many action scenes and ?
 * Multi-Armed and Dangerous: Mr. Hands.
 * No Indoor Voice: B.E.N. It nearly gets Jim and company killed a few times.
 * No Sense of Personal Space: B.E.N has this in spades, much to the annoyance of Jim.

"Ben: Disable a few laser cannons, what is the big deal? All we gotta do is find that one little wire...
 * Not That Kind of Doctor: Invoked.
 * This is also a Shout-Out to Star Trek's Doctor McCoy: "Dang it, Jim. I'm an astronomer, not a doctor!"
 * Obviously Evil: Scroop. Also, the big bad pirate from the introduction story, too.
 * Oh Crap: Ben gets one of these moments when he goes to disable the laser cannons.

[Ben opens some electrical doors, revealing a mess of wires]

Ben: Oh mama!"

"Doppler: Excuse me, brutish pirate.
 * Meltdown (the fat pirate) also fits this trope:

Meltdown: [Belches]

Doppler: Yes, you. I have a question. Is it that your body is too massive for your teeny-tiny head... or is it that your head is too teeny-tiny for your big, fat body?!

Meltdown: [Grabs Doppler] I PUMMEL YOU GOOD!

Doppler: Yes, I'm sure you will, but before you do, I have one more question! [pulls out a gun and points it at pirate] Is this yours?

Meltdown: [Stares at the gun in shock] Uhhhhhh...."


