The gargoyle coming to life and falling along with Frollo is an excellent touch. It feels like it's the Devil himself, taking the sinner to the flames of Hell.
I don't think so because gargoyles are supposed to ward off evil so when Frollo was truly revealed as evil in those moments, the gargoyle came to life in its own way and did it's job. That's just my theory though
Notice how Quasi still holds onto him and doesn’t just let him fall to his death, even after Frollo revealed to him that he killed his mother. “Who is the monster and who is the man?” Is an easily answered question.
The great irony is, if Frollo hadn't tried to kill them afterwards, he would have survived. And by falling at the precise moment he did, Quasimodo was able to be rescued from death by Febus.
I only just realized why Quasimodo lost consciousness so quickly: his hunchback means he has smaller lungs than most. When it comes to parkouring around the cathedral, he's more of a sprinter than a marathon runner, and he just got done repelling an invasion on Notre Dame. The smoke inhalation wouldn't have helped matters, either.
Great insight Quasi was physically strong but he had to be exhausted by this point in the story (also emotionally like dude just realized his "boss" straight up murdered his mom!)
1:35 I've always loved how quickly Esmerelda's face turns from fear to disgust. It's such a small animation detail, but you gotta love how much effort the animators put into the film.
@@dragonstormx And what's worse for Frollo is that he's trying to murder two people in the church of the one woman he feared yet begged for protection: Beata Maria, aka Blessed Mary. As in Holy Mary, Mother of God. He constantly forgotten that Notre Dame is her house.
Honestly, the thing I love most about the scene is how the gargoyle seems to come alive to frighten Frollo. For those who don't know, the reason gargoyles were built on churches and other buildings was to scare off demons and evil spirits, meaning that even though Frollo called himself a holy man and a servant to God, he was the farthest thing from it.
Which is silly because nowhere in the Bible does it teach that gargoyles will scare away anything evil. They look like demons themselves and demons certainly don't scare away demons. It would have made sense to put angels all over the building instead. Angels are terrifying to Demons
And you know what's worse for Frollo? In "Hellfire" he is begging "Beata Maria" to protect him. Beata Maria is Mary, Holy Mother of God. Notre Dame, meaning "Our Lady," is HER church. It was HER eyes staring down at him that ultimately scared him during "Bells of Notre Dame," more so than the saints. She has been watching Frollo for 20 years and had given him the chance to change for the better within her walls, but he never did. Not to Quasimodo and not to Esmeralda. *She* sent Frollo to his death: the one Woman Frollo ultimately feared
What I love about Quasimodo vs Frollo was the difference in how they treated Esmerelda. Quasimodo undoubtedly related to her lower status in life, but more importantly, after he realized his initially romantic feelings for her would not be reciprocated, he accepted it. And when he saved Esmerelda, it was like a brother rescuing a sister. Frollo, however, descended deeper into insanity and darkness, and burned with lust over Esmerelda. In the end, he exposed himself as a monster, and tried to kill her and Quasimodo when it was clear Esmerelda would never agree to be with him.
@@a.g.demada5263, honestly, Quasimodo & Esmeralda are the Disney equivalent of Harry & Hermione from the Harry Potter movies, meaning that they're not soulmates, but they are like brother & sister.
@@joshmontemayor1212 I disagree about Harry and Hermione (because I wanted to see them as a couple) but Esmeralda was the first woman to be nice with him (except the gargoyle La Volière) and she looks like his mother (a bit).
I find it fitting that Frolo fell to his death face-to-face with a Gargoyle. Despite their appearance, Gargoyles are usually said to be benevolent creatures that ward off evil spirits and demons, which is why you find them on so much old gothic architecture. And as you probably noticed, the gargoyle seemed to come to life just before Frolo fell to his death. IDK, I just thought that was cool.
The choir backing most of this scene is phenomenal, I love the choir used in this movie, they use the same motif but just with some tone changes it becomes something sadder, or more dramatic.
In the scene at 1:33, you can see the color contrast between the orange and red of the fiery depths below and the faint blue-ish light of the Notre Dame. Possibly a subtle representation of heaven and hell. If Frollo had, at first, climbed back onto the balcony and then tried to attack Esmerelda, he would have succeeded. Instead, he chose to attack Esmerelda. I think this is representing him choosing his obsession over his better self and thus losing his final chance of redemption. Also, gargoyles were believed to scare away evil spirits. In this shot, it makes sense they are pointed at "hell", to keep them at bay. But one gargoyle instead found another evil, who needed to go back into the fiery pit.
I feel like he gave up that chance in ‘Hellfire’. The guard who informs him that Esmerelda has escaped is bathed in white light. Almost a divine shadow contrasting against the harsh and aggressive flames of hell. He tells the guard to go and makes his final decision to go down the path of sin. He chooses the flames of hell and begs god for forgiveness not for what he has done, but for what he was about to do.
@@aviatorhd9389 also the guard appears from seemly nowhere and knows that she had escaped when it was shown that no other guard knew this so as people have stated It was probably a angel appearing from god or as I like to imagine god himself intervening but frollo rejects him and the guard disappears
@@silence6813 aye I never thought of that. It’s also ironic because he believes that by killing/imprisoning the gypsies he be let into heaven because he thinks that he’s doing gods work. And then when the gargoyle comes to life it’s obviously a demon and he is being sent to hell because he goes straight down into lava.
@@Afeeder Exactly, Plus he said he shall smite the wicked and plunge them in the firey pit. The moment the gargoyle came to life it was like it was saying to Frollo "You are the true wicked one who will be smite and now I'll plunge you into the fiery pit of lava below."
I recently watched this movie for the first time, and about a week later, I watched it with my whole family (I'd watched it while I was home alone the first time). At the part where Frollo falls down into the lava, my brother mentioned, "I don't think that was the street below..." I'd never thought of it that way, but he actually made a pretty good point.
@@marcusblackwell2372 exactly. I think the scene's kind of open for interpretation, but I thought the way my brother saw it was interesting - I wouldn't have thought of that myself.
@@carlottarobbins7005 Yeah i thought that as well, the molten copper and fiery courtyard is a metaphor/allegory for hellfire Also in folklore gargoyles were meant to ward off evil so it’s also kind of interesting that it’s a demonic gargoyle that carries Frollo basically into Hell.
What I find absolutely ironic about frollo’s last moments is that throughout the movie, he always had this self righteous attitude where he was above everyone except for god, who he held in such high reverence. However, his last words were a prophetic quote “and HE shall smite the wicked and plunge them into the fiery pit.” With HE referring to god, and he then proceeds to attempt to carry out that prophecy and smite who he perceived as the wicked. Frollo in his last moments took up the mantle of god and tried to carry out his will. That falls under the most dangerous sin, pride. And like the arrogant false god he perceived himself to be, he was cast out of the holy sanctuary of notre dame and plummeted into the raging inferno below, a hell of his own creation. Lots of parallels to Lucifer.
In reality it was a "SHE" who smites him Notre Dame is the church of Lady Mary, Mother of God, the one woman Frollo feared most of all. The one whose protection he once begged to have, but no matter what he did, she could not grant it. Frollo killed an innocent mother on her church's steps, he saw Mary's eyes looking down at him *from stone* warning him of his fate.
In my personal opinion, frollo still has the best fall death scene. I know that Disney villains fall all the time, but frollo’s fall hits different. We know he’s falling into molten metal, but from the view they showed is and the gargoyle coming to life taking him as he falls, he was falling straight to hell.
I think it's the symbolism that makes the fall so epic. Frollo tests God by placing himself on God's level to exact Judgment, and God responds by sending Frollo to Hell because God's done with the evil Frollo does in His name.
And the fact that we saw what really happened to him once he fell to the ground (burned in molten iron). We have seen disney villain falls like the Evil Queen, Maleficent, and Gaston but them hitting the ground was cut off.
What few people ever notice is that the gargoyle structure was weakened by Frollo himself when he swung trying to kill QM just moments prior. The gargoyle coming to life at the last moment just finished the job, as the duty of gargoyles is to ward off evil. Very poetic.
Two things I didn’t realize until recently. 1. If the gargoyle Frollo was standing on didn’t break he likely would’ve won. 2. The visual metaphor of Frollo seeing the demon smile on the gargoyle as he falls into the “firey pit” is almost like he’s being dragged to Hell.
To be fair, if a noted public official who was once held in high regard but had visibly decended into madness was swinging a freaking sword at people atop my local church, which he had also shown great disrespect to, I'd probably stop what I was doing and watch too.
@@ariadnefrolich7243this would be like if Bernie sanders was swinging a machete at some Italian guy who was carrying Janet Jackson, all of this happening on the roof of the fucking Vatican.
Gargoyles come alive to ward off evil, Frollo wasn't just evil he was an absolute demon, so quite fitting that he went to Hell via a load of molten copper!
I'm aware that the whole comment section mocked Frollo's last words, but there's a hidden gem which makes the death scene of this villain hilarious bordering on ridiculous. Turn your smartphone upside down the moment the gargoyle breaks off (1:48). Congratulations, you have just turned it into a stone rocket and launched Frollo to a sky on fire (alternatively, the surface of the Sun)!
Frollo's own choices often lead to his own demise. He had no one to blame but himself, despite doing everything he could to blame everyone BUT himself. Poetic. This movie is just an absolute masterpiece.
1:00 I love the animation here. The wind, the pose, the distant fire casting shadows, the moment itself. He looks the best he ever looked, as if he's "free" from his personal burden and to act like the piece of shit he really is.
The actor who dubbed Frollo did an excellent job! In the bit when the statue growls, Frollo's voice sounded terrified! I saw a few dubs and most of them just wanted to give a loud scream, but in this dub he sounds terrified and almost as if he wants to clumb up but is too petrified to move!
It's a small detail but I absolutely love that Esmeralda is still holding on to Quasi even when it looks like Frollo will literally cut her in half right before Frollo falls to his death. Quasi was unconscious so holding his weight must have been staggering (even as strong as she was...she just had a heck of smoke inhalation) and when he does slip from her grasp thank god Phoebus was there! She truly loved Quasi ❤️ what a great film.😊
Romantic love can come and go, but familial love is forever Quasi thought he found a romantic partner in Esmeralda, but what he actually found were true family members: the one thing he *truly* needed. A Family. Not the false image Frollo fed him for 20 years.
00:52-1:00 Frollo finally admitting to Quasimodo that his mother did not abandon him, but he killed his mother. Quasimodo was shocked and betrayed that he was raised by the man who murdered his mother and was lied to all his life by the man who he loved and looked up to as a father figure.
If we keep rebelling against God and doing evil things, then he will step back and let the devil have us. Good thing Jesus came to save us when we give him the chance.
I tend to believe that it was Mary Notre Dame is her church. It was her statue's eyes that Frollo showed the most fear of. And he even begged for her protection in "Hellfire." He never called for the Lord because...well, he believed himself to be the Lord, or at the very least, his avatar. She showed him he wasn't anything
Frollo: "And he shall smite the wicked and plunge them into the fiery pit!" Satan: "That my que?" God: "I tried to warn him 20 years ago, and ever since. A man reaps what he sows. He's yours." Satan: 1:45
Mary: He murdered an innocent woman on my doorstep. I sent one of my people to stop him from killing another, but it seems no matter how hard we've tried, he will not atone. He has no place here. Quasi's Mother: *silently watches her killer fall into hell where he thought she would go simply because she was a gypsy*
"And he shall smite the wicked and plunge them into the fiery pit!" I imagine the big man was trying to be patient, trying to let Frollo see the error of his ways. But after 20 years, nothing. And that last bit of blasphemy was what pissed off the big man.
1:12 This shot is pervectly depicted. The only thing that stops Frollo from literally being send to hell was Quasimodo. It was done because he had cared for him. He done it because he had a little glimps of goodness at the beginning -yes, even Frollo. Otherwise he wouldn't care for Quasimodo. Despite all evil he done he wasn't yet to be send to hell. He still got a chance as every sinner has. But he disclaimed Quasimodo by trying to kill him - twice even after Quasimodo was ready to forgive him. He wanted to destroy phisical depiction of his own goodness, which little he had. By this Frollo sealed his fate by his own will. He was send to hell.
no, quasimodo did not try to save frollo because he still loved him. He knew that frollo was only lying, using him, and manipulating him at that moment. He only tried to save him to show he is not a monster like the latter
I’d argue there really hasn’t been a Disney OST that has topped it. The soundtrack from the burning scene right up to Frollo’s poetic death is absolutely breathtaking.
Funny in the Latin American spanish dub of Robin Hood, Friar Tuck actually says: GET OUT OF THE HOUSE OF GOD! Which in context, it works here with Frollo
@1:15 you can see Quasimodo has no hatred in his heart towards him, otherwise he would've dropped him in the fire. One of the most kind hearted Disney characters
I really like how Esmeralda rarely shows fear in Frollo's face. Even as he is about to kill her, she shows more disgust than fear, as if to say "I can't believe people like you exist."
@@philosopherscribe39 That's what Family does for one another. Quasi may have thought it was romantic love he was feeling, but it was actually familial. She gave him what Frollo never wanted to give him: a family.
“And he shall smite the wicked and plunge them into the fiery pit” is such an ironic quote from Frollo of all people It reminds me of the quote from the start of the film “he saw corruption everywhere, except within” because Frollo is so desperate to look like a “good guy” that he ends up being a villain
He definitely had a soul, at least initially, considering how much he agonizes over his sinful thoughts in “Hellfire”. Of course, he keeps trying to deflect the blame onto Esmeralda and at one point onto God Himself (“It’s not my fault, if in God’s plan, He made the devil so much stronger than a man.”), but the fact that his sinful thoughts about Esmeralda caused him so much inner turmoil at some point shows that he was not quite beyond salvation yet. Having said that, Frollo officially threw away all hope for his own salvation the moment he decided to give in to his sinful desires, especially once he started effectively declaring war on the House of God just to get to Esmeralda. From that point on, whatever remnants of Frollo’s soul were left by that point (after all the wholesale persecution and mass murder he oversaw in Paris) finally withered and decayed until finally it was time for him to go to hell.
She's not scared of him: she's absolutely disgusted by him. It's a blink-and-you-miss, but just before the scene goes to Frollo Esmeralda's face transforms from fear to disgust.
Frollo: “And He shall smite the wicked and plunge them into the fiery pit!” God: “Joke’s on you, ‘cause My Will right now is ensuring you endanger the City of Paris no more. By the way, would you mind greeting Satan for Me down there?”
I think I finally know why Frollo's eyes & teeth turned a demonic orange color: the gargoyle Frollo stood on came to life with orange eyes & a demonic orange mouth and then it scared him. I think that the demonic gargoyle exposed the evilness inside Frollo's soul.
