PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • The Great Mouse Detective
  • The Great Mouse Detective
rdfs:comment
  • The Great Mouse Detective (Basil, el ratón SuperDetective en España y Policías y Ratones en Hispanoamérica) es un largometraje animado de Walt Disney Pictures, vigésimo sexto título de los Clásicos Disney. Está basada en el libro Basil of Baker Street, ilustrado por Eve Titus. Se estrenó en cines el 2 de julio de 1986.
  • After the failure of the Disney animated feature film The Black Cauldron, this simpler film proved to be a success upon its initial release in 1986. As such, the new senior management of the company were convinced that their animation department was still a viable enterprise and this set the stage for the Disney Renaissance.
  • (The Disneycember logo is shown, before showing clips from The Great Mouse Detective) Doug (vo): The Great Mouse Detective. This is actually one of the first Disney films I ever saw in theatres. And when you’re a little kid watching the magic of Disney on the big screen, this is exactly what you want to open up with. Olivia: Daddy! Where are you? [Approaches the window and calls out into the fog] Daddy! Daddy...! Doug (vo): [Imitating a whining child] "Mommy! That’s scary as fuck!" [Speaks normally] Well, after that, the movie’s actually much more tame, at least not quite as creepy.
  • The Great Mouse Detective is a 1986 American animated mystery film produced by Walt Disney Feature Animation, originally released to movie theaters on July 2, 1986 by Walt Disney Pictures. The 26th feature in the Walt Disney Animated Classics, the film was directed by Burny Mattinson, David Michener, and the team of John Musker and Ron Clements, who later directed Disney's hit films The Little Mermaid and Aladdin. The film was also known as The Adventures of the Great Mouse Detective for its 1992 theatrical re-release and Basil the Great Mouse Detective in some countries. The main characters are all mice and rats living in Victorian London.
  • The Great Mouse Detective is a 1986 animated film produced by Walt Disney Feature Animation, originally released to movie theaters on July 2, 1986 by Walt Disney Pictures. The twenty-sixth animated feature in the Disney Animated Canon, the film was directed by Burny Mattinson, David Michener, and the team of John Musker and Ron Clements, who later directed Disney's hit films The Little Mermaid and Aladdin. The film was also known as The Adventures of the Great Mouse Detective for its 1992 theatrical re-release and Basil the Great Mouse Detective in some countries. The main characters are all mice and rats living in Victorian London.
  • The Great Mouse Detective is a 1986 Disney animated film, based on the children's book series by Eve Titus, which was in turn a version of Sherlock Holmes. The story revolves around the great mouse detective in question, Basil (a play on the name of famous Holmes actor Basil Rathbone), and his new-found friend, an ex-army surgeon just returning from Afghanistan, Major Dr David Q. Dawson (based on Watson). The story concerns Basil hunting down his nemesis, Ratigan, who is loosely based off Moriarty. Basil is approached by a little girl named Olivia, whose father has just been kidnapped by one of Rattigan's henchmen. Together they end up solving the case, and saving queen and country as well. In the end, Ratigan meets his own death while trying to kill Basil.
  • Based on the children's story Basil of Baker Street by Eve Titus, it draws heavily on the tradition of Sherlock Holmes with a heroic mouse who consciously emulates the detective; Titus named the main character after actor Basil Rathbone, who is best remembered for playing Holmes in film (and whose voice, sampled from the Red-Headed League[1], was the voice of Holmes in this film, 19 years after his death). The main characters are all mice and rats living in London.The layouts were done on computers, and video cameras made a digital version of pencil testing possible, which helped speeding up the production. The movie is also notable for its early use of computer generated imagery (CGI): for a chase scene that takes place in the interior of Big Ben. The movements of the clock's gears were p
  • Basil, The Great Mouse Detective in the UK. A 1986 Disney Animated Canon masterpiece (number 26) with no Medieval European Fantasy setting, no True Love's Kiss, and no princesses (although there is a mouse version of Queen Victoria...) More importantly, the reasonable success of this film after The Black Cauldron debacle was able to convince the new senior management of Walt Disney Pictures that their animation department had a future after all. Oh, and there's a Victorian strip tease in a Bad Guy Bar -- sung by Melissa Manchester, no less -- followed up with a Bar Brawl.
