Allegro Non Troppo: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
m (Dai-Guard moved page Allegro Non Troppo (Animation) to Allegro Non Troppo over redirect: Remove TVT Namespaces from title)
m (Mass update links)
Line 20: Line 20:
* [[Deranged Animation]]: The ''Firebird'' sequence is this, without a doubt.
* [[Deranged Animation]]: The ''Firebird'' sequence is this, without a doubt.
* [[Downer Ending]]: Especially Bolero
* [[Downer Ending]]: Especially Bolero
* [[Everything's Better With Monkeys]]: {{spoiler|[[Inverted Trope|Inverted]] in the second half of ''Boléro'', where a demonic monkey species slowly grows in dominance and eventually kills off the rest of the species.}}
* [[Everything's Better with Monkeys]]: {{spoiler|[[Inverted Trope|Inverted]] in the second half of ''Boléro'', where a demonic monkey species slowly grows in dominance and eventually kills off the rest of the species.}}
* [[Family-Unfriendly Death]]
* [[Family-Unfriendly Death]]
* [[Fauns and Satyrs]]
* [[Fauns and Satyrs]]
Line 36: Line 36:
** In-universe example: After seeing the conductor torment the animator for three full segments, is it any wonder that the man {{spoiler|actually the evil monkey}} at the end of ''Boléro'' so strongly resembles him?
** In-universe example: After seeing the conductor torment the animator for three full segments, is it any wonder that the man {{spoiler|actually the evil monkey}} at the end of ''Boléro'' so strongly resembles him?
* [[What Do You Mean Its Not Symbolic]]
* [[What Do You Mean Its Not Symbolic]]
* [[What Do You Mean It Wasn't Made On Drugs?]]
* [[What Do You Mean It Wasn't Made on Drugs?]]


{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}

Revision as of 14:25, 9 April 2014

Allegro Non Troppo (but there are tropes) is an Italian animated film functioning as a parody of Disney's Fantasia. Like Fantasia, Allegro Non Troppo melds classical music with animation, the sequences ranging from utterly bizarre to depressing beyond belief. Between the pieces are short, sepia-tone, live-action shots of the orchestra and the animator. Pieces played in the film are:

  • Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune by Claude Debussy--A parody of Beethoven's Pastorale from Fantasia, where an elderly faun tries to get a nymph for himself, but fails every time.
  • Slavonic Dance No. 7 Op. 46 by Antonín Dvořák -A caveman sets out to build better dwellings than the other cavemen, who repeatedly mimic every act he does.
  • Boléro by Maurice Ravel--Possibly the film's most famous sequence, where a soda bottle left on a wasteland creates an evolution of bizarre creatures in a parody of The Rite of Spring from Fantasia.
  • Valse Triste by Jean Sibelius--The film's saddest piece, in which a small cat is left in a destroyed house, remembering the good times spent there only to have reality come crashing upon it.
  • Concerto in C major for 2 Oboes, 2 Clarinets, Strings and Continuo RV 559 I. Larghetto - (Allegro) by Antonio Vivaldi--A bee tries to enjoy a meal on a flower only to have a rowdy couple thwart her attempts.
  • The Firebird by Igor Stravinsky--God makes Adam and Eve and the serpent tries to get them to eat the apple of knowledge. When they refuse, the serpent eats it himself and is thrown into a hellish environment of Western materialism and commercialism.
Tropes used in Allegro Non Troppo include: