One can only imagine his reaction when he learned what it actually was.
Rumor has it that a scientist at one point mistakenly reported the thing as a newly discovered dinosaur.
#ED EDD N EDDY SOUND EFFECTS FINAL DESTINATION MOVIE#
Originally created for the 1956 film Forbidden Planet, Robby continued to be reused in many movie and TV productions up to the present day (although since the 1960s a lightweight replica has been used).
Robby the Robot, as seen in the page image.Cruella de Vil's car also made a brief cameo near the beginning of The Rescuers as the car Madame Medusa used to drive to the airport.These were actual physical props, painted white with "outlines" drawn on the edges, that were filmed in front of white backgrounds and photocopied onto the cels in a manner similar to Rotoscoping. Two vehicles from One Hundred and One Dalmatians actually made a reappearance in The Aristocats: The Baduns' truck (as a milk truck the cats ride in at one point while heading back to Paris) and the moving van (as the truck that comes to pick up Edgar and take him to Timbuktu at the end of the film).Other popular props include the yellow ball with the blue stripe and red star from "Luxo Jr.", as well as both Luxo lamps from the same short. The most famous example is the Pizza Planet delivery truck from Toy Story, which has found its way into almost every film. The folks at Pixar are fond of resusing props, sets, even whole characters from their previous movies ( and even from their upcoming ones), usually as a Shout-Out, as well as for practical measures.Just take it as a given that live theatre companies save and re-use everything. This is utterly ubiquitous in live theatre, so a section for this would be hopelessly long, and utterly pointless. For when video games reuse "models" of the polygonal kind in the same work, see You All Look Familiar.Ĭompare Stock Footage, Palette Swap and California Doubling. If it's a real item, then it's Off-the-Shelf FX. This is the cause of several entries on Rare Guns.Ĭan overlap with Whole Costume Reference if the costume is recycled from an earlier work. For most productions this will go unnoticed, a stock M4 won't be distinquishable from any other stock M4, these companies also keep several specially modified guns ranging from niche filling guns like Bling Bling Bang or stand-ins for hard to obtain guns to very specific firearms. Most firearms use in modern movies are handled by external armorers who keep guns for use in future productions. While this may be a cost saving measure, there's something about the practice that just screams "low budget". The prop may be altered by repainting it or adding or removing widgets but it remains recognizable, especially if the original production was well known. When elaborate sets, costumes or props are made for one production, they may turn up again and again in other productions that may need elaborate props but don't have the budget to design and build their own. The Hollywood version of "Waste Not, Want Not".