owl:sameAs
Followed
  • Oliver & Company
dcterms:subject
foaf:homepage
precedida
títuloES
  • Basil, el ratón SuperDetective
sucedida
Duración
  • 4440.0
args
  • film=44
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dbkwik:es.disney/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
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Starring
Story
Label
Runtime
  • 4440.0
  • 4380.0
Producer
Título
  • The Great Mouse Detective
Narrator
  • Val Bettin
preceded
  • The Black Cauldron
Country
  • United States
Name
  • The Great Mouse Detective
  • The Adventures of the Great Mouse Detective
Type
  • Film score
Caption
  • Original Film Poster
  • Original theatrical release poster
dbkwik:thatguywiththeglasses/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Language
Preceded By
  • The Black Cauldron
Title
  • The Great Mouse Detective
Music
Image size
  • 215
Gross
  • 3.862555E7
Distribución
Studio
Dirección
Imagen
  • The Great Mouse Detective.png
IMDB ID
  • 91149
Distributor
ID
  • 91149
Release
  • 1986-07-02
Released
  • 1986-07-02
  • 1992-02-14
  • 1992-05-09
Año
  • 1986
Time
  • 4440.0
Recorded
  • 1986
Based on
  • Basil of Baker Street by Eve Titus and Paul Galdone
Budget
  • N/A
  • 1.4E7
Writer
  • Dave Michener
  • Pete Young
  • Vance Gerry
  • Matthew O'Callaghan
  • John Musker
  • Ron Clements
  • Bruce Morris
  • Peter Young
  • Mel Shaw
  • Steve Hulett
  • Burny Mattinson
  • Eve Titus
Director
Followed By
  • Oliver & Company
Género
  • Animación, misterio
títuloLA
  • Policías y Ratones
abstract
  • The Great Mouse Detective is a 1986 animated film produced by Walt Disney Feature Animation, originally released to movie theaters on July 2, 1986 by Walt Disney Pictures. The twenty-sixth animated feature in the Disney Animated Canon, the film was directed by Burny Mattinson, David Michener, and the team of John Musker and Ron Clements, who later directed Disney's hit films The Little Mermaid and Aladdin. The film was also known as The Adventures of the Great Mouse Detective for its 1992 theatrical re-release and Basil the Great Mouse Detective in some countries. The main characters are all mice and rats living in Victorian London. Based on the children's book series Basil of Baker Street by Eve Titus, it draws heavily on the tradition of Sherlock Holmes with a heroic mouse who consciously emulates the detective; Titus named the main character after actor Basil Rathbone, who is best remembered for playing Holmes in film (and whose voice, sampled from the Red-Headed League was the voice of Holmes in this film, 19 years after his death). Interestingly, Sherlock Holmes also mentions "Basil" as one of his aliases in the Arthur Conan Doyle story "The Adventure of Black Peter". After the failure of the previous Disney animated feature film, The Black Cauldron, this simpler film proved to be a success upon its initial release in 1986. As such, the new senior management of the company were convinced that their animation department was still a viable enterprise and this set the stage for the Disney Renaissance. It should be also noted that this is the film which saved Disney's Animation Studios from going bankrupt at the time. Despite not being well known upon its original release, in recent years, the film has been regarded as a cult classic.
  • The Great Mouse Detective (Basil, el ratón SuperDetective en España y Policías y Ratones en Hispanoamérica) es un largometraje animado de Walt Disney Pictures, vigésimo sexto título de los Clásicos Disney. Está basada en el libro Basil of Baker Street, ilustrado por Eve Titus. Se estrenó en cines el 2 de julio de 1986.
  • After the failure of the Disney animated feature film The Black Cauldron, this simpler film proved to be a success upon its initial release in 1986. As such, the new senior management of the company were convinced that their animation department was still a viable enterprise and this set the stage for the Disney Renaissance.
  • The Great Mouse Detective is a 1986 Disney animated film, based on the children's book series by Eve Titus, which was in turn a version of Sherlock Holmes. The story revolves around the great mouse detective in question, Basil (a play on the name of famous Holmes actor Basil Rathbone), and his new-found friend, an ex-army surgeon just returning from Afghanistan, Major Dr David Q. Dawson (based on Watson). The story concerns Basil hunting down his nemesis, Ratigan, who is loosely based off Moriarty. Basil is approached by a little girl named Olivia, whose father has just been kidnapped by one of Rattigan's henchmen. Together they end up solving the case, and saving queen and country as well. In the end, Ratigan meets his own death while trying to kill Basil. There are many similarities, as well as differences, between this film and the original Sherlock Holmes stories.
