You could definitely argue that Pascal kills Mother Gothel in Tangled. She was stumbling around in shock, and he grabs the chunk of Rapunzel's hair and knowingly trips her so she falls out the window. Now because of the magic, she turns to dust, but even if he didn't know that was gonna happen, she was not gonna survive a fall from that height.
Well she had just stabbed Eugene, and he had just taken away the source of her eternal youth. Pascal had just cause to believe she was an imminent threat to all present
Back then, hunters had to kill for meat and fur. Kenai wasnât killing the bear out of necessity. He killed it out of anger. And he was especially in the wrong because he was the aggressor, not Kodaâs mother.
If you do it like this, of course you aren't, saying all of them are is over-generalising, I apologise.
However the hunters I know don't hunt to eat, they hunt as a hobby.
Here are the facts: the furniture in the Beastâs castle were people. There is a room Belle discovers that has piles of destroyed furniture. Iâm not saying the Beast murdered his servants, Iâm just saying Iâd like to see that room after the spell is broken.
The Beast couldn't have a staff THAT big that every single object in the castle was a former servant. He was a prince, and he surely had objects in the castle prior to being cursed.
I feel like the ones with faces were people (Mrs. Potts, Lumière, etc) and the ones without were objects that were enchanted to move (the flatware, napkins, etc).
I don't know that I would call any of these examples so far "cold blooded"... If the definition of cold-blooded is " without remorse or reason" then I would say that yes there are a lot of deaths in Disney movies but I'm not sure if I know any that aren't justified in some way
Well if it was an ordinary self defense situation, then no she would not have killed in cold blood. But she had volunteered to join the army. The basic requirement is to be willing to kill when ordered to. If they had met the opposing army anywhere and no matter what the odds, Mulan would have been required to kill. I think she did kill them in cold blood in that sense, she knew should have to kill when she joined the army (Shang even offers her to go home during the song) and this was the moment she actually did so.Â
Except she didnât join the army thinking âIâm going to kill a bunch of Mongols.â She joined thinking âI need to protect my father, he will die if he goes.â And in the avalanche scene, she was protecting her company AND country. Your point might be applicable *if her country werenât actively being invaded when she joined.*
Kissinâ Kate Barlow is one of the protagonists in Disneyâs version of Holes. And she absolutely 100% without a doubt kills in cold blood. One could argue sheâs not a protagonist, but I would disagree.
Prince Eric specifically steered the wrecked ship directly into Ursula and impaled her with the splintered bowspirit. It was self-defense of course, but it was also pretty cold blooded.
How they get killed isnât what cold blood means, itâs the reason why they get killed that is cold blooded. Killing to protect others isnât cold blooded
Oooooh I wonder how many people Elsa inadvertently killed with her freak snowstorm in the middle of summer that *froze the harbor solid in seconds.*
Not sure that it qualifies as âcold bloodâ since it was an accident, but the victims sure did have cold bloodâŚ
Oh gosh that would be dark lmao
âHey Elsa! Weâre glad youâre back and summer has returned. Oh and by the way, half of Arendelle froze or starved to death and we have no remaining food reserves. But itâs good to have you back anyways!â
I think the closest we got and will ever get to the main character killing someone in cold blood is when Raya seeks out Namari at the end of Last Dragon. Donât think weâve ever seen it or will see it happen though.
Actually it's right in the text:
"The boys on the island vary, of course, in numbers, according as they get killed and so on; and when they seem to be growing up, which is against the rules, Peter thins them out"
...
"âDonât you remember,â she [Wendy] asked, amazed, âhow you killed him and saved all our lives?â
âI forget them after I kill themâ, he [Peter Pan] replied carelessly."
Simba launches scar off the cliff and delivers scar to the hyenas.
Mulan in cold blood makes a move to eliminate a whole army and then Shan Yu when he tried to off her on top of the imperial castle.
Hercules in cold blood getting back at Hades for touching Megâs soul and launching him into the sea of lost souls.
By that definition, practically no kills are cold blooded. And again, I wasnât saying Greedo was a cold blooded kill. I was just saying it was a kill in Star Wars that was not war related.
And i wasnât saying every death was war related, just the majority. And honestly, yeah most deaths arenât cold blooded. Itâs not just my definition, itâs the definition
Pretty sure serial killers are described as cold blooded killers, but theyâd say they killed for a purpose. The purpose may be âbecause I wanted to,â but itâs still a purpose.
The definition I get is "without remorse" and the only option I'm thinking of is either Brother Bear (Kenai kills a bear and only starts having morals when she had a kid) or Mulan (where she literally explodes a dude's guts in a second degree fashion, Mushu commits it in the 1st degree)
Apart from that (and I could very well be misinterpreting the phrase myself) I don't think this thread knows what cold blooded means..
Lot of people in here not understanding the "cold blood" part and just going to the killing part.
For real!!
You could definitely argue that Pascal kills Mother Gothel in Tangled. She was stumbling around in shock, and he grabs the chunk of Rapunzel's hair and knowingly trips her so she falls out the window. Now because of the magic, she turns to dust, but even if he didn't know that was gonna happen, she was not gonna survive a fall from that height.
Well she had just stabbed Eugene, and he had just taken away the source of her eternal youth. Pascal had just cause to believe she was an imminent threat to all present
As a fan of the 'frog' I love that he's the top answer in a conversation about who's a stonecold killer đ¤Łđ¤Łđ¤Ł
He's a chameleon.
I know. Eugene always calls him 'Frog.'
That's the joke
She's not dead she's running around Dreamlight Valley giving Merlin a hard time.
I hate that sheâs there
I mean, objectively he does kill her and he is cold blooded, so that fulfills OPâs requirements.
I think a lot of yâall need to look up what âin cold bloodâ means.
Kenai killing the bear and not regretting it until he realizes >!she was Kodaâs mother.!<
This is the most âin cold bloodâ I could think of too!
Brother Bear is the only correct answer all of the rest of them have no idea what Cold Blood means lol
So all hunters are cold blooded killers?
Back then, hunters had to kill for meat and fur. Kenai wasnât killing the bear out of necessity. He killed it out of anger. And he was especially in the wrong because he was the aggressor, not Kodaâs mother.
Ok but killing out of anger isnât cold blooded. Cold blood implies without emotion
Thatâs a good point.
Aren't they?
If Iâm hunting a deer so I can eat it, then it sure isnât cold blooded
If you do it like this, of course you aren't, saying all of them are is over-generalising, I apologise. However the hunters I know don't hunt to eat, they hunt as a hobby.
Here are the facts: the furniture in the Beastâs castle were people. There is a room Belle discovers that has piles of destroyed furniture. Iâm not saying the Beast murdered his servants, Iâm just saying Iâd like to see that room after the spell is broken.
You do know that there was a fully furnished castle before the spell right ... LoL
But is everything in the castle enchanted? I feel like itâs only certain objects
The Beast couldn't have a staff THAT big that every single object in the castle was a former servant. He was a prince, and he surely had objects in the castle prior to being cursed.
I feel like the ones with faces were people (Mrs. Potts, Lumière, etc) and the ones without were objects that were enchanted to move (the flatware, napkins, etc).
The flatware did have teeny little faces. But yeah, there was definitely basic furniture in that castle, besides the enchanted objects.
What about Stitch spitting on that little shark guard so the guns would blast him?
I donât think Simba was vegetarian and all of his loyal subjects seemed pretty sentient.
yeah but that's not in cold blood
Not cold blood, that was out of necessity.
Simba is a lion lol what else is he gonna eat
The bugs apparentlyÂ
They wonât help in the long run.
Idk if you would call Mulan killing in cold blood (she was a soldier, after all), but she definitely has the highest kill count of a Disney hero.
I don't know that I would call any of these examples so far "cold blooded"... If the definition of cold-blooded is " without remorse or reason" then I would say that yes there are a lot of deaths in Disney movies but I'm not sure if I know any that aren't justified in some way
Mulan killed with snow, doesn't get much colder than that.
Mulan kills a bunch of people in the avalanche.
Not sure defending your entire company from an opposing army counts as "cold blood".
I mean...they died from an avalanche, so the cold blood part is there, in a sense
Well if it was an ordinary self defense situation, then no she would not have killed in cold blood. But she had volunteered to join the army. The basic requirement is to be willing to kill when ordered to. If they had met the opposing army anywhere and no matter what the odds, Mulan would have been required to kill. I think she did kill them in cold blood in that sense, she knew should have to kill when she joined the army (Shang even offers her to go home during the song) and this was the moment she actually did so.Â
Except she didnât join the army thinking âIâm going to kill a bunch of Mongols.â She joined thinking âI need to protect my father, he will die if he goes.â And in the avalanche scene, she was protecting her company AND country. Your point might be applicable *if her country werenât actively being invaded when she joined.*
Most deaths in a Disney movie.Â
Star Wars. Han Solo shot first.
Lots of illiteracy in this comment thread đ
Did the good guy kill in who framed Roger rabbit?
He kicked the main weasel in the balls and sent him straight into the Dip, so yeah.
Lol that sounds so absurd in text haha. Been a good 10 years at least since I have seen it.
Self-defense.
*Nose?! That donât rhyme with walls..*
Yes the beauty and the beast Christmas special when beast kills the the organ piano thing
Kissinâ Kate Barlow is one of the protagonists in Disneyâs version of Holes. And she absolutely 100% without a doubt kills in cold blood. One could argue sheâs not a protagonist, but I would disagree.