 * OOC Is Serious Business: Silver, toward the end. He always tried to sweet talk The Captain. Then...
 * Outrun the Fireball: Two examples:
 * The black hole sequence, where they actually use the fireball itself to give them enough power to outrun it.
 * The climax, where they
 * Papa Wolf: John Silver. He becomes fiercely protective of Jim and essentially gives up everything, including his life's dream, for him in the end.
 * Parental Abandonment: The only song in the movie is about Parental Abandonment. In fact, Disney said they specifically geared the film to single-parent households. Appropriate since it is Jim's motivation for befriending Silver.
 * Parental Substitute: Silver. The movie could best be described as a platonic love story.
 * Petting Zoo People: Most of the cast!
 * Pirate Booty: Of course!
 * Pirate Parrot: Morph is an IN SPACE example, imitating form as well as speech.
 * Planet of Hats: The DVD extras reveal that Montressor is a "mining planet". There is a mining operation which Jim flies through early in the film, but otherwise this isn't elaborated on.
 * Precursors: Treasure Planet and the star-map, according to the supplemental material.
 * Punctuated for Emphasis:
 * Silver : "WHERE'S. THAT. BLASTED. TREASURE?!"
 * Silver strikes again with: "Change in plan, lads! We! Move! Now!"
 * Puppy Dog Eyes: Oh, can those eyes get any bigger?
 * Recycled in Space: The working title was "Treasure Island in Space".
 * Red Eyes, Take Warning: Silver's cybernetic eye turns red during his... less friendly moments (not necessarily correlated with which side he's on at the time). Normally, it's gold.
 * Riddle for the Ages: Just who built Treasure Planet, and where did they go?
 * The artbook, A Voyage of Discovery, explains that Treasure Planet was actually built by an ancient race called the Forefathers who used the portal to learn more about other alien cultures. They eventually disappeared and left the entire planet behind.
 * The Right Hand of Doom: John Silver's cybernetic right hand, with a robotic peg leg.
 * Rule of Cool: More or less everything.
 * Sci-Fi Writers Have No Sense of Scale
 * Space Does Not Work That Way
 * Scenery Porn: Really, does this one need to be explained?
 * Schizo-Tech: It combines 19th-century sailing technology, with technology that appears to have been made centuries into the future.
 * Sci-Fi Writers Have No Sense of Scale: But we don't really care, do we?
 * Self-Destruct Mechanism: Played so straight, as with any story involving a forgotten treasure trove.
 * Sesquipedalian Loquaciousness: Amelia, Dr. Doppler, and even Silver both provide quite a bit of this.
 * Sexy Discretion Shot: Surprisingly, for a Disney movie. Amelia has a broken rib, and Dr. Dopper says "Let me take a look at that." The camera pans away.
 * Slipped the Ropes: Done hilariously with Dr. Doppler. Turns out, he has abnormally thin wrists.
 * Sky Surfing: Jim's favorite high-adrenaline hobby.
 * The Sociopath: Scroop is one who's portrayed disturbingly realistic.
 * Space Does Not Work That Way: except no one cares that it doesn't.
 * Space Is an Ocean: And everything that goes with it:
 * Space Pirates: Naturally.
 * Space Sailing
 * Space Whales
 * Spot of Tea: Amelia, Of Course.
 * Stealth Hi Bye: Silver is surprisingly good at this.
 * Stealth Pun: Dr. Doppler is a dog-like alien. The meal Sarah serves him in his first scene at the Benbow Inn looks like dog food and is served in what looks like a dog dish, but even the name follows this theme: Alponian chowder.
 * Steampunk: Oodles of it. The overall aesthetic style, along with Space Is an Ocean. Mixed in a very interesting way with Cyberpunk.
 * Stiff Upper Lip: The Captain.
 * Really Smart Aliens:
 * Swiss Army Appendage: John Silver's bionic arm.
 * Take My Hand: to Jim in the climax.
 * Teens Are Short: Jim is fifteen, but he can't be more than 5-and-a-half feet tall; he's even shorter than his mother. Granted, his shortness makes Silver's and Mr. Arrow's downright hugeness stand out more, as well as making Scroop and the larger aliens appear more menacing by comparison. It even accentuates Capt. Amelia's statuesque height.
 * If you watch the reunion scene closely, you can see that Jim's actually as tall as his mother, and later at the inn's reopening, Jim's grown taller. Obviously, he was just waiting for a growth spurt.
 * That's No Moon:
 * There's also the spaceport, which was intentionally built to resemble a crescent moon from a distance.
 * Thigh-High Boots: Captain Amelia.
 * Time Skip: About 12 years after the Distant Prologue.
 * Token Human: Jim, as the Audience Surrogate.
 * Trailers Always Lie: For a guy who doesn't even appear until somewhere during the last half of the movie, the trailers sure did love B.E.N.
 * Treasure Map: A holographic one.
 * Troubled but Cute: Jim. Hawkins. That is all. Thanks to Generic Cuteness and Puppy Dog Eyes, he is indeed cute, and due to the aforementioned Disappeared Dad, troubled enough that he can tell the officers exactly which paragraph of the rules he broke this time.
 * Weld the Lock: Captain Amelia welds the hatch to prevent the pirates from getting in.
 * What Measure Is a Non-Cute?: So, Amelia is a Catgirl, Doppler is a Dog Man, John Silver looks like some kind of shaved bear, Morph is a Squishy Pink Thing (although Your Mileage May Vary on the cute part), and Scroop is a horrid Spider-Scorpion. Guess who the bad one is! Go on!
 * Subverted in that the rather ugly
 * What Song Was This Again?: The French version of "I'm Still Here" is translated to "Un Homme Libre" (A Free Man) and becomes less of a song about a boy telling off the universe and something more like 'if you feel like a reject, maybe you should run away'.
 * Wooden Ships and Iron Men: To a degree. It's been somewhat Disneyfied, but the pirates themselves evoke this trope. Quite literally in Silver's case.
 * X Meets Y: Spelljammer meets Treasure Island.
 * Yank the Dog's Chain: . Ouch.
 * Zeerust: Invoked. Space is filled with luminiferous aether capable of propelling any vehicle Baron Munchausen might've dreamed up. So long as it looks piratey.
 * Zeerust: Invoked. Space is filled with luminiferous aether capable of propelling any vehicle Baron Munchausen might've dreamed up. So long as it looks piratey.