  • (The Disneycember logo is shown, before showing clips from The Great Mouse Detective) Doug (vo): The Great Mouse Detective. This is actually one of the first Disney films I ever saw in theatres. And when you’re a little kid watching the magic of Disney on the big screen, this is exactly what you want to open up with. Olivia: Daddy! Where are you? [Approaches the window and calls out into the fog] Daddy! Daddy...! Doug (vo): [Imitating a whining child] "Mommy! That’s scary as fuck!" [Speaks normally] Well, after that, the movie’s actually much more tame, at least not quite as creepy.
  • Basil, The Great Mouse Detective in the UK. A 1986 Disney Animated Canon masterpiece (number 26) with no Medieval European Fantasy setting, no True Love's Kiss, and no princesses (although there is a mouse version of Queen Victoria...) More importantly, the reasonable success of this film after The Black Cauldron debacle was able to convince the new senior management of Walt Disney Pictures that their animation department had a future after all. This Animated Adaptation of Basil of Baker Street, a series of children's books by Eve Titus, tells a story of Sherlock Holmes in a Mouse World. When toymaker and mechanical genius Hiram Flaversham is Kidnapped Scientist, his daughter Olivia hires the greatest detective in all mousedom, Basil of Baker Street, to find him. On her way, she is found by the Narrator and Dr. Watson's Captain Ersatz, Dr. Dawson, just back in London after serving overseas in the military. Basil is reluctant to take the case until he realizes the bat who kidnapped Olivia's father works for his Arch Enemy, the Diabolical Mastermind Professor Ratigan. With the help of his trained hound, Toby, Basil tracks the bat to a human toy shop, but he escapes and kidnaps Olivia. Ratigan uses her to force her father to complete a robot duplicate of the mouse queen as part of his Evil Plan to take over the kingdom. After learning Basil is on the case, the Evil Genius decides to use this as an opportunity to humiliate and defeat his rival once and for all. Basil falls for his trap hook, line, and sinker and, with some encouragement from Dawson, narrowly escapes the Death Trap in enough time to save the queen and engage Ratigan in a Chase Scene by air that culminates in a gruesome Monumental Battle at Big Ben. Oh, and there's a Victorian strip tease in a Bad Guy Bar -- sung by Melissa Manchester, no less -- followed up with a Bar Brawl. * Adorkable: Could briefly be used to describe Basil, of all people, after Olivia's My Parents Are Dead moment. He gets very awkward and tongue-tied before snapping back to his usual self. * Also the scene where he's awkwardly trying to cheer up Dawson. "I say...Dawson, old chap?" with a nervous smile. * Agony of the Feet: "OW! My foot! My only foot!" * All There in the Script: Books, actually. The original book series reveals that not only was Ratigan a mouse, but also that his first name is Padraic. * Always Night * Aside Glance: Fidget gives one when Ratigan frees him from the cat and begins cuddling him. * Ax Crazy: Ratigan towards the climax, when he's enraged. * Awesomeness By Analysis: Near the end, Basil escapes Ratigan's killer Rube Goldberg Device by setting it off at a very precise moment. * Bad Boss: Don't upset Professor Ratigan, or he'll feed you to his Right-Hand-Cat. * ...or simply toss you overboard when you're weighing him down. * Bad Guy Bar * Batman Gambit: When life gives you lemons, make lemonade; when your Arch Enemy is on your trail, let him find you so you can kill him. * Berserk Button: Calling Ratigan a rat. * Beware the Nice Ones: Ratigan's infamous Villainous Breakdown. * Big Bad: Professor Ratigan. * Big Friendly Dog: Toby. * Big No: Basil, when discovering that the two bullets don't match. * Big "Shut Up!": Ratigan, after Olivia starts to bad mouth him when he's escaping. * Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: Ratigan. * Bizarre and Improbable Ballistics: The idea behind the ballistics test is presented fairly well, but the experiment conducted to determine a match has a fatal flaw. Basil holds the ends of the bullets together, and most of the grooves etched into the bullets by the rifling match, except for few. The problem is, if you turn the bullets around in your head so they're side-by-side as opposed to end-to-end, one would be a mirror image of the other! Thus, a cursory glance at them would be