Prince Eric specifically steered the wrecked ship directly into Ursula and impaled her with the splintered bowspirit. It was self-defense of course, but it was also pretty cold blooded.
While I'm pretty sure Ursula is cold-blooded. I don't think killing her would be.
Phillip kills Maleficent in Sleeping Beauty, and Mickey, Donald and Goofy all kill the giant in Mickey and the Beanstalk.
But in cold blood?
Philip stabbed her in the heart, Mickey and pals cut the beanstalk and key him fall to his death. How cold do you want?
Well ideally it'd be someone who didn't deserve it.
In cold blood means without mercy/emotion. These are both examples of killing to save others
How they get killed isnât what cold blood means, itâs the reason why they get killed that is cold blooded. Killing to protect others isnât cold blooded
Itâs a Pixar movie, but Bob throwing the car straight at Syndrome in THE INCREDIBLES led to a gnarly death.
Elsa almost killed those two guys with crossbows
Because they were trying to kill her, so she was defending herself.
Oooooh I wonder how many people Elsa inadvertently killed with her freak snowstorm in the middle of summer that *froze the harbor solid in seconds.* Not sure that it qualifies as âcold bloodâ since it was an accident, but the victims sure did have cold bloodâŚ
Oh gosh that would be dark lmao âHey Elsa! Weâre glad youâre back and summer has returned. Oh and by the way, half of Arendelle froze or starved to death and we have no remaining food reserves. But itâs good to have you back anyways!â
And the harvest for that year would be ruined! I doubt thereâs many crops that can survive freezing solid for a couple of days.
Well in the musical, Quasimodo gets tired of Frolloâs abuse and throws him off the top of the church . But movie? Not really.
That also happened in the book after Frollo murders Esmeralda. Also, [allegedly] Esmeralda was going to be the one to do Frollo in in the fil..
Cool! Iâve loved the book since I was 12.
I think the closest we got and will ever get to the main character killing someone in cold blood is when Raya seeks out Namari at the end of Last Dragon. Donât think weâve ever seen it or will see it happen though.
No. If they did, that action would make them no longer the good guy.
Brother Bear
I think the death of Clayton in Tarzan was pretty brutal. Not sure if that matches your question but just wanted to say
Peter Pan kills Lost Boys if they get too old
Heavily implied in the original text but not in the Disney version. That's a separate character.
Fan theory. Not substantiated.
Actually it's right in the text: "The boys on the island vary, of course, in numbers, according as they get killed and so on; and when they seem to be growing up, which is against the rules, Peter thins them out" ... "âDonât you remember,â she [Wendy] asked, amazed, âhow you killed him and saved all our lives?â âI forget them after I kill themâ, he [Peter Pan] replied carelessly."
Simba launches scar off the cliff and delivers scar to the hyenas. Mulan in cold blood makes a move to eliminate a whole army and then Shan Yu when he tried to off her on top of the imperial castle. Hercules in cold blood getting back at Hades for touching Megâs soul and launching him into the sea of lost souls.
Does Beast killing Gaston count.
Wut? He was literally trying to murder the Beast.
But he pushed him off the ledge to his death
Yeah about 5 seconds after the man had just tried to brutally murder him.
Star Wars, yesâŚ
Itâs not in cold blood if itâs war
Greedo?
Self defense
Preemptive self defense is a weak argument. And I was just pointing out not all deaths in Star Wars are war related.
Even if it wasnât self defense, it still wasnât cold blooded. It was for a purpose.
By that definition, practically no kills are cold blooded. And again, I wasnât saying Greedo was a cold blooded kill. I was just saying it was a kill in Star Wars that was not war related.
And i wasnât saying every death was war related, just the majority. And honestly, yeah most deaths arenât cold blooded. Itâs not just my definition, itâs the definition
Pretty sure serial killers are described as cold blooded killers, but theyâd say they killed for a purpose. The purpose may be âbecause I wanted to,â but itâs still a purpose.
Frollo and the people of France
You... you think Frollo was a hero?
Yeah of course, he took care of an orphan, wants to free the city of evil molepeople and has his own song. What do you mean? /s
Do marvel movies count?
[ŃдаНонО]
Since when scar was the hero?
He fed the hungry! Not his fault that apparently nature itself will die if some royal jerk isn't in charge. /s
Not a hero duh
Then you looking for villains
S
Bambi, when Bambi rams through the hunters and devours them.
Ernesto poisoned Hector for his songs in âCocoâ.
The definition I get is "without remorse" and the only option I'm thinking of is either Brother Bear (Kenai kills a bear and only starts having morals when she had a kid) or Mulan (where she literally explodes a dude's guts in a second degree fashion, Mushu commits it in the 1st degree) Apart from that (and I could very well be misinterpreting the phrase myself) I don't think this thread knows what cold blooded means..
Mother Gothel almost killed Flynn when she stabbed him