Disenchantment: Difference between revisions

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** Verbal irony:
{{quote|'''Elf King''': How can the world's greatest race be racist?"}}
** [[Dramatic Irony]]: Luci's role is to steer Bean "towards the darkness" - that much the audience is let in on. Luci doesn't seem to know what she is being steered towards exactly, and Bean doesn't realiserealize she is being so steered. Thus the audience is left to figure out the nature of what it is towards which she is being steered. The dramatic irony is that it is {{Spoiler|the unfreezing of her mother - which is one of her three wishes - who seeks the ruin of her father's kingdom.}}
** [[Dramatic Irony]]:
Luci's role is to steer Bean "towards the darkness" - that much the audience is let in on. Luci doesn't seem to know what she is being steered towards exactly, and Bean doesn't realise she is being so steered. Thus the audience is left to figure out the nature of what it is towards which she is being steered. The dramatic irony is that it is {{Spoiler|the unfreezing of her mother - which is one of her three wishes - who seeks the ruin of her father's kingdom.}}
* [[Godiva Hair]]:
** Oona; her floor-length locks are so long, they not only cover her breasts in one scene, they cover her behind in another.
** [[Shameless Fanservice Girl]] Ursula - a forest selkie - has this too.
* [[Hidden Agenda Villain]]: In season one, Cloyd and Becky seem to be the antagonists, being the ones who send Luci to tempt Bean into evil, but their goals are kept hidden. When they are revealed to be {{spoiler| accomplices to [[The Man Behind the Man| Dagmar]]}}, more information is revealed - something about Bean being instrumental to a prophecy - but nothing solid. This is even lampshaded in "Princess of Darkness".
{{quote|'''Cloyd:''' Oh no, they're onto us.
'''Jerry:''' They'll know exactly what we're up to.