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The Brave Little Toaster is a 1987 animated film produced by Hyperion Pictures, distributed by Disney (though it went disributed in the UK by ITC instead) , and based on a children's novel by Thomas M. Disch.
The film centers on five appliances — the eponymous Toaster, Lampy (a lamp), Kirby (a vacuum), Radio (guess), and Blanky (an electric blanket) — who live in a old cabin out in the woods. The appliances have been left behind by their Master, a young boy, and have been waiting for him to return for years. When the cabin is put up for sale, the appliances determine to go find the Master (who, unknown to them, is now a young man getting ready for college) by making a journey to the city.
Though it didn't get much of a theatrical release, it's still fondly remembered and has become somewhat of a cult classic by its own right amongst many kids of the late Eighties and Nineties thanks to its airings on the Disney Channel and its home video release. It's proved to be a popular enough film to grant two direct-to-video sequels, and neither of them really sucked. As a side note, some of the people behind this film (such as John Lasseter and Joe Ranft) went on to go work for another company specializing in heartwarming animated features...
The Brave Little Toaster, despite its title (and its cover), has also become notorious as one of the most scary movies Disney ever produced, with gems like the song "Worthless", as you'll see here.
WARNING: If you plan on seeing this film, please make sure you're not going to be replacing or throwing out any old appliances in the near future. You will regret it.
This film contains examples of:[]
- Adaptational Alternate Ending: In the original book, the appliances find a new home, in the movie, they reunite with their original owner.
- Adaptation-Induced Plothole: The balloons in Brave Little Toaster Goes to Mars seemed like a giant Big Lipped Alligator Moment, right? In the book, they actually served a purpose: The balloons helped push the laundry-basket spacecraft to Mars, and one mylar balloon, who became friends with Toaster because they were both reflective, decided to accompany the group to Mars and proved to be a reasonably competent navigator.
- Adaptational Nice Guy: While the Master's appliances are by no means jerks in the original book, they're nowhere near as concerned with love or personal attachment as they are in the movie, instead simply desire to be used.
- Adaptational Villainy: In the book, the new appliances that Toaster and the others meet in Rob's apartment aren't nearly as mean as they are in the movie. They are actually quite helpful, aiding the old appliances in finding a new owner, and even a little guilty about their part in the replacement of the old appliances.
- Adorkable: Rob and Lampy both fit this description to a tee!
- The Alleged Car: "Worthless"
- Ambiguous Gender: The Toaster. In the book Toaster is explicitly without gender, in films one could get into minutia but really there is no clear indication either way. Or at least there wouldn't be without the few times Toaster's gender is called into question.
AC: Somebody untie the knot in this guy's cord!
Kirby: Where's Toater? Blanky: He sank.
- And That's Terrible: Mack in To The Rescue, who even states he's "so bad".
- And This Is For: Played for laughs by Radio:
Lampy: Hey, come over here. I'm gonna... |
- Animate Inanimate Object: The appliances all play this trope and act inanimate in the presence of humans.
- Art Evolution: The sequels look somewhat different to the original. Switching over to another studio from Wang also made this noticeable.
- Ascended Fridge Horror: The idea of anthropomorphic electronics sharing a world with humans is Deconstructed with themes of materialism and abandonment.
- It Gets Worse during the "Worthless" scene, set in a junk yard: there's a huge magnet seeking out the toaster and crew, to throw them all into a compactor - essentially attempting to murder them as they run away from it and hide in fear for their lives. Meanwhile, it actually is throwing cars into the compactor.
- To make that even worse, the cars are singing a song about how helpless and worthless they feel. Some attempt to escape the magnet, which is pretty horrifying in itself, but even more disturbing is others convey that they want to die and fully understand the concept of death, even though they are objects.
- It Gets Worse during the "Worthless" scene, set in a junk yard: there's a huge magnet seeking out the toaster and crew, to throw them all into a compactor - essentially attempting to murder them as they run away from it and hide in fear for their lives. Meanwhile, it actually is throwing cars into the compactor.
Personified hearse: I took a man to a grave yard. I beg your pardon, but it's quite hard enough just living with the stuff I have learned. |
- Be Careful What You Wish For: Kirby eventually loses patience with the other appliances and flat out tells them he'd be better off without them. In the next scene Toaster, Blanky, Lampy, and the Radio fall into the waterfall, leaving Kirby all alone.
- Berserk Button: Don't remind the Air Conditioner that he's stuck in the wall. The results will not be pretty.
- Big Damn Hero: Kirby during the waterfall scene.
- Big "Shut Up!": Lampy gets a collective "shut up" after the third time he fails to come up with a good method of transportation.
Radio: Shut up! Shut up! |
- Black Comedy: How the appliances at Elmo St. Peter's shop have chosen to deal with their situation, and the basic idea behind the "B-Movie" song.
- The Blank: Radio
- Captain Obvious/Sarcasm Blind: Lampy, when Air Conditioner denies laughing at them.
Lampy: I think he was laughing at us. |
- Cool Car: The red car (people are split as to whether its a Corvette or a Plymouth Superbird that's been rear-ended) during "Worthless".
- Companion Cube: This film is based around this trope.
- Conspiracy Theorist: The Air Conditioner, due to the preferential treatment the other appliances received, developed wild theories about them which are revealed during his rather disturbing death scene.
- Contemptible Cover: As mentioned by the caption above, the cover art depicts this movie as a light-hearted family flick. The actual film is a far cry.
- Conveyor Belt O' Doom: Which leads to a crusher that mashes you into a cube.
- Corrupt Hick: The toaster oven during "Cutting Edge". She has a southern accent, and offers a bit of back-handed "Southern Hospitality" to Toaster in the form of some muffins, while flaunting how much more advanced she is and zaps him a second later.
- Covers Always Lie: Do. They. Ever. If you think the one above is bad, another cover for the DVD shows the main five characters and the younger master skipping down a yellow road surrounded by twinkling stars.
- Crap Saccharine World
- Crying Little Kid: Blankey.
- Cultural Translation: During the "Worthless" song, the Indy 500 car instead mentions running the Nürburgring in the German dub.
- Dark Is Not Evil: The appliances in Elmo Saint Peter's parts shop may be broken, tinkered with, and twisted by the events they have seen, but they are by no means evil. You COULD say that they're resigned to their fate in a fairly unhealthy, EXTREMELY macabre way, however...
- Darker and Edgier: The film has a significantly darker tone than the book, which is an interesting inversion to what usually happens to animated adaptations of books.
- Also in comparison to the sequels.
- Deadpan Snarker: Kirby and the Air Conditioner.
- Department of Redundancy Department: Sometimes Lampy speaks a little like this sometimes.
Lampy: All of a sudden, you're being so darn nice to him all of a sudden. |
- Determinator: The magnet crane is a terrifying example of this.
- Deranged Animation: This movie is full of it, appearing in the Nightmare Sequence, "It's a B-Movie", "Cutting Edge", and the junkyard scene.
- Despair Event Horizon: The appliances of Elmo Saint Peter's parts shop have been convinced that being able to escape is all a joke. As for the cars of "Worthless," however, the name says it all.
- Disney Acid Sequence: "Cutting Edge (More More More)".
- Disney Death:
- The Toaster. This might also apply to Lampy and the air conditioner.
- In the first sequel, Radio.
- In the second sequel, Tinselena.
- Dissimile:
Radio: We're trapped here like rats! Small, little rats with no hair and one leg. |
- Driven to Suicide: The Air Conditioner in the first movie.
- In Goes to Mars, Tinselena becomes this after her Heroic Sacrifice, and decides to throw herself into the garbage can. She is ultimately saved when Chris finds her and decides to give her a makeover.
- There is a literal example in the original where a green truck drives himself onto the Conveyor Belt of Doom instead of letting the magnet crane get him.
- Dying Alone: There is one scene when the poor little flower realizes that it was loving its own reflection on Toaster after he runs away, and as he peeks into the bushes, he notices that the flower is losing its petals as it dies emotionally alone and brokenhearted. So disturbing... and heart-breaking!
- Earn Your Happy Ending: And how.
- The Eighties: Especially with the appliances and electronics that appear in the movie.
- Electrified Bathtub: Naturally, how Toaster's horrific dream ends.
- "Everybody Laughs" Ending
- Evil Brit: The ridiculously large projector/stereo/mainframe/entertainment-system/generic high-tech device (possibly a Beeping Computer) seen in the apartment and "Cutting Edge" has a somewhat vague British accent, but like all the "Cutting Edge" appliances he is definitely an evil Jerkass.
- Evil Laugh: The clown in Toaster's dream puts all other evil laughs to shame. Arguably, the laugh done to start "It's a B-Movie," though not done by anyone evil.