His death could be interpreted as divine intervention; the gargoyle, being a symbol of God, judges Frollo as the true wicked and casts him into Hell, symbolized by the molten copper. The gargoyle coming to life and demonically roaring at him could be showing him what he’s in store for. Ironically, Frollo suffered what he most feared: the damnation of his soul.
Quasimodo: shit hes going to find me... Frollo: hmm... F- Quasimodo: FESTIVAL... FUCK! Frollo: You were thinking of going to the festival *attacks with sword*
Frollo repeatedly broke the Third Commandment: *"You shall not take the name of the Lord your God in vain, for the Lord will not hold him guiltless who takes his name in vain."*
Yup. Let's not forget "you shall not commit murder, you shall not lie, you shall not commit adultery" (lust=adultery to Jesus in Matthew 5). May we come into relationship with God and examine our hearts to stay away from these sins.
Frollo is one of the worst kinds of villains: the kind that don’t get that they are the bad guy while believing he is the good guy. It just proves what I learned after watching Ms. Marvel. Good and bad aren’t what we are, they’re what we do.
He's one of the best-written and most detestable villains because basically, he's real; he has no supernatural powers or magic of any kind. He is an old man driven by power and religion to do what he thinks is right. He's the kind of villain you actually see in real life.
The thing I love most about this movie is that it dealt with an incredibly sensitive topic (genocide and religious horror) without antagonizing the religion either. They have this truly evil religious figure say that God will plunge the wicked into the pit of fire, and he does. Frollo's death here was an act of God. It wouldn't have been as potent if one of them had killed him, or even if he'd tripped and fallen by mistake. The movie poses the question "who is the monster and who is the man?" and gives the most decisive answer I've ever seen by having their antagonist die by divine intervention. Usually I like more open ended finales. Things that leave you with questions and choices, but this one spent the whole movie showing you how evil this man is, and they will end it in that decisive fashion too. God shall smite the wicked and plunge them into the firey pit.
Well said. In fact the Bible is full of people who feared God, and some stuck with God while others fell away and became some of the worst villains who still believed they were in God's favor. Look at King Saul versus King David. Both committed grievous sins, the only difference between the two was that David repented and came back to God while Saul only felt sorry for himself and committed suicide. Or like Peter versus Judas who betrayed Jesus. Even though Peter denied Christ three times, he cried bitterly and repented and Jesus restored him. But Judas never went back to Jesus and also committed suicide. And let's not talk about King Ahab and queen Jezebel😅
this ending was just mmm! Delicious. The gargoyle's face changing to a demon's at the end! This movie was the reason I fell in love with Greogrian chant and Choral music
This movie is amazing, the voice acting, drama, action, animation, music and villain are top tier. The main characters are good and thr story is dark and engaging. Yes people complain about the tone and the gargoyles but to me I didnt mind it too much because other Disney films have tone issues like lion King but that was still good to. The films pacing is really good as well. Too underrated if you ask me.
There's a part of me that wonders how the viewing experience would have been if we, too, along with Quasimodo, just NOW learned that Frollo actually killed his mother. We know from the get-go that Frollo lies to him about her abandoning him, but I can't help but wonder if that reveal wouldn't have been more effective had it been delayed 'til now. My only reservation with that though is that the opening sequence of this film is so badass you hate to tamper with it.
@@vincently1995 You can add Alec Trevelyan’s death in GoldenEye as well. Being dropped by James Bond from THAT height at the bottom of the antenna cradle and shattering your spine while your instrument of destruction explodes and collapses on top of you is quite a brutal way to go.
One thing reminds me of Jim Told Master grace truth about the old man kills Elizabeth's death with poison drink from Disney's The Haunted Mansion with Eddie Murphy star.
Gargoyles are supposed to ward off evil and protect the innocent. Victor, Hugo and Irene are nice and friendly to Quasimodo because he has a pure soul. They helped him protect Esmeralda because she was innocent of any wrong doings and was in a sacred building. So if a Gargoyle head appeared before Frollo as vicious and growling, it's because he was indeed the evil one. And it's possible the Gargoyle head deliberately detached itself from Notre Dame so it could send Frollo to where he belongs: Hell.
Just a tiny correction: the third gargoyle's name is Laverne, not Irene lol. Also if you look closely, the gargoyle Frollo was standing on was the same on he himself had cut into moments before. So it was already weakened and then further collapsed under his weight. Frollo did it to himself, and in that final moment, the church reminded him of that.
1:46 rumour has it that after 20 long years, Quasimodo's mother's ghost came back into that stone gargoyle to have her revenge on her killer and avenge her son
Quasimodo not letting go of Frollo's cloak is the most heartbreaking and marvellous addition to this phenomenal scene. Jesus once spoke of forgiveness of our enemies... And the greatness of Quasi's love saved him at the end. Also, you can notice how deformed everything in the human world is in this scene. When Frollo dives into the fire, there is no Paris streets underneath - only fire and smoke, as if it's Hell itself. So thrilling.
1:45 The Gargoyle: [to Claude Frollo] "Look upon thy face, blasphemous sinner. For it shall be the last thing ye shall ever see. Hell awaits thee." 🔥🔥🔥💀💀💀😈💀💀💀🔥🔥🔥
It's not a coincidence or divine intervention that the gargoyle collapsed. If you look closely, it gave way because Frollo cut it. Disney/Pixar villains- the ones that die- almost always lose their lives as a result of their own actions.
@@jamesgizasson honestly I wouldn't feel bad for it I imagine it got a nice calm place up in heaven possible on a person house because it liked that person atleast to me I like to imagine thats what happened
The gargoyle coming to life and falling along with Frollo is an excellent touch. It feels like it's the Devil himself, taking the sinner to the flames of Hell.
Yes,what represention!!!
Funny you should mention that, because gargoyles are actually said to protect dwellings from things like demons
It’s what he deserves.
It was the irony that frollo picked on quasi about his friends being made of stone and that stone can’t talk. Turns out the joke would be on frollo
I don't think so because gargoyles are supposed to ward off evil so when Frollo was truly revealed as evil in those moments, the gargoyle came to life in its own way and did it's job. That's just my theory though
Notice how Quasi still holds onto him and doesn’t just let him fall to his death, even after Frollo revealed to him that he killed his mother. “Who is the monster and who is the man?” Is an easily answered question.
I would’ve just let Frollo fall and say sorry butterfingers
The great irony is, if Frollo hadn't tried to kill them afterwards, he would have survived. And by falling at the precise moment he did, Quasimodo was able to be rescued from death by Febus.
Frollo is a monster
If he had survived he would have lost his position as a juge and been sent to prison
I would have let go of it and let him fall if I were him. He killed someone's mother he deserves it.
I only just realized why Quasimodo lost consciousness so quickly: his hunchback means he has smaller lungs than most.
When it comes to parkouring around the cathedral, he's more of a sprinter than a marathon runner, and he just got done repelling an invasion on Notre Dame. The smoke inhalation wouldn't have helped matters, either.
Do you remember Imagination Movers?
@@EddieKyteABCDEFG12345678910 HELL YEA MAN! Oh man they were my heros when I was little!
Then adding onto all that, holding the weight of a grown man probably isn't easy, even as strong as Quasimodo is
@@pastaplumber9000Quasimodo could destroy a stone pillars and knock out few armoured soldiers. Holding some old dude is no problem.
Great insight Quasi was physically strong but he had to be exhausted by this point in the story (also emotionally like dude just realized his "boss" straight up murdered his mom!)
1:43 The fact that the function of the gargoyles is to "scare away the demons" and Frollo is scared away is so ironic.
Especially when he said earlier that stone can't talk.
@@silence6813 Ikr lmao. Frollo was worse than humans, he was a demon. Spiritually.
The gargoyles are to hold off evil, and Frollo is more than 100% evil.
Ironic, but also incredibly fitting.
1:44 your soul is mine!!!
Frollo: "And he shall smite the wicked and plunge them into the fiery pit"
God: "An excellent suggestion Frollo"
And then he makes it happen.
Then when the gargoyle came to life he was like "SURPRISE MOTHER F@#$&R!"
ikr thats exactly what i thought r words r powerful n when the wikid quote scripture they curse themselves with the wages of sin death
@@FayBelleRose233 amen
God: “very poor choice of words >:)”
1:35 I've always loved how quickly Esmerelda's face turns from fear to disgust. It's such a small animation detail, but you gotta love how much effort the animators put into the film.
Me too! N I love that she still wasn’t going to let Quasimodo go.
She was like: “ew, cringe bro”.
She is looking at the face of Satan manifesting in Frollo
Quasimodo saved Frollo from plummeting to his death, and Frollo still aimed to kill him and Esmeralda. She didn't imagine Frollo could be so depraved.
@@dragonstormx And what's worse for Frollo is that he's trying to murder two people in the church of the one woman he feared yet begged for protection: Beata Maria, aka Blessed Mary. As in Holy Mary, Mother of God. He constantly forgotten that Notre Dame is her house.
Frollo: “And he shall smite the wicked and plunge them into the fiery pit”
Gargoyle: “And so he shall”
Do you remember Welcome to Pooh Corner?
Gargoyle: Bet
Learns the hard way that he’s the wicked one
Gargoyle: sike thats a wrong number
*This is the Way.*
Notre-Dame herself has had enough of Frollo. She gave him fair warning and a second chance twenty years ago, but she does not give third chances.
Well if frollo saw the look in Quasimodo's eyes than it would have remained him when he was a boy
Yep! 1:45 is also great cuz earlier Frollo had mocked the idea of the gargoyles coming to life (the first scene between Frollo / grown Quasi).
@@jambler15 Do you remember Johnny and the Sprites?
So she's a Valve, got it.
Jordan Davis 21 And Had enough
Despite all the attempts to kill him, despite all the insults, he was unable to let the cloak slip from his hands, big heart ...
Yeah Quasi didn’t let go which reflects what a good person he always was.
I think that's when God gave a subtle nudge to Febus that Quasimodo desperately needed his help.
And I guess that Frollo STILL trying to kill Quasi and Esmeralda despite that must be the last straw for Him.
because while frollo may be a monster, quasi doesnt want to be like him
"What makes the monster and what makes the man"
The greatest or at least one of the greatest disney films ever. It is way too underrated.
one of the greatest
And the darkest too!!
With a really realistic villian. It's their best work all around imo. Wish the gargoyles weren't really alive.
@@Slappap noo the gargoyles were the comedic relief. Without them the movie wouldn't be the same.
@@RhythmBulzara Victor and Laverne are good, they add comedy without being too anoying. Hugo on the other hand is terrible imo.
Honestly, the thing I love most about the scene is how the gargoyle seems to come alive to frighten Frollo. For those who don't know, the reason gargoyles were built on churches and other buildings was to scare off demons and evil spirits, meaning that even though Frollo called himself a holy man and a servant to God, he was the farthest thing from it.
Which is silly because nowhere in the Bible does it teach that gargoyles will scare away anything evil. They look like demons themselves and demons certainly don't scare away demons. It would have made sense to put angels all over the building instead. Angels are terrifying to Demons
Especially when he just admitted to Quoisimoto after he saved Esmeralda that he killed his MOTHER 💀
How right you are.
And you know what's worse for Frollo?
In "Hellfire" he is begging "Beata Maria" to protect him. Beata Maria is Mary, Holy Mother of God. Notre Dame, meaning "Our Lady," is HER church. It was HER eyes staring down at him that ultimately scared him during "Bells of Notre Dame," more so than the saints.
She has been watching Frollo for 20 years and had given him the chance to change for the better within her walls, but he never did. Not to Quasimodo and not to Esmeralda.
*She* sent Frollo to his death: the one Woman Frollo ultimately feared
"We are Defenders of the night! we are GARGOYLES!"
What I love about Quasimodo vs Frollo was the difference in how they treated Esmerelda. Quasimodo undoubtedly related to her lower status in life, but more importantly, after he realized his initially romantic feelings for her would not be reciprocated, he accepted it. And when he saved Esmerelda, it was like a brother rescuing a sister. Frollo, however, descended deeper into insanity and darkness, and burned with lust over Esmerelda. In the end, he exposed himself as a monster, and tried to kill her and Quasimodo when it was clear Esmerelda would never agree to be with him.
Me, I think Quasimodo saw Esmeralda like a mother's figure
@@a.g.demada5263, honestly, Quasimodo & Esmeralda are the Disney equivalent of Harry & Hermione from the Harry Potter movies, meaning that they're not soulmates, but they are like brother & sister.
@@joshmontemayor1212 I disagree about Harry and Hermione (because I wanted to see them as a couple) but Esmeralda was the first woman to be nice with him (except the gargoyle La Volière) and she looks like his mother (a bit).
To me I think Frollo is like the evil lustful stepfather who wants to kill Quasimodo and Esmeralda so they’ll never see the light of day.
Wow. Intellectual property right here
I find it fitting that Frolo fell to his death face-to-face with a Gargoyle. Despite their appearance, Gargoyles are usually said to be benevolent creatures that ward off evil spirits and demons, which is why you find them on so much old gothic architecture. And as you probably noticed, the gargoyle seemed to come to life just before Frolo fell to his death. IDK, I just thought that was cool.
I always felt it was symbolizing that it was a demon taking frollo to hell as they both fell into the lava below. The lava symbolizing Hell.
Makes sense too since Frollo is evil and he got what he deserved because he was evil and he got unged i to the fire pit for being wicked.
And it did it'd job remarkably well. Warded off the evil spirit of Frollo and sent him off from the cathedral.
Also, the Gargoyles are Quasimodos only friends for a Long time, they love him, because he’s a kind soul
Angels of the Night, indeed
1:35 Frollo: "And He shall smite the wicked and plunge them into the fiery pit."
God: "Well, you said that about yourself."
Lol
The delivery of that line is phenomenal
Every aspect of this 2 minute clip = cinematic perfection
@@jambler15 Do you remember The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh?
The choir backing most of this scene is phenomenal, I love the choir used in this movie, they use the same motif but just with some tone changes it becomes something sadder, or more dramatic.
In the scene at 1:33, you can see the color contrast between the orange and red of the fiery depths below and the faint blue-ish light of the Notre Dame. Possibly a subtle representation of heaven and hell. If Frollo had, at first, climbed back onto the balcony and then tried to attack Esmerelda, he would have succeeded. Instead, he chose to attack Esmerelda. I think this is representing him choosing his obsession over his better self and thus losing his final chance of redemption.
Also, gargoyles were believed to scare away evil spirits. In this shot, it makes sense they are pointed at "hell", to keep them at bay. But one gargoyle instead found another evil, who needed to go back into the fiery pit.
Even more color detailing apart from his eyes color changed? Neat.
I feel like he gave up that chance in ‘Hellfire’. The guard who informs him that Esmerelda has escaped is bathed in white light. Almost a divine shadow contrasting against the harsh and aggressive flames of hell. He tells the guard to go and makes his final decision to go down the path of sin. He chooses the flames of hell and begs god for forgiveness not for what he has done, but for what he was about to do.
@@aviatorhd9389 also the guard appears from seemly nowhere and knows that she had escaped when it was shown that no other guard knew this so as people have stated It was probably a angel appearing from god or as I like to imagine god himself intervening but frollo rejects him and the guard disappears
Frollo to Quasi: "Can stone talk?" (arrogantly).
Gargoyle's response to Frollo: 1:44
And notice at 1:38, the faintish blue light is gone. It’s just the orange and red of fiery depths.
To admit,Frollo is really strong for old man.
He is!
If he still has good strength he has to be early 50's.
Very true, credit is where credit is due.
Wasn't he just 35??
@@padmeamidala3331 He was 60 when he dead.
That deep, almost hysterical chuckle at 1:29 is more disturbing than the typical evil laugh. To me, that's the sound of madness.
[Gasps] 😧😧😧😧
Judge Frollo What Happen To You 😧❤️🖤💜🔥
It’s almost like he’s barely even conscious
He sounded more like a beast than a human
🫢🫢🫢🫢🫢
Frollo realized too late that HE was the wicked one.
plus He also learns that stone can come to life which is ironic.
@@silence6813 aye I never thought of that. It’s also ironic because he believes that by killing/imprisoning the gypsies he be let into heaven because he thinks that he’s doing gods work. And then when the gargoyle comes to life it’s obviously a demon and he is being sent to hell because he goes straight down into lava.
@@Afeeder Exactly, Plus he said he shall smite the wicked and plunge them in the firey pit. The moment the gargoyle came to life it was like it was saying to Frollo "You are the true wicked one who will be smite and now I'll plunge you into the fiery pit of lava below."
@@silence6813 yeah I completely agree. I love this scene because it’s so deserved
And he was the one to plunge into the firey pit 😂 I can’t stand him usually I don’t hate villains but this one really makes my damn blood boil 😂
Frollo: “And he shalt smite the wicked and plunge them into the fiery pit.”
God: “Well, that’s my cue.”
Frollo in hell: I hate that hunchback bell-ringer!
@@anthonyguarino4242 Do you remember Out of the Box?
@@EddieKyteABCDEFG12345678910 yes, why?
@@anthonyguarino4242 Because I am helping the commenters remember old Disney shows.
@@EddieKyteABCDEFG12345678910 ok
I recently watched this movie for the first time, and about a week later, I watched it with my whole family (I'd watched it while I was home alone the first time). At the part where Frollo falls down into the lava, my brother mentioned, "I don't think that was the street below..." I'd never thought of it that way, but he actually made a pretty good point.
What did he mean?
@@marcusblackwell2372 I think he was referring to the fire Frollo falls into actually being Hell rather than the street below
@@carlottarobbins7005 oh, so not the Cathedral or a thousand flaming pitchforks waiting below
@@marcusblackwell2372 exactly. I think the scene's kind of open for interpretation, but I thought the way my brother saw it was interesting - I wouldn't have thought of that myself.
@@carlottarobbins7005 Yeah i thought that as well,
the molten copper and fiery courtyard is a metaphor/allegory for hellfire
Also in folklore gargoyles were meant to ward off evil
so it’s also kind of interesting that it’s a demonic gargoyle that carries Frollo basically into Hell.
What I find absolutely ironic about frollo’s last moments is that throughout the movie, he always had this self righteous attitude where he was above everyone except for god, who he held in such high reverence. However, his last words were a prophetic quote “and HE shall smite the wicked and plunge them into the fiery pit.” With HE referring to god, and he then proceeds to attempt to carry out that prophecy and smite who he perceived as the wicked. Frollo in his last moments took up the mantle of god and tried to carry out his will. That falls under the most dangerous sin, pride. And like the arrogant false god he perceived himself to be, he was cast out of the holy sanctuary of notre dame and plummeted into the raging inferno below, a hell of his own creation. Lots of parallels to Lucifer.
Well said
His name even almost spells Lucifer:
Claude Frollo
C l u e f r
L u c f e r
Lucifer is more similar to Jesus and Quasimodo than Frollo. They are rebellions against an absolute control freak. as above, so below.
In reality it was a "SHE" who smites him
Notre Dame is the church of Lady Mary, Mother of God, the one woman Frollo feared most of all. The one whose protection he once begged to have, but no matter what he did, she could not grant it. Frollo killed an innocent mother on her church's steps, he saw Mary's eyes looking down at him *from stone* warning him of his fate.
In my personal opinion, frollo still has the best fall death scene. I know that Disney villains fall all the time, but frollo’s fall hits different. We know he’s falling into molten metal, but from the view they showed is and the gargoyle coming to life taking him as he falls, he was falling straight to hell.
I think it's the symbolism that makes the fall so epic. Frollo tests God by placing himself on God's level to exact Judgment, and God responds by sending Frollo to Hell because God's done with the evil Frollo does in His name.
Jordan Davis 22 And The from all
And the fact that we saw what really happened to him once he fell to the ground (burned in molten iron). We have seen disney villain falls like the Evil Queen, Maleficent, and Gaston but them hitting the ground was cut off.
What few people ever notice is that the gargoyle structure was weakened by Frollo himself when he swung trying to kill QM just moments prior. The gargoyle coming to life at the last moment just finished the job, as the duty of gargoyles is to ward off evil. Very poetic.
Two things I didn’t realize until recently. 1. If the gargoyle Frollo was standing on didn’t break he likely would’ve won.
2. The visual metaphor of Frollo seeing the demon smile on the gargoyle as he falls into the “firey pit” is almost like he’s being dragged to Hell.
If he hadn't cut said gargoyle he'd have won for a short time before being imprisoned & executed by everyone else.
He went against and attacked the church...he’d be fucked
It's an actual theory that God lifted the consecration from Notre Dame for a moment to allow Satan to get rid of Frollo.
He cut the gargoyle he was standing on
Gargoyles are made to scare away demons
lol I love how that one guy at 00:32 is like, "Hey everyone, stop fighting so we can observe the main characters."
Yeah
I think that scene is there so that everyone down below would realize what Quasi had done and that's why they praised him as a hero at the end.
To be fair, if a noted public official who was once held in high regard but had visibly decended into madness was swinging a freaking sword at people atop my local church, which he had also shown great disrespect to, I'd probably stop what I was doing and watch too.
@@ariadnefrolich7243this would be like if Bernie sanders was swinging a machete at some Italian guy who was carrying Janet Jackson, all of this happening on the roof of the fucking Vatican.
@@linkfan160
Did they see the whole scene though??? Like Frollo falling?
Gargoyles come alive to ward off evil, Frollo wasn't just evil he was an absolute demon, so quite fitting that he went to Hell via a load of molten copper!
that’s so interesting, I never knew that!! Perfect fitting indeed!
Iron? I thought it was copper.
@@EWBRboy2006 I think it’s iron but I’m not 100% sure
Frollo was just a cruel, evil man. Not a demon
@@joshualowe959 yes we know he isn't a demon but they were just saying that he was like a demon because he was so evil and cruel
I'm aware that the whole comment section mocked Frollo's last words, but there's a hidden gem which makes the death scene of this villain hilarious bordering on ridiculous. Turn your smartphone upside down the moment the gargoyle breaks off (1:48). Congratulations, you have just turned it into a stone rocket and launched Frollo to a sky on fire (alternatively, the surface of the Sun)!
Hahaha! How did you even come up with that? I didn't know how much i wanted to launch Frollo into the sun
UNDERRATED LOL
😂😂I laughed so hard omg
All aboard the FrolloRocket! One ticket only costs a musical number and a handsome voice!
Oh my gosh that is freaking hilarious!
AND HE SHALL SMITE THE WICKED AND PLUNGE THEM INTO THE FIERY PIT!
that delivery from tony jay absolutely made this movie for me.
Man of evil and sin, may you be judged by God and cast down into the fires of Hell.
God: If you insist, Frollo.
:)
I am currently binging the death scenes of Disney villains and this one is especially great.
@@Jothomas214 god: alright here's your one way ticket to hell
That, and the sound design for the crumbling rocks, growling gargoyle, and the choir in the back! Such an amazingly orchestrated scene
"And He shall smite the wicked and plunge them into the firey pit!"
That He did, Frollo. That He did.
Do you remember The Original Wiggles (1993-2006)?
@@EddieKyteABCDEFG12345678910irrelevant much?
@@summermelody7942 I'm sorry, it's just that I am trying to make a difference on TH-cam.
In the words of Eric Cartman: he was smack down by the Lord!
I liked the subtle foreshadowing of him cutting the gargoyle he ends up standing and falling off from.
Never noticed that, I always thought it was another Gargoyle
You’re right you can even see the cut at 1:17
Good eye
Frollo's own choices often lead to his own demise. He had no one to blame but himself, despite doing everything he could to blame everyone BUT himself. Poetic. This movie is just an absolute masterpiece.
Jordan Davis 22 The up And
1:43 Gargoyle: A human?
1:45 Gargoyle: (GASP) A MONSTER!
1:00 I love the animation here. The wind, the pose, the distant fire casting shadows, the moment itself. He looks the best he ever looked, as if he's "free" from his personal burden and to act like the piece of shit he really is.
So true! And for Frollo when he is going to kill Esmerelda and Quasimodo, there’s nothing but Fire and Smoke behind him.
The actor who dubbed Frollo did an excellent job!
In the bit when the statue growls, Frollo's voice sounded terrified! I saw a few dubs and most of them just wanted to give a loud scream, but in this dub he sounds terrified and almost as if he wants to clumb up but is too petrified to move!
In the french version that's the same voice actor than Scar and Gandalf
Tony Jay voiced Frollo, may he Rest in Peace
@@JJDDCrazyDrive *peace.
It's a small detail but I absolutely love that Esmeralda is still holding on to Quasi even when it looks like Frollo will literally cut her in half right before Frollo falls to his death. Quasi was unconscious so holding his weight must have been staggering (even as strong as she was...she just had a heck of smoke inhalation) and when he does slip from her grasp thank god Phoebus was there! She truly loved Quasi ❤️ what a great film.😊
I guess he wanted to behead her 😦
Romantic love can come and go, but familial love is forever
Quasi thought he found a romantic partner in Esmeralda, but what he actually found were true family members: the one thing he *truly* needed. A Family.
Not the false image Frollo fed him for 20 years.
00:52-1:00 Frollo finally admitting to Quasimodo that his mother did not abandon him, but he killed his mother. Quasimodo was shocked and betrayed that he was raised by the man who murdered his mother and was lied to all his life by the man who he loved and looked up to as a father figure.
Yeah but unlike Scar he mentioned it indirectly. In other words he admitted to it without saying he killed her
He didn't say he killed his mother. Just that she died trying to save him.
Still, he would have immediately got that with the following line.@@sofiastern1653
@@sofiastern1653true but I think Quasi put 2+2 together
Frollo killed an innocent mother…
This is the scene where the REAL monster finally gets locked away ... forever.
Satan: ''You think you're a monster... you ain't seen nothing yet, human.''
The fact that God himself seemed to intervene to end Frollo is saying something.
And wasn't that the same gargoyle that Frollo had slashed with his sword?
If we keep rebelling against God and doing evil things, then he will step back and let the devil have us. Good thing Jesus came to save us when we give him the chance.
Nah i believe he called Satan and put him in charge
I tend to believe that it was Mary
Notre Dame is her church. It was her statue's eyes that Frollo showed the most fear of. And he even begged for her protection in "Hellfire." He never called for the Lord because...well, he believed himself to be the Lord, or at the very least, his avatar.
She showed him he wasn't anything
Frollo: "And he shall smite the wicked and plunge them into the fiery pit!"
Satan: "That my que?"
God: "I tried to warn him 20 years ago, and ever since. A man reaps what he sows. He's yours."
Satan: 1:45
Satan: bro we don’t want him down here ether throw him into the void
@@nickblackstone5772 Don't you mean
"Won't want him nether?"
Sorry I had to 😆
God: “he gave me Quasimodo’s mom and now I gift him to you.”
Satan: “Alright!,Alright! Fair is fair.”
Mary: He murdered an innocent woman on my doorstep. I sent one of my people to stop him from killing another, but it seems no matter how hard we've tried, he will not atone. He has no place here.
Quasi's Mother: *silently watches her killer fall into hell where he thought she would go simply because she was a gypsy*
Frollo is
1.Murderous
2.Monsterous
3.Malevolent
4.Cruel
5.Devilish
6.Short Tempered
7.Terrifying
8.Scary
9.Horrifying
10.Sadistic
11.Heartless
12.Creepy
13.Crude
14.Sophisticated
15.Disgusting
16.Dangerous
17.Sinful
18.Satanic
19.Deceptive
20.Manipulative
21.Angry
22.Insane
23.Crazy
24.Psychotic
25.Demonic
26.Repulsive
27.Violent
28.Nasty
29.Evil
30.Wicked
31.Abusive
32.Hateful
33.ademented
34.Prejudiced
35.Sexist
36.Racist
Wow
@@TylerSmith-qd6hi All true tho lol 😂
Do you have anymore my good friend
And is the pure embodiment of the sin of pride!
And also embodies all seven sins!
Frollo: "Now I'm going to do what I should have done 20 years ago"
Karma: "What a coincidence, so am I"
1:36 god: I couldn't agree more
1:36 funny to think how frollo’s last words would also be his demise
1:47 Frollo either realized Stone really can talk or just noticed he was about to fall to his doom
It kind of goes both ways
Frollo saw the "stone" become alive because its a gargoyle. They come alive to scare evil
Well, it didn't talk, more like roared at him. But i digress.
@@danatos24 Don't you mean Tigress
@@davidfearis7335 No, thats a character from a kids comedy movie. Digress means to leave the main subject temporarily in speech or writing.
Frollo: "And he shall smite the wicked and plunge them into the fiery pit!"
Satan: "With pleasure! 👹"
My favorite part is when the statue makes that devil’s face and he gets dropped down to the fire!
As if he was going to be punished for all he has done.
@Dakota Call and he shall, frollo. He shall
Did you know that gargoyles were put on churches to scare away demons.
@@AlexKS1992 yeah, I love that kind of stuff. Makes what happened to him have even more meaning.
@@AlexKS1992 I didn’t know that.
"And he shall smite the wicked and plunge them into the fiery pit!"
I imagine the big man was trying to be patient, trying to let Frollo see the error of his ways. But after 20 years, nothing. And that last bit of blasphemy was what pissed off the big man.
