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1[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/RadioFlyer300_400_6974.gif]]
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3''Radio Flyer'' is a 1992 drama-fantasy film directed by Creator/RichardDonner.
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5An adult named Mike (Creator/TomHanks) is observing his two sons fighting; with one insisting that a promise doesn't mean anything. To make them understand that a promise does mean something, he tells them the story of his youth.
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7Young Mike (Creator/ElijahWood), his little brother Bobby (Creator/JosephMazzello), their mother Mary (Creator/LorraineBracco) and their German Shepherd Shane move to a new town after their father/husband leaves them. There, Mary marries a new man (Creator/AdamBaldwin), who likes the others to call him "The King". Unbeknowst to Mary, The King is an alcoholic who often gets drunk and beats Bobby. The two boys, seeing that their mother has found happiness at last with The King, are reluctant to tell either her or the police about the abuse. They instead try to avoid The King by exploring and having adventures in amidst the local environs. In the process, the two concoct a plan for Bobby to escape The King once and for all. Inspired by the urban legend of a boy named Fisher who attempted to fly away on his bicycle, the two convert their epononymous Radio Flyer toy wagon into an airplane.
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9Behind-the-scenes, the film is better known for its TroubledProduction that saw the would-be directorial debut of screenwriter David Mickey Evans, whose original script was purchased in a record-breaking bidding war, quashed mid-way through principal photography by the studio. Several of the lead actors were recast and Evans was replaced in the director's chair by Richard Donner, who made him rewrite large chunks of the script, resulting in a film many critics said was filled with clashing tones.
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11----
12!!This film provides examples of:
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14* [[AbusiveParents Abusive Stepdad]]: The King. He even has [[ICallItVera a pet name]] for his favorite appliance to beat Bobby with!
15* AdultsAreUseless: Played straight with the mother; she seems oblivious about The King's abuse of her children, but though she does request a divorce later on due to the numerous times Jack beat Bobby and heavily drunk (after she found out), after the arrest she tries to reconcile with him. It is sad she does after he what he has done, but she probably does it in the hope he would stop his bad behavior, unfortunately he does not. The sheriff knows something is amiss and is caring enough to intervene on behalf of the brothers few times, but he does not succeed in doing so.
16* AintTooProudToBeg: The King tearfully grovels to Mary to forgive him and take him back after she throws him out for severely beating up Bobby. It turns out to be a ruse, however, and she falls for it hook, line, and sinker.
17* AnAesop: About keeping promises, no matter what. Although YMMV as to how family-friendly this is, given the context.
18** Be more careful in choosing your spouse. A lesson Mary learns the hard way.
19* TheAlcoholic: The King.
20* ArcSymbol: Airplanes and various other flying craft.
21* AssholeVictim: The King more than deserved getting attacked by Shane and arrested. Twice each.
22* BadassCape: One of the seven great abilities and fascinations is based upon this trope.
23* BadPeopleAbuseAnimals: The King viciously beats and abuses Shane while Mary and the boys are away. Could be a case of PragmaticVillainy since he knows Shane will maul his ass if he attempts to hurt Bobby in the dog's presence.
24* BigDamnHeroes: Shane, twice. Ordinarily watching a big, powerful dog like him mauling somebody would be completely horrifying. Not so much when it's [[AssholeVictim The King]]. Once after he beats Bobby to near death and once more when he ambushes the boys on the hill.
25* BitchInSheepsClothing: The King initially seems like a decent, friendly guy and solid stepfather material for Mike & Bobby. Until the drinking starts...
26** Deliberately used by him when begging Mary to take him back, drunkenly sobbing out crocodile tears and fake promises to change. Sadly, she caves in.
27* DisappearedDad: The boys' real father.
28* DistantPrologue: The Fisher story.
29* DisturbedDoves: A flock of these takes off when The King gives Bobby the NoHoldsBarredBeatdown that leads to his arrest.
30* DramaticallyMissingThePoint: When The King reads Mikey's note, he is angry as he told them to stay off the hill, completely missing the ominous message which could easily lead an outsider to think Bobby intended to kill himself. Then again it's not as if he cared that much about their well-being to begin with. Either way, he heads them off with the sole intention of punishing both of them for disobeying him.
31* TheDreaded: How Mike and Bobby come to view The King once his true colors show.
32* DreamSequence: The dream of the buffalo.
33* EasilyForgiven: Mary does this to The King, probably only in the hopes that things will change. Unfortunately, they do not. Sadly, both can be TruthInTelevision.
34* TheFaceless: The King. Believed to be because Adam Baldwin didn't want his face associated with child abuse, but could also be the director's way of portraying The King as an almost mythic figure from the boys' point of view along with everything else in the film.
35* ForTheEvulz: The King is not given a FreudianExcuse for his actions.
36* FingerGun: One of the seven great abilities and fascinations is that this [[FingerPokeOfDoom actually fires bullets]].
37* {{Flight}}: The last of the seven great abilities and fascinations, and the main focus of this film.
38* FramingDevice: Adult Mike is telling his kids the story of his childhood.
39* FreeRangeChildren: Mike and Bobby. After the abuse starts, Mike invokes this trope as a deliberate way to keep Bobby out of the house and out of The King's crosshairs as much as possible.
40* FriendOrIdolDecision: Subverted. At one point, Mikey has a choice: to stay with Bobby or to play football with Victor and his gang. Given that he wants to fit in, he goes with the gang, leaving his brother to his own devices. The result is that the football game is actually an ambush, which Mikey ends up overcoming, only to come home and find that his brother was put in the hospital by The King. He realizes he should have stayed with Bobby.
41* GangOfBullies: Victor's Gang.
42* GoryDiscretionShot: Twice: during onstage abuse of Bobby, the camera cuts away -- to Mikey the first time, and to a flock of DisturbedDoves the second.