- Family-Unfriendly Death:
- Both the "It's a B-Movie" and "Worthless" numbers. And in a particularly horrific scene, Rob just misses being added to this list.
- The air conditioner getting worked up to the point of aneurysm, and dying... on camera.
Blanky: Poor Air Conditioner... |
- He got better.
- Fat Bastard: Mack in To The Rescue.
- Fingore: The Master almost goes into the compactor hands first.
- First Time in the Sun: When the appliances first leave the cabin.
- Five-Man Band:
- The Hero: Toaster
- The Lancer: Lampy
- The Smart Guy: Radio
- The Big Guy: Kirby
- Tagalong Kid: Blanky.
- Kind of ironic seeing how in the books Kirby was the alleged leader and Toaster was just the thing that kept them moving.
- Forced to Watch: The most logical reason for why the lamp, the only appliance in the junk shop not clearly abused/reassembled, is as insane as the rest. He got to help with most or all of the other ones. And he's a light, so he had a good view...
- Freeze-Frame Bonus: A113 is on an apartment door.
- French Jerk: The food processor in "Cutting Edge". Also, implied to be a Supreme Chef.
- Would also be Everything Sounds Sexier in French, if it weren't Just a Stupid Accent.
- Gilligan Cut: When making travel plans, Radio takes over from Lampy in finding a mode of transport on the grounds that he has a better idea. Cut to Radio trying to turn Blanky into a magic carpet.
- While Toaster & Kirby are clearly annoyed, Lampy has a look of excitement on his face, as if he's expecting Blanket to lift off at any second.
- Gory Discretion Shot: In To the Rescue when Sebastian shows what the animal testers did to his arm.
- Gossipy Hens: The sewing machine.
- Grumpy Bear: Kirby.
- Hammerspace: The appliances' cords tend to disappear when they aren't being used.
- Happiness in Slavery: Not truly slavery per se. The appliances know that some day they will wear out, but they will go with the knowledge that they were useful and loved.
- Though, the Master is determined to rebuild his appliances so they'll last extra longer.
- Heroic BSOD: Poor Kirby.
- Heroic Sacrifice: Hey, there's a reason this movie's called the Brave Little Toaster....
- Again, Lampy gets one of these too.
- Radio gets one in one of the sequels.
- Tinselena in Goes to Mars.
- The Homeward Journey
- Hope Spot: The song "City of Light." Things go pretty downhill for a while after that.
- Huddle Shot
- Humans Are Special / Humans Are Bastards: One of the main themes throughout the films. Some humans use machines well and treat them kindly, but others are willing to toss out faithful ones in pursuit of newer models. Comes to a head in The Brave Little Toaster Goes to Mars.
- Hypocritical Humor: In the third movie, when arguing about what the hearing aid is useful for, this exchange occurs:
Lampy: Yeah, none of us needs a hearing aid. |
- Incredibly Lame Pun: Lampy has watts of 'em!
- Insane Proprietor: Done by the TV to get the Master to go to the junkyard.
- Irony / Ironic Echo: Tons. Examples:
- Elmo St. Peters, after the blender hides, says something along the lines of "It couldn't have just got up and walked away."
- When Radio hides, he said "What did it do? Just get up and walk away?"
- HUGE situational irony. After the appliances' journey, it is revealed that Rob/The Master actually was coming back for them.
- Also, Kirby suggested that they just stay in the cottage. Only that someone will buy the cottage and have a new master.
- It is ironic that Lampy, who is physically bright, is not that bright mentally.
- And yet it is he who figures out a way to save Radio's life.
- Elmo St. Peters, after the blender hides, says something along the lines of "It couldn't have just got up and walked away."
- I Was Just Passing Through: Kirby tries to pull this as an excuse for rescuing the others from the waterfall ("I just slipped and fell in, that's all!") None of them buy it.
- Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Kirby.
- Ratso the rat in the sequels.
- Large and In Charge: The Supreme Commander in Goes to Mars thinks that he should be voted for simply because he is bigger than everyone else.
- Large Ham: The Radio.
- Heh... Ham Radio.
- Kinda comes with the territory, since Radio's character is a mixture of the news broadcaster and the radio dramatist.
- No love for TV?
- Heh... Ham Radio.
- Least Is First: Blanky, the youngest and weakest of the group, is the first to join Toaster to find the Master
- Leitmotif: Each character has their own theme.
- Lightning Can Do Anything: Like recharge a battery.
- Lighter and Softer: The sequels.