The big man saw this shit a 100 light-years away and yet still held out hope
1:12 This shot is pervectly depicted. The only thing that stops Frollo from literally being send to hell was Quasimodo. It was done because he had cared for him. He done it because he had a little glimps of goodness at the beginning -yes, even Frollo. Otherwise he wouldn't care for Quasimodo. Despite all evil he done he wasn't yet to be send to hell. He still got a chance as every sinner has. But he disclaimed Quasimodo by trying to kill him - twice even after Quasimodo was ready to forgive him. He wanted to destroy phisical depiction of his own goodness, which little he had. By this Frollo sealed his fate by his own will. He was send to hell.
no, quasimodo did not try to save frollo because he still loved him. He knew that frollo was only lying, using him, and manipulating him at that moment. He only tried to save him to show he is not a monster like the latter
1:45
Gargoyle Statue: "Express Elevator for Judge Claude Frollo. 7th Circle of Hell. GOING DOWN!"
1:12 the choir and the trumpets…very few Disney movies can top music like this…very powerful
I’d argue there really hasn’t been a Disney OST that has topped it. The soundtrack from the burning scene right up to Frollo’s poetic death is absolutely breathtaking.
Friar Tuck: (shouting at Frollo) GET OUT OF MY CHURCH!!!!
I'm sorry but wrong movie but still good. I can see that.
*the whole joke going over you*
For real
Funny in the Latin American spanish dub of Robin Hood, Friar Tuck actually says: GET OUT OF THE HOUSE OF GOD!
Which in context, it works here with Frollo
Or how about the scene in Robin Hood prince of thieves where friar Tuck defenestrated the bishop of Hereford?
Frollo makes a great Villian!
He is the GREATEST villain
Joshua Lowe I agree!
My fav disney villain!
Like Scar.
@@Charles-zl1ue Frollo and Scar!
One of the most satisfying Disney villain deaths. 👏🏽
And frightening
To me it’s number 1. Which is yours?
@@steffondoyle8071 ooooh it’s too many to choose from for me! Lol I’d say it’s a toss up between Frollo and Clayton from Tarzan.
Without a doubt! I also love the way Mr. Sykes went out in a flash of (implied) gory glory. X3
@@prissy.laroux I think Dr. Facilier is also a great contender.
The absolute menace of Frollo though. No Magic or powers or an army behind him, just a dangerous human man.
@1:15 you can see Quasimodo has no hatred in his heart towards him, otherwise he would've dropped him in the fire.
One of the most kind hearted Disney characters
I really like how Esmeralda rarely shows fear in Frollo's face. Even as he is about to kill her, she shows more disgust than fear, as if to say "I can't believe people like you exist."
She doesn’t let go of Quasimodo even when Frollo comes at her with the sword. She may not love him romantically but she still loved him so much.
@@philosopherscribe39 That's what Family does for one another.
Quasi may have thought it was romantic love he was feeling, but it was actually familial. She gave him what Frollo never wanted to give him: a family.
“And he shall smite the wicked and plunge them into the fiery pit” is such an ironic quote from Frollo of all people
It reminds me of the quote from the start of the film “he saw corruption everywhere, except within” because Frollo is so desperate to look like a “good guy” that he ends up being a villain
I would say may God have mercy on his soul, but to be honest, I don't think he had a soul to begin with.
I would make a joke about him being a ginger but I'm better than that.
He lost it a long time ago.
Do any of us? :)
He definitely had a soul, at least initially, considering how much he agonizes over his sinful thoughts in “Hellfire”. Of course, he keeps trying to deflect the blame onto Esmeralda and at one point onto God Himself (“It’s not my fault, if in God’s plan, He made the devil so much stronger than a man.”), but the fact that his sinful thoughts about Esmeralda caused him so much inner turmoil at some point shows that he was not quite beyond salvation yet.
Having said that, Frollo officially threw away all hope for his own salvation the moment he decided to give in to his sinful desires, especially once he started effectively declaring war on the House of God just to get to Esmeralda. From that point on, whatever remnants of Frollo’s soul were left by that point (after all the wholesale persecution and mass murder he oversaw in Paris) finally withered and decayed until finally it was time for him to go to hell.
Frollo had no heart or honor.
1:30 Easly one of the best evil laughs
Now he realize that stone can come to life
I never noticed it before, but Frollo actually managed to cut Quasimodo's arm at 0:36.
Good eye!
Esmeralda’s terrified face when she’s looks at frollos says she’s looking at the devil not a cruel man
She's not scared of him: she's absolutely disgusted by him. It's a blink-and-you-miss, but just before the scene goes to Frollo Esmeralda's face transforms from fear to disgust.
Frollo: “And He shall smite the wicked and plunge them into the fiery pit!”
God: “Joke’s on you, ‘cause My Will right now is ensuring you endanger the City of Paris no more. By the way, would you mind greeting Satan for Me down there?”
I think I finally know why Frollo's eyes & teeth turned a demonic orange color: the gargoyle Frollo stood on came to life with orange eyes & a demonic orange mouth and then it scared him. I think that the demonic gargoyle exposed the evilness inside Frollo's soul.
His death could be interpreted as divine intervention; the gargoyle, being a symbol of God, judges Frollo as the true wicked and casts him into Hell, symbolized by the molten copper. The gargoyle coming to life and demonically roaring at him could be showing him what he’s in store for. Ironically, Frollo suffered what he most feared: the damnation of his soul.
1:48
Happy Trails, Frollo!
Thats a Die hard line that Mclane said
You can see how good the hunchback’s heart is. He could’ve let go of the cape and let Frollo die but he held on.
Frollo: "And he shall smite the wicked, and plunge them into the fiery pit!"
God: "Hey, great idea. Thanks."
Frollo: And He shall smite the wicked and plunge them into the fiery pit!!
God: Yup!! Darn right I will!
Frollo:
(Searching)
Esmeralda:
(Coughs)
Quasimodo:
Bless you.
Ohh!
Frollo:
Leaving so soon??
Quasimodo: shit hes going to find me...
Frollo: hmm... F-
Quasimodo: FESTIVAL... FUCK!
Frollo: You were thinking of going to the festival *attacks with sword*
Frollo repeatedly broke the Third Commandment: *"You shall not take the name of the Lord your God in vain, for the Lord will not hold him guiltless who takes his name in vain."*
Yes like all the fanatics and terrorist in the world
Yup. Let's not forget "you shall not commit murder, you shall not lie, you shall not commit adultery" (lust=adultery to Jesus in Matthew 5). May we come into relationship with God and examine our hearts to stay away from these sins.
Frollo is one of the worst kinds of villains: the kind that don’t get that they are the bad guy while believing he is the good guy. It just proves what I learned after watching Ms. Marvel. Good and bad aren’t what we are, they’re what we do.
He's one of the best-written and most detestable villains because basically, he's real; he has no supernatural powers or magic of any kind. He is an old man driven by power and religion to do what he thinks is right. He's the kind of villain you actually see in real life.
0:03 Frollo : She lives ! (Draw the sword)
Quasimodo : NO!
Heavy ass breathing 😂
The thing I love most about this movie is that it dealt with an incredibly sensitive topic (genocide and religious horror) without antagonizing the religion either. They have this truly evil religious figure say that God will plunge the wicked into the pit of fire, and he does. Frollo's death here was an act of God. It wouldn't have been as potent if one of them had killed him, or even if he'd tripped and fallen by mistake. The movie poses the question "who is the monster and who is the man?" and gives the most decisive answer I've ever seen by having their antagonist die by divine intervention.
Usually I like more open ended finales. Things that leave you with questions and choices, but this one spent the whole movie showing you how evil this man is, and they will end it in that decisive fashion too. God shall smite the wicked and plunge them into the firey pit.
