Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context WesternAnimation / Hilda

Go To

1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/hilda_1_1.png]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:''[[CharacterCatchphrase "Such is the life of an adventurer."]]''\
3[[labelnote:Characters]]'''Left to right:''' Frida, Hilda, Twig, David, Wood Man, and The Great Raven.[[/labelnote]]]]
4
5->''Life is an adventure and\
6I will take you by the hand\
7And show you what I see and understand.''
8-->-- '''Hilda''', "[[https://youtu.be/CC5J6sd6cb8?feature=shared The Life of Hilda]]"
9
10''Hilda'' (alternatively titled ''Hilda: The Series'' in online marketing) is an animated {{fantasy}} {{adventure}} series distributed by Creator/{{Netflix}}. It was adapted from the Eisner-award nominated [[ComicBook/{{Hilda}} graphic novel series of the same name]] and produced by Britain's Silvergate Media (later known as [[Creator/SonyPicturesTelevision Sony Pictures Television – Kids]]) and Canada's Creator/MercuryFilmworks, with original author Luke Pearson as showrunner. The series marks the first production by Silvergate Media to be targeted for older audiences.
11
12The series follows the eponymous Hilda (Creator/BellaRamsey), an 11-year-old blue-haired girl with a knack for befriending the magical creatures that populate her world, who must learn to make friends with humans as well after circumstances force her and her mother (Daisy Haggard) to leave her childhood home in the wilderness for the walled city of Trolberg... but that doesn't necessarily mean the end of meeting more of those supernatural critters, now does it?
13
14The first season, released on 21 September 2018, consists of 13 episodes, adapting 4 of the 6 published books with a healthy dose of AdaptationExpansion in between. The second season premiered two years later on 14 December 2020, one episode adapting the 5th of the 6 books. When Sony Pictures Television acquired Silvergate, it was announced that a [[https://silvergatemedia.com/sony-pictures-television-announces-the-acquisition-of-childrens-media-company-silvergate-to-strengthen-its-entry-into-the-kids-genre/ 85-minute movie special was in production]] which would adapt the 6th book, ''WesternAnimation/HildaAndTheMountainKing'', and was released on December 30th, 2021.
15
16Despite the graphic novel series coming to an end with a total of 6 books, as well as "The Mountain King" being the last book to be adapted, [[https://www.instagram.com/p/CF8RwtJJdhy Luke Pearson expressed a desire to continue the series]]. A third and final season, as announced by [[https://web.archive.org/web/20210609192112/https://twitter.com/AkoMitchell/status/1402684799127539716 Ako Mitchell on Twitter]] and officially by [[https://silvergatemedia.com/silvergate-makes-three-key-promotions-within-hildas-production-team/ Silvergate Media]], was released on Netflix on December 7th, 2023, with the first two episodes premiering at the Ottawa International Animation Festival on September 21st, 2023 (the fifth anniversary of the show's premiere). The final season [[https://deadline.com/2023/09/hilda-netflix-final-season-launch-date-ottawa-animation-festival-1235547896/ consists of 7 episodes (as opposed to 13 like the other two seasons) and a 70-minute film]]. It also has a more focused and ongoing narrative unlike the previous two seasons (which were mostly episodic in nature) according to [[https://www.animationmagazine.net/2021/12/creative-team-behind-hilda-and-the-mountain-king-discuss-her-next-big-adventure/ Luke Pearson]].
17
18Follow updates on the show [[https://twitter.com/hildatheseries here.]]
19
20The novelization of the series has [[Literature/HildaTieInSeries its own page]].
21----
22!! This show provides examples of:
23[[foldercontrol]]
24
25[[folder:#-A]]
26* TwentyMinutesIntoThePast: While the show first aired in the 2010s, the show itself seems to be set in the late 80s or at the very latest the early 90s. Cellphones are non-existent (in "The Storm", Johanna had to call Hilda from a phonebooth), Frida has a computer in her room, but she is the only one and the internet doesn't seem to be a thing since the protagonists always go to the library when they need information. In "The Eternal Warriors," David is shown listening to music using a portable cassette player, rather than an [=MP3=] player or other digital device more common to the 21st century.
27* TwoDVisualsThreeDEffects: Played straight as of Season 2.
28* AbortedArc:
29** Hilda attempting to find anything that could potentially discredit Erik Ahlberg is set up to be a recurring plot thread throughout Season 2, but after a failed attempt in "The Draugen" and a brief mention in "The Witch", it's never brought up again.
30** While it does lead to bouts of significant character development, the aftermath of Frida's falling out with Hilda and David in "The Ghost" is mostly pushed to the sidelines. She does apologize to them in "The Black Hound", though said apology is about her hanging out with the Marra more than their initial fight, which is resolved largely offscreen.
31* ActorAllusion:
32** In "The Fifty Year Night", Hilda investigates a mystery involving her neighbor Mr. Ostenfeld, who is voiced by ''Series/PlaySchool'' legend Derek Griffiths. In a scene in Mr. Ostenfeld's flat, there is a cuddly toy of Humpty, one of the toys from ''Series/PlaySchool'', sitting on the sofa.
33** In "The Witch", after being accused of trespassing, Hilda tries (and fails) to claim to The Committee of Three that she is a witch based on her use of magic in "The Tide Mouse". Hilda is voiced by Creator/BellaRamsey, who had previously played the witch student Mildred Hubble in CBBC's adaptation of ''Literature/TheWorstWitch''.
34* AdaptationExpansion:
35** For season 1, episodes 1 and 2 are based on ''Hilda and the Troll'' and (mostly) ''The Midnight Giant'', episode 3 is based on ''The Bird Parade'', and episodes 12 and 13 (plus Hilda's Sparrow Scout initiation at the start of episode 4) are based on ''The Black Hound''. The episodes in-between are newly written stories.
36** Season 2, the season finale is adapted from ''Hilda and the Stone Forest'', and a few scenes from that graphic novel (like Hilda getting grounded) are incorporated into other episodes of the season, but otherwise the season is entirely filled with new stories. A TimePassesMontage early on in ''The Stone Forest'' shows single panels of various implied adventures Hilda has, some of which serve the basis for entire episodes in the adaptation.
37** And Season 3 consists entirely of new stories, as the show had run out of graphic novels to adapt after the movie.
38* AdaptedOut:
39** A minor elf character named Tomas appeared in the graphic novel version of ''The Midnight Giant'', but his role was given to Alfur in the cartoon and novelizations.
40** In Season 2, the season-wide absence of the Great Raven effectively removes him from the adaptation of ''The Stone Forest''. His role in the graphic novel is collectively assumed by Frida, David, and Gerda.
41* AdaptationInducedPlothole: The