- Literal Minded: From Goes to Mars:
Balloon: Howdy y'all! Where ya headed? |
- The Man Behind the Curtain / The Reveal: The Supreme Commander in the third movie turns out to be the hearing aid's long lost brother.
- Meaningful Name: The appliance shop owner is named Elmo St. Peters--as in "Saint Peter", as in "the guy you see shortly after your death". Fitting for a man who runs a store where everything's on its last legs, and alluded to in "B Movie Show" ("You just tell St. Pete/That you got cold feet").
- Also, "St. Peters' fire" is an electrical aura that sometimes appears around pointed objects (like ships' masts) in stormy weather. So "Elmo" is a meaningful name for an electrician.
- Monster Clown: One shows up in the Toaster's brief Nightmare Sequence.
- Mood Whiplash / Shoo Out the Clowns: From silly animal antics to a Narcissus flower dying of a broken heart in a heartbeat...until one of the clowns returns.
- Motor Mouth: The radio.
- Named by the Adaptation: The "Master" is given the name "Rob McGroarty" and the "Pirate" is named "Elmo St. Peters". The appliances are also given names, either simply after what they are, or given names alluding to what they are.
- Never Trust a Trailer: The VHS trailer for the movie didn't do too much better than the cover on making it look like it was a very Dark and Edgy movie.
- New Technology Is Evil: Literally. The "cutting edge" appliances try to off the main characters.
- No Celebrities Were Harmed: The air conditioner (a Jack Nicholson sound-alike) and the hanging lamp (a Peter Lorre sound-alike). Of course, what did you expect, what with impressionist extraordinaire Phil Hartman doing their voices?
- The can opener/lamp/shaver is an obvious Joan Rivers sound-alike, so it's only appropriate that it makes a self-deprecating quip.
- No Name Given: The radio's name is never revealed nor is he addressed by any name in the first movie. However, in the sequels, he has been addressed by the other appliances as "Radio".
- Nothing Is Scarier: During the "Its a B-Movie" sequence, there are disembodied cords that drag characters away into the darkness.
- Not So Stoic: When Kirby is finally all alone. He doesn't handle it well, to say the least.
- One Mario Limit: Averted Trope with Kirby, who debuted before the video game character. (He's named after the vacuum company, which also debuted before the video game character.)
- Punch Clock Villain: The magnet and the mechanic are both just doing their jobs.
- While that does apply to the mechanic (in his defense, he's unaware that the appliances he takes apart are alive), the magnet is still pretty evil, calmly dropping a human onto the Conveyor Belt O' Doom and all.
- Punctuated! For! Emphasis!: Air Conditioner: "IT'S MY FUNCTION!!!!!"
- Put on a Bus: A very Literal Minded example of this is the green pickup truck in the "Worthless" scene. He has literally been Put on a Bus (as in literally sitting on top of a bus) and left to rot, even though he is still in perfect working order (his engine is already running when the magnet comes for him, and he drives himself away, only for the camera to cut to him sitting on the Conveyor Belt O' Doom, not even trying to struggle despite being perfectly capable of out-running the magnet, implying he committed suicide, averting the trope, but still implying it).
- Quicksand Sucks: Mud in a swamp works just as well.
- The Renaissance Age of Animation
- Ripped From the Phone Book
- Rousing Speech: In the first book Toaster gives one of these to the rest of its True Companions.
- Say My Name: "TOASTER!!!" "BLANKY!!!"
- Setting-Off Song: "City of Light."
- She's a Man In Japan: Lampy is female in some versions, such as the German, Polish and Brazilian Portuguese dubs.
- Shout-Out: Radio suggests going North by Northwest while trying to find the city.
- Space Does Not Work That Way: Expected in The Brave Little Toaster Goes to Mars. But then it's a kids' movie, and they are appliances.
- Staggered Zoom
- Stealth Pun: There is a talking faucet in The Brave Little Toaster Goes to Mars. See "Hey, It's That Voice!" on the Trivia tab.
- Sssssnaketalk: Murgatroyd from To the Rescue.
- Tears of Joy: Air conditioner after the Master fixed him. AC recognized the Master and realized he was wrong about him and really does care.
- Some viewers thought that those were regretful tears for doubting the Master to begin with.
- And others always thought they were a reference to the beginning of the film, where we see AC's anger at never being "played with" by the Master (what with being stuck in the wall and the Master being too short to reach). Yet now the Master is all grown up and can not only reach him, but resurrect him.