Yes the wicked are the criminals
Frollo hitler Staline fanatics
Well said. In fact the Bible is full of people who feared God, and some stuck with God while others fell away and became some of the worst villains who still believed they were in God's favor. Look at King Saul versus King David. Both committed grievous sins, the only difference between the two was that David repented and came back to God while Saul only felt sorry for himself and committed suicide. Or like Peter versus Judas who betrayed Jesus. Even though Peter denied Christ three times, he cried bitterly and repented and Jesus restored him. But Judas never went back to Jesus and also committed suicide. And let's not talk about King Ahab and queen Jezebel😅
The fact that the gargoyles stayed out of this entire moment instead of helping Quasimodo represents the reality of him being his own person.😮
Well they did actually help fight the soldiers so it’s left ambiguous if they are actually alive
Darkest last words ever in a kids movie
You mean the "Aaaaaaaaaaaaa" part?
"Kids movie" it's familiar.
@@brokkolievogorogdinnye8714 And He Shall Smite The Wicked part
this ending was just mmm! Delicious. The gargoyle's face changing to a demon's at the end! This movie was the reason I fell in love with Greogrian chant and Choral music
This classic is so UNDERRATED! The music, the cinematography, the loyalty between Quasi and Esmerelda is unmatchable ❤
This movie is amazing, the voice acting, drama, action, animation, music and villain are top tier. The main characters are good and thr story is dark and engaging. Yes people complain about the tone and the gargoyles but to me I didnt mind it too much because other Disney films have tone issues like lion King but that was still good to. The films pacing is really good as well. Too underrated if you ask me.
I find Lion King to be overrated
@@bighand1530 yeah so do I actually. I like hunchback of notre dame, lilo and stitch and beauty and the beast better movies in my opinion.
@@lordshenfan6625 I hear ya
@@bighand1530 why do you find lion King overrated?
@@lordshenfan6625
Overrated doesn't mean it's bad tho
Frollo: “And he shall smite the wicked, and PLUNGE them into the fiery PIT!”
God:
“M’kay.” (snaps fingers.)
Frollo: "And he shall smite the wicked and plunge him to the fiery pit!"
Rick O'Connell: "GO TO HELL AND TAKE YOUR FRIENDS WITH YOU!" 1:48
Rick O'Connell from The Mummy?
Good. I don't wanna see Frollo again, ever! 😠
@@HeckYeahItsUziyeah it's a quote from the mummy returns why?😕
Frollo: “and he shall smite the wicked and plunge them into the fiery pit!”
God: “Enjoy The BBQ Frollo“
Frollo’s death will always be one of the best Disney villain deaths of all
This movie was great! Saw it twice in theaters. Also I had HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME toys, bed sheets, matching pillow cases; and an Esmeralda dress
This scene, along with several other Disney animated movie scenes (oddly enough), SEVERELY scarred me as a child.
Disney is scarier than any horror movie I've ever seen. They put in the work to create incredible movies, especially the animators.
There's a part of me that wonders how the viewing experience would have been if we, too, along with Quasimodo, just NOW learned that Frollo actually killed his mother. We know from the get-go that Frollo lies to him about her abandoning him, but I can't help but wonder if that reveal wouldn't have been more effective had it been delayed 'til now. My only reservation with that though is that the opening sequence of this film is so badass you hate to tamper with it.
"And He shall smite the wicked and plunge them into the fiery pit!"
1:45 Satan: Now _there's_ an idea!
Me: (before Frollo's death) For the last time, Judge Claude Frollo, you are under arrest!
Frollo: “And he shall smite the wicked and plunge them into the fiery pit”
God: “You got that right”
Reminds me of the joker’s death in Tim Burton’s Batman
Also reminds me of Hans Gruber's death from Die Hard 1
@@vincently1995 You can add Alec Trevelyan’s death in GoldenEye as well. Being dropped by James Bond from THAT height at the bottom of the antenna cradle and shattering your spine while your instrument of destruction explodes and collapses on top of you is quite a brutal way to go.
"Remember when I said I'd kill you last?"
_"I made you swear that you would!"_
*"I LIED."*
One thing reminds me of Jim Told Master grace truth about the old man kills Elizabeth's death with poison drink from Disney's The Haunted Mansion with Eddie Murphy star.
Doomguy waiting in Hell: Ah, yes, fresh meat!
*reloads double-barreled shotgun with malicious intent*
Lmao Pudge reference
Lol
Gargoyles are supposed to ward off evil and protect the innocent. Victor, Hugo and Irene are nice and friendly to Quasimodo because he has a pure soul. They helped him protect Esmeralda because she was innocent of any wrong doings and was in a sacred building.
So if a Gargoyle head appeared before Frollo as vicious and growling, it's because he was indeed the evil one. And it's possible the Gargoyle head deliberately detached itself from Notre Dame so it could send Frollo to where he belongs: Hell.
I can imagine most of the gargoyles sleeping and this one got woken up by god himself to send frollo to hell
Ummm no, Frollo cut that Gargoyle with the sword. He then he stood on it until it started to break apart.
@@INTJ10551 I know that genius. I'm talking about it in a metaphorical and ironic sense.
Just a tiny correction: the third gargoyle's name is Laverne, not Irene lol. Also if you look closely, the gargoyle Frollo was standing on was the same on he himself had cut into moments before. So it was already weakened and then further collapsed under his weight. Frollo did it to himself, and in that final moment, the church reminded him of that.
1:48 so long Frollo it serves you right for killing Esmeralda and Quasimodo
Gargoyle: You lookin a little cold up here bruh. Let me help you out...
1:46 rumour has it that after 20 long years, Quasimodo's mother's ghost came back into that stone gargoyle to have her revenge on her killer and avenge her son
BEST
DISNEY
MOVIE
EVER
I usually Watched Disney's The Hunchback Of Notre Dame 1 and 2 in 🇺🇲English and Spanish 🇲🇽
Quasimodo not letting go of Frollo's cloak is the most heartbreaking and marvellous addition to this phenomenal scene.
Jesus once spoke of forgiveness of our enemies... And the greatness of Quasi's love saved him at the end.
Also, you can notice how deformed everything in the human world is in this scene. When Frollo dives into the fire, there is no Paris streets underneath - only fire and smoke, as if it's Hell itself. So thrilling.
1:45 The Gargoyle: [to Claude Frollo] "Look upon thy face, blasphemous sinner. For it shall be the last thing ye shall ever see. Hell awaits thee."
🔥🔥🔥💀💀💀😈💀💀💀🔥🔥🔥
This is probably the most realistic Disney villain ever. Disney freaking went there with this movie. Shew!
1:51 Welcome to hell, frollo! 👹🔥
It's not a coincidence or divine intervention that the gargoyle collapsed. If you look closely, it gave way because Frollo cut it.
Disney/Pixar villains- the ones that die- almost always lose their lives as a result of their own actions.
1:34 EsMerelda goes from “oh no I’m about to die” to “oh my god what is that thing?”
"AND HE SHALL SMITE THE WICKED AND PLUNGE THEM INTO THE FIREY PIT!!!"
A lesson Frollo ended up learning all too well.
Bye, bye, bad guy! 😄😄😄
Why do I feel sorry for the gargoyle? He literally sacrificed himself just to take out the trash!
Q^Q
@Paulo SM Hahaha! True! :3
@@jamesgizasson honestly I wouldn't feel bad for it I imagine it got a nice calm place up in heaven possible on a person house because it liked that person atleast to me I like to imagine thats what happened
That was a demon, bro. When you fight God long enough, God will let the devil have you.
@@TazHall Gargoyles are supposed to protect against demons, bro. :3