all you need to see that they don't match. Of course, if Ratigan knew Basil would make such a stupid mistake when comparing the bullets, this could be a case of Fridge Brilliance, as it implies almost impossibly good foresight. * Blowing a Raspberry: Ratigan's appearance in the Royal Palace elicits Dramatic Gasps from the crowd, except one little kid who just razzes him. * Bond Villain Stupidity: Justified. Ratigan does build a giant death trap that he leaves our heroes in. However, it is explained that he wanted to stay and watch it, but as the heroes arrived 15 minutes later than he planned, he doesn't have the time to stay. So he rigs a camera to capture Basil's dying moment instead. * Bread, Eggs, Milk, Squick: Fidget has to get "tools, gears, girl, and uniforms". * Brick Joke: Right before leaving for Buckingham Palace, Ratigan tells a soon-to-be-dead Basil "Now, you will remember to smile for the camera, won't you?" as he activates his deadly Rube Goldberg contraption which is set to take a picture at the exact moment Basil and Dawson are to die. * ...A few scenes later, after Basil's last-minute ingenuity very narrowly lets them escape the trap, he grabs hold of Dawson, catches Olivia and says "Smile, everyone!" as the picture of the three is successfully taken. * British Royal Guards: Two guards are very easily beaten by Mooks. * Bunny Ears Lawyer: Basil is an undeniable genius who, when we first meet him, comes off as quite possibly insane. * The Cameo: Sherlock Holmes himself appears three times in silhouette. In the books, Basil actually lives under Holmes' floor. From his and Watson's dialogue, Holmes is apparently solving the case of the Red-Headed League. And the dialogue is performed by? Basil Rathbone. * Dumbo appears as a bubble-blowing toy in the toy shop that Basil and Dr. Dawson go to. * Bill the Lizard from Alice in Wonderland also appears in the film. * Toby the dog is from the Sherlock Holmes novel The Sign of the Four. * Cape Snag: Basil invokes this on Ratigan towards the climax. * Captain Ersatz * Card-Carrying Villain: Ratigan likes to talk about how his latest scheme is supposed to be "even grimmer" than his previous ones. * Cats Are Mean * Climbing Climax * Clock Punk: The robot double of Queen Mousetoria that Flaversham makes for Ratigan. * Clock Tower: The Westminster Clock Tower, home of Big Ben, is the location for the final showdown. * Conspicuous CG: One of the first uses of CGI (after The Black Cauldron) in an animated feature, traced from wire-frame graphics onto animation cels and certainly a far more conspicuous user than its predecessor -- where The Black Cauldron mostly limited CGI to special effects and stuff (i.e. glittering stars, chroma-keying smoke into the scenes, etc.), The Great Mouse Detective made extensive and notable use of it in the interior of Big Ben. Very impressive stuff for its time. * Cue Card: Mr. Flaversham is forced to read off cue cards while operating the Queen Mousetoria robot. * Curb Stomp Battle: The final battle shows that Basil doesn't have any opportunity against Ratigan in a one-on-one wrestle. A good thing that this is a genius battle. * Dangerously Genre Savvy: When Ratigan learns that Basil is on the case, he realizes that it is inevitable that the great detective will track him to his lair, so he sets a trap for him there. He also sets up a decoy trap in the bar that fronts his hideout so that Basil will easily avoid it and be lulled into a false sense of security. * Deadpan Snarker: Basil. * Death Trap: Justified, in universe, by Ratigan. * Detective Animal: Basil, naturally. * Diabolical Mastermind: Ratigan, defined by Basil as the "Napoleon of crime" (an obvious reference to Professor James Moriarty). * Disney Death: Basil. * Disney Villain Death: Ratigan. * Distinguished Gentleman's Pipe: Basil. * Dueling Movies: With An American Tail, another animated movie about mice coming out the same year (though it didn't come out until a few months afterward.) The Great Mouse Detective lost in the end, but that didn't mean it wasn't successful; in fact, it convinced Disney that its animation unit still had a future. * The success of An American Tail probably helped convince Disney as well. * Eureka Moment * * And on the villains' side as well: * Evil Brit: Ratigan, albeit with the American voice of Vincent Price. * Evil Counterpart: Ratigan is one to Basil, just as Moriarty is to Holmes. * Evil Is Hammy: Ratigan. Again, look at who voiced him. It's inevitable. * Evil Is Stylish: Again, Ratigan. * Evilly Affable: In song, Ratigan professes that he has planned his worst crime yet. His mooks gush "Even meaner? You mean it? Worse than the widows and orphans you drowned?" The thing is that his thugs asked the question with enthusiasm, and Ratigan was simply having fun the entire time. * Executive Meddling: Largely averted, as Jeffery Katzenberg had little to no faith the movie would be any good. Most of his attention was spent on meddling with The Black Cauldron; we all know how that film turned out. Katzenberg did, however, demand the title of this film be changed from "Basil of Baker Street" to simply "The Great Mouse Detective". Two of the four directors have since said they've always hated this new title. * Exit, Pursued by a Bear: Felicia, Ratigan's cat. * Expressive Mask: Basil as a white rubber Chinese mouse during his introduction (also an example of Latex Perfection). * Expy: Basil to Sherlock Holmes, Ratigan to Professor Moriarty. * And Dawson to Watson. * Ratigan also bears some resemblance to Mok from Rock and Rule according to John Kricfalusi's analysis of that movie * Face Palm: Basil during "Let Me Be Good To You" after Dawson starts making a fool of himself. * Family-Unfriendly Violence: Ratigan's brutal beatdown of Basil in the final scene. * Four-Fingered Hands: Exceptions being Ratigan (a rat) and Fidget (a bat). * For the Evulz: "You don't know what a delightful dilemma it was trying to decide on the most appropriate method for your demise." * Frothy Mugs of Water: Averted; the drinks in the Bad Guy Bar are explicitly referred to as beer. * Furry Confusion: The movie has anthropomorphic mice, rats, bats, and lizards, but real cats, dogs, and horses, not to mention humans as well. * Genius Bruiser: Ratigan prefers to use his brain to solve his problems (if nothing else to preserve his image), but he is vastly stronger than anyone else in the movie. * Getting Crap Past the Radar: The stripping mouse named Miss Kitty, with this line "Hey fellas/I'll take off all my blues!" Bearing in mind everything from her bow to her shoes is blue, this didn't sneak past the radar, it buzzed the tower and spilled coffee all over the air boss. * "Hey fellas, / There's nothin' I won't do, just for you!" * "So dream on, and drink your beer. Get cozy, your baby's here!" Basil also points out his drinks are drugged. The fact that half the bar is smoking seems to be the least of the worries during this scene. * "Boys, what you're hoping for will come true / Let me be good to you!" * Gilligan Cut: * Good Is Not Nice: Basil comes across as somewhat rude, especially early in the film, which makes him a good contrast to the Faux Affably Evil Ratigan. Fitting, since the original Holmes can be somewhat of a Jerkass Smug Snake himself at times. * Gory Discretion Shot: You see the shadow of Bartholomew the mouse getting eaten by Ratigan's cat. * Good Smoking, Evil Smoking: Basil smokes a pipe while Ratigan smokes a cigarette (complete with long stemmed filter a la Cruella de Vil). When Basil disguises himself as a thug, he swaps out his pipe for a cigarette. * GPS Evidence: The brandy, coal dust, and salt water on Fidget's list. * Heel Face Return: Fidget does this in a sequel comic. * Heroic BSOD: Basil after he falls for Ratigan's trap. * Homage: "Elementary, my dear Dawson". The entire movie, really, especially one scene where the silhouettes of two men who are obviously Holmes and Watson are visible discussing a case. The Holmes expy even shares a name with probably the most famous actor who played Sherlock. (So would that make this a Holmsage?) * In fact, in The Adventure of Black Peter, Holmes mentions he's known as (Captain) Basil around the Sumner area, though that much is coincidence. Of course, there's also Toby the dog, whom Holmes used in The Sign of the Four. * I Am Not Weasel: The professor HATES being called a rat; he's actually a "big mouse". * Idiot Ball: Basil and Dr. Dawson grab it pretty hard in the toy store by not realizing that someone had to have set off all the toys' mechanisms and that they didn't just wind themselves up. Basil should have instantly realized that whoever turned them on must have done so to provide cover for himself, and Dawson messed up by just letting Olivia wander off by herself. * I Have Got Your Daughter * Insistent Terminology: "I AM NOT A RAT!" * Then again, in the original books, he actually is a mouse. * Intoxication Ensues: Dawson, after drinking a drugged pint of beer. * Ironic Echo: Basil's ringing of Ratigan's little dinner bell (as Ratigan would use to call Felicia) before Big Ben strikes the hour, the bell's vibrations knocking Ratigan off to his demise. * Jump Scare: Twice by Fidget; when he breaks into Flaversham's shop, and when he hides in a cradle while inside the human toyshop. * Kid Appeal Character: Olivia. * Kidnapped Scientist: Flaversham is a toymaker, but he qualifies. His skill with making mechanical toys had applications for chicanery that Ratigan made forcible use of. * Knighting: It's certainly implied by the picture in the newspaper article at the end. * Large Ham: Ratigan is one of Disney's largest. In fact, Vincent Price said that this was his favorite role, and that he had a lot of fun with it. What's more, he also professed to being "flattered" that all of Ratigan's songs were written specially for him so that he could act as over-the-top as possible. * Mr. Price was prone to making wild, over-the-top hand gestures and such while acting, which the animators worked into Ratigan's character as well. * There's also the incredibly expressive, hyperactive unless quite visibly depressed, always overdramatic Basil himself. * Barrie Ingaham (Basil's voice actor) was also given to dramatic gesturing. The animators had lots of raw material to work with! * Basil's most notably hammy moments are: * * and... * Laser-Guided Karma: Felicia escapes Toby by jumping over a high wall, only to be torn apart by the royal hounds on the other side. * Last-Name Basis: (Padraic) Ratigan, (David) Dawson, and (Hiram) Flaversham. * Lucky Translation: Basil is called "Basil Holmuis" (hole-mouse) in Dutch. Yes, that's a real word. * The Italian title for the film is Basil l'investigatopo, a play on words with "investigatore" ("detective") and "topo" ("mouse"). * Miss Kitty: Miss Kitty Mouse, of course. * Missing Mom: Well, this IS a Disney movie (Olivia has no mother.) * Mouse World * Ms. Fanservice: Miss Kitty. * Musical Trigger: Sets off the Death Trap. * My Name Is Not Durwood: Basil constantly gets Olivia's surname wrong. Funnily enough, the one time he does get it right is when he's addressing her father. * My Parents Are Dead: Basil, depressed about failing to catch Ratigan yet again and playing the violin to console himself, dismisses Olivia's request that he find her father with, "Surely your mother knows where he is." Olivia responds, "I don't have a mother," and Basil's playing comes to a screeching halt. * Nice Mice: Most of them, at least. * No Celebrities Were Harmed: Queen Mousteria, a clear analogue of Queen Victoria. * No-Holds-Barred Beatdown: Towards the end of the movie, Ratigan mercilessly attacks Basil while shouting "There's no escape this time, Basil!" That Ratigan is usually more friendly than that only makes his suddenly vicious attack feel even more intense. * No Kill Like Overkill: Ratigan's ridiculously over-the-top Death Trap for Basil, which is set up so the detective will be snapped by a mousetrap, shot by a gun, impaled by a crossbow, chopped in half by an ax, crushed by an anvil, and gotten his picture taken. Very Rube Goldberg-ish, isn't it? Just like the Mousetrap board game... * Nominal Importance: Some characters, including "Miss Kitty", are only named in the credits. * Not Good with People: Basil. He is downright rude towards Olivia and seems to be very very uncomfortable while trying to cheer up Dawson. * Obsession Song: "Goodbye So Soon" * Off-Model: The very unfortunate DVD cover that was formerly at the top of this page. See its completely different art style here. * How about the current DVD cover artwork? Basil and Olivia don't look too bad, despite Basil having five fingers (usually he has four) and Dr. Dawson's eyes looking rather odd. * Offstage Villainy: Ratigan lists his villainous exploits in his opening song, but we never get to see them. * Ominous Music Box Tune: In the toy shop, when the cradle that Fidget hides in is wound up. * One-Scene Wonder: Remember Miss Kitty? Yeah. * One-Winged Angel: As part of his Villainous Breakdown, Ratigan reverts to his monstrous feral rat form. He proves incredibly dangerous, nearly killing Basil. * Panty Shot: Olivia, a few times. Most notably when Fidget shoves her into the bottle. * Paper-Thin