- It's probably all of the above.
- Some viewers thought that those were regretful tears for doubting the Master to begin with.
- Team Mom: Toaster, although it has an Ambiguous Gender, often falls into this role, especially once the others start to argue.
- And taking care of clingy, crying Blanky.
- Thank the Maker: The appliances often do this with their "Master".
- That Poor Plant: The saddest example of this trope ever done.
- Through a Face Full of Fur: The Air Conditioner becomes hot-tempered literally and figuratively, as he irately turns red after the other appliances offend him with mentioning that he's incapable of mobility unlike the others, and he becomes so heated he breaks down.
- The Giant Magnet from the junkyard turns gold (or yellow) with fury rather than the normal red, trying to attract and collect the appliances.
- Truck Driver's Gear Change: All of the songs contain at least one instance.
- Uncle Tomfoolery: Plugsy. Oh, so very, very much. He may be a Talking Purple Lamp, but it's still applicable. His voice, his facial features, his mannerisms... if Uncle Tom were a real character, and that character was a lamp, that lamp would be Plugsy.
- Could be any number of things from innocent but Unfortunate Implications to Getting Crap Past the Radar, hard to tell since he only has about 2 minutes of total screen time, and most of that is during a musical number.
- Unspoken Plan Guarantee: Can be observed with Lampy. Near the beginning of the film, he explains his ideas of how they can travel before they're implemented, with hilarious (but failed) results. When they're trying to come up with a plan to save Radio from having his tube taken out, he simply says he has a plan — which then works.
- Earlier, due to the group being distracted, Lampy didn't tell anyone he was going to use himself as a lightning rod. He just did it. And it worked.
- Villain Song: Both of which are Crowning Moments of Awesome:
- While they aren't exactly villains, the insane machines in "Like A Movie" (aka "It's a B-Movie") do a wonderful job of showing the horror of waiting to be taken apart for spares. And they aren't bad shadow puppeteers either.
- A more directly evil example is "Cutting Edge", where the new appliances sing an egotistic preview of their superiority to the main characters.
- Vitriolic Best Buds: Lampy and Radio, Type 2.
- Wasn't That Fun?: Kirby throws out a sarcastic quip as the entire party is sinking helplessly into a mud puddle, with him being the first to go.
Kirby: "Oh, this is great fun! Let's make these outings a regular thing!" |
- We Could Have Avoided All This: If the appliances had simply stayed at the cottage, the Master would've have come back to get them for college. They never learn that though.
- What Measure Is a Non-Human?: Don't. Get us. Started.
- White and Grey Morality: Elmo St. Peters is really not evil or anything. He's a regular guy who takes apart appliances and sells the parts.
- Why Did It Have to Be Snakes?: The appliances have a fear of water, Kirby and Toaster more than the others. Understandably, since they're electric.
- With or Without You
Toaster: Well, I'm going, with or without you. |
- Yellow Peril: Look closely at the blue boombox during "Cutting Edge" and tell me you don't see it. All its missing is is a Sony or Panasonic logo! It even has slanted eyes! Well, slanted, notches on its knobs, which are implied to be its eyes.
- You're Just Jealous: The air conditioner ridicules Toaster and the others for their optimism that their Master/Rob will come back one day. Toaster thinks its just a defense mechanism to hid the fact he's jealous of them because the Master never gave him much love as them. At first he denies it, but when Kirby points out he's stuck in a wall, his repressed rage kills him. (He's repaired later in the movie, though.)
- His real repressed rage was that The Master never played with him because he was too high on the wall. What Do You Mean It's Not Symbolic?
- Zeerust: Averted with the main characters, who are based on contemporary designs of the 50's. Despite their age, they are perfectly functional and have not been made obsolete (for the mostpart, anyway). These two factors make the main characters somewhat timeless.
- Played straight with the appliances in the apartment Rob lives in. Though some of them are functionally timeless, their 1980's designs have a more zeerust feel by modern standards. They are currently in the uncanny valley of design, essentially. It doesn't help their case that they chant about being on the cutting-edge. In song, no less!
- Seeing as the movie is all about things being obsolete, one could say Cutting Edge has aged like fine wine.
- Played straight with the appliances in the apartment Rob lives in. Though some of them are functionally timeless, their 1980's designs have a more zeerust feel by modern standards. They are currently in the uncanny valley of design, essentially. It doesn't help their case that they chant about being on the cutting-edge. In song, no less!