43* GroinAttack: Mikey gives one to Victor, winning the fight.
44* GrowingUpSucks: At age 13, one loses the "seven great abilities".
45* HarmfulToMinors: Bobby's abuse by The King...and what he does to escape it.
46* HateSink: The King is a world class asshole.
47* HeroicDog: Shane, 100%.
48* ICallItVera: Old Trusty, the cord The King uses to beat Bobby. Funnily enough, The King is played by the same actor whose character would provide the trope name later on.
49* IGaveMyWord: An important theme in the story -- mainly, the reason Mikey doesn't tell anyone about the abuse.
50* ItWasAGift: The eponymous wagon.
51* JustPlaneWrong: No way could the souped-up Radio Flyer fly in real life. For starters, the engine the kids choose to strap to the Flyer lacks the power for the job. Even more the case for the little helicopter propellers they add to the wings to boost takeoff. The third part is that the design seems to lack any significant fuel tank, so it wouldn't fly far.
52* KickTheDog: Two examples side by side. One is literal as The King abuses Shane when Bobby and Mike aren't around. The other is when he starts hurting Mike while he tries to start the plane. [[spoiler: Shane [[TheDogBitesBack bit back]]]] during the second kicking.
53* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: Quoted nearly word for word by Fisher's friends during the prologue.
54* NeverSayDie: The "Is he...?" variant is used with Fisher.
55* NoHoldsBarredBeatdown: The King gives one of these to Bobby as Victor's gang is giving one of these to Mikey.
56* KickTheDog: The King almost kills Shane at one point.
57* LoveMakesYouDumb: Or at least, very gullible. Mary is quick to swallow The King's very transparent lies and empty promises.
58* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: The King. You have to pay careful attention to realize his name is Jack [=MacKenzie=].
59* ParasolParachute: One of the seven great abilities and fascinations is based upon this trope.
60* PinkySwear: What makes the whole mess happen, from an Aesop point of view. The plan of transforming a wagon into a functional airplane is the one option that fulfills the promise between the brothers to protect each other that ''doesn't'' breaks the promise to make their mother sad... somehow.
61* PlotParallel: The beatings of Mikey and Bobby, by Victor's gang and The King, respectively.
62* PoliceAreUseless: Subverted. The sheriff does attempt to intervene on the boys' behalf and succeeds in throwing The King in jail after his brutal beating of Bobby, but the courts let him out to attend his mother's funeral without any monitoring or orders to stay away from Mary and the boys.
63* PrecisionFStrike: The movie's lone F-bomb happens under funny circumstances; during the long drive to their new home, Mary and the boys sing the Name Song ("Bobby, Bobby, Bo-Bobby, Banana-fana-fo-fobby...") and eventually come to the name "Chuck". Right when the song reaches "Banana-fana-fo-fu--," Mary and Mike stop in time, Bobby doesn't, although he stops as soon as he realizes he dropped the bomb. Apologizing profusely, he scrambles into the back seat, saying he'll get the soap and wash out his mouth himself. Notably, Mary struggles to keep from busting out laughing.
64* ProductPlacement: Naturally; Radio Flyer is a brand name of a real life little red wagon.
65* RubeGoldbergDevice: Regardless of what [[http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9E0CEEDF1E3EF932A15751C0A964958260 some reviewers]] said, this trope is actually inverted. Despite the work the boys put into fixing up the Radio Flyer, it is ''under''-engineered, as far as actual flight is concerned.
66* RuleOfCool: The only way the plot to escape The King is able to work.
67* RuleOfSeven: The seven great abilities and fascinations of childhood.
68* SecurityBlanket: One of the above seven great abilities and fascinations.
69* ShoutOut: The theatre is showing "X-15" in the marquee. The film was Richard Donner's first film.
70* SirSwearsALot: The King.
71* TheSixties: The story takes place in 1969 California.
72* SmugSnake: The King, after the boys discover what he did to Shane.
73* SpiritAdvisor: The buffalo plays this role, sort of, to Mikey.
74* TalkingAnimal: This is one of the seven great abilities and fascinations. Additionally, in a dream, Mikey's SpiritAdvisor buffalo talks to him.
75* TitleDrop: Of course. There are several close-ups on the wagon's brand throughout the film.
76* TragicMistake: Mary accepting The King back into the family with the hopes that he's changed for the better, and that the abuse would finally stop. It does not, and the abuse escalates to the point where Bobby runs away from home and never returns.
77* {{Troperrific}}: The seven great abilities and fascinations, many of which are based on common tropes.
78* TheUnfavorite: Bobby is the target of The King's abuse. Mikey has some SurvivorGuilt over this, particularly when him ditching Bobby to hang out with Victor and his crew results in Bobby suffering at the hands of The King.
79* UnnamedParent: Bobby and Mikey call their stepfather The King, "because that's what he liked to be called." A BlinkAndYoullMissIt moment shows his real name is Jack [=McKenzie=].
80* UnreliableNarrator: The adult Mike may well be this. Indeed, at the end he says to his own sons: "''Now do you understand what I mean about history being in the mind of the teller?''"
81* UrbanLegend: An InUniverse one about how the Fisher kid tried to use the hill next to the airfield as a ramp for a flying stunt that went horribly wrong is talked about at the beginning of the film, and later on Mikey and Bobby remember it and decide to try to fly themselves... of course, after making sure that they have something better than a cape and a bike to try it with.
82* WhenItAllBegan: The Fisher story.
83* [[WickedStepmother Wicked Stepfather]]: The King. He's wicked enough that running away from him would be a pretty good idea in the sense of "he's going to kill my brother, I have to do ''something''"... if not, you know, the fact that calling the police is a million times better.

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