Disguise: Basil and Dawson's sailor disguises. Lampshaded by Ratigan. * Primal Stance: When Ratigan's animal rage returns him to all fours while attacking Basil. * Punny Name: Many in the foreign language editions -- besides, of course, "Ratigan". For instance, the Italian Dawson is named "Topson", with "topo" meaning "mouse." * Putting a Hand Over His Mouth: Basil does this to Dawson, as does Ratigan to Olivia--before she bites it. * Ridiculously Cute Critter: Olivia. * Right-Hand-Cat: Felicia. Oddly, she's also a Right-Hand Attack Dog, though obviously not in the literal sense. * Let's not forget she is the Hand Cat, of a RAT * Rube Goldberg Hates Your Guts: The clock tower ends up being a huge death trap. It doesn't work, but man, if someone didn't outdo themselves thinking it up. * Running Gag: "Everything will be fine, Miss Flanghangar!" "FLAVERSHAM!" "Whatever." * Schmuck Bait: "The World's Greatest Criminal Mind" has the line You're tops, and that's that. Considering Rattigan's Berserk Button, why would the chorus end a line with anything that could rhyme with 'rat'? * Second Face Smoke: A woman at the tavern blows smoke at Dawson when he tries to apologize for bumping into her. * Shout-Out: To the clock tower fight from The Castleof Cagliostro. * Disney also references its own movies with a Dumbo toy in the toy shop and Bill the lizard as one of Ratigan's mooks. * Basil shares his name with Basil Rathbone, an actor famous for his portrayal of Sherlock Holmes and whose image often inspired the image the detective has in popular culture. * Bonus points: Basil Rathbone's voice appears, through the magic of archived dialog, as the voice of Sherlock Holmes. * Showgirl Skirt: Kitty's number has her remove a normal skirt to show a short, feather skirt underneath. * Sissy Villain: Ratigan (before he turns into a psychotic, feral rat at the end) is quite possibly one of Disney's most cold-blooded villains... and yet he surrounds himself with pink and purple fabric, fashionable capes, and sings songs while being carried around by his hired boys. * Sherlock Scan * She's Got Legs: Miss Kitty the bar singer has some of the most shapely, curvaceous legs ever animated. * Slipping a Mickey: Basil and Dawson are given drugged drinks sometime in the bar. Basil is Genre Savvy enough to test his drink first, but Dawson isn't so fortunate. * Smoking Is Cool * Staggered Zoom: Done one Ratigan right before he goes nuts during the Big Ben scene. * Stepford Smiler: Ratigan's a Type C. * Super Senses: Basil is able to detect drugs in his beer by simply dipping his fingertip into the drink and licking it. Which is similar to what real-life mice and rats do if they suspect poison. * Techno Babble: Basil spouts some while analyzing Ratigan's Death Trap. See Writers Cannot Do Math down the page. * The Renaissance Age of Animation * They Have the Scent * Thrown From the Zeppelin: Fidget the bat, literally. * Thunderous Confrontation: As the standard for Disney animated films, Basil and Ratigan's big fight on Big Ben near the end is accompanied by a strong thunderstorm, which clears up once Basil and Ratigan fall off the clock, and Basil survives thanks to using a piece of Ratigan's getaway blimp. * Title Drop: The last line of the film. * Keep in mind, the original title would have been "Basil of Baker Street", the name of the book series. Characters utter "Basil of Baker Street" quite frequently throughout the film, so if Executive Meddling hadn't changed the title, there would have been a lot of title drops! * Tranquil Fury: Throughout most of the movie, Ratigan repeatedly gets angry, but manages to reign it in and remain Evilly Affable as he threatens and murders his henchmen. During the climax, however... * Unusually Uninteresting Sight: Queen Mousetoria's guests aren't too quick to pick up on the fact that her double looks a bit... robotic. * Unwitting Pawn: Basil falls for Ratigan's ploy perfectly, throwing him into a temporary Heroic BSOD at the shock of his own stupidity. * Victorian London * Villainous Breakdown: And how! Ratigan, towards the final battle, turns from a formal and composed rat into a hulking and monstrous one. Heck, it's even the trope's picture on the film page! * Made even more frightening is the fact he was previously so Evilly Affable. It series to show just how insane and feral his breakdown has left him. * Villain Song: "The World's Greatest Criminal Mind" * "Goodbye, So Soon" could maybe count, too! * What Could Have Been: Madonna was considered to voice Miss Kitty and perform the song "Let Me Be Good To You". * Wretched Hive: The seedy pub. They DO serve Rodent's Delight, after all... * Writers Cannot Do Math: Really, Basil... just what is "the square root of an isosceles triangle", exactly? (Maybe Basil just is so much smarter than us that he knows how to calculate the square root of an isosceles triangle!) * You could also argue that he's thinking so fast that he's not verbalizing every step of his mental process, and there's some stuff in the middle that he just skips. * The Watson: Dr. Dawson. * The Wonka: He's Sherlock Holmes compressed into mouse form. What else needs to be said? * Worthy Opponent: Subverted. When Basil confronts Ratigan and starts speaking, it looks like he's invoking this trope, but it's actually the lead-in to an insult: * You Dirty Rat: "SEWER RAT!" * You Got Spunk: Olivia:
  • Based on the children's story Basil of Baker Street by Eve Titus, it draws heavily on the tradition of Sherlock Holmes with a heroic mouse who consciously emulates the detective; Titus named the main character after actor Basil Rathbone, who is best remembered for playing Holmes in film (and whose voice, sampled from the Red-Headed League[1], was the voice of Holmes in this film, 19 years after his death). The main characters are all mice and rats living in London.The layouts were done on computers, and video cameras made a digital version of pencil testing possible, which helped speeding up the production. The movie is also notable for its early use of computer generated imagery (CGI): for a chase scene that takes place in the interior of Big Ben. The movements of the clock's gears were produced as wire-frame graphics on a computer, printed out and traced onto animation cels where colors were added, and the characters were then animated by hand over these cels and the characters' completed cels placed on top of them. The Great Mouse Detective is sometimes cited as the first animated film from Disney to use CGI, but 1985's The Black Cauldron has this distinction.This film did fairly well in the box office and got warm reviews from critics (especially a "two thumbs up" from popular critics Siskel and Ebert), a welcome change after the previous Disney flop The Black Cauldron. Its moderate success after its predecessor's failure gave the new management of Disney confidence in the viability of their animation department. This led to creation of The Little Mermaid, released three years later, which signaled a renaissance for Walt Disney Productions. However, this film is usually "underrated" and "underappreciated" by Walt Disney, which focuses more on its original and newer films. Despite all this, The Great Mouse Detective has a large fanbase.
  • The Great Mouse Detective is a 1986 American animated mystery film produced by Walt Disney Feature Animation, originally released to movie theaters on July 2, 1986 by Walt Disney Pictures. The 26th feature in the Walt Disney Animated Classics, the film was directed by Burny Mattinson, David Michener, and the team of John Musker and Ron Clements, who later directed Disney's hit films The Little Mermaid and Aladdin. The film was also known as The Adventures of the Great Mouse Detective for its 1992 theatrical re-release and Basil the Great Mouse Detective in some countries. The main characters are all mice and rats living in Victorian London. Based on the children's book series Basil of Baker Street by Eve Titus, it draws heavily on the tradition of Sherlock Holmes with a heroic mouse who consciously emulates the detective; Titus named the main character after actor Basil Rathbone, who is best remembered for playing Holmes in film (and whose voice, sampled from a 1966 reading of "The Adventure of the Red-Headed League" was the voice of Holmes in this film, 19 years after his death). Sherlock Holmes also mentions "Basil" as one of his aliases in the Arthur Conan Doyle story "The Adventure of Black Peter". After the failure of Disney's previous animated feature film The Black Cauldron, this simpler film proved to be a success upon its initial release in 1986. As such, the new senior management of the company were convinced that their animation department was still a viable enterprise and this set the stage for the Disney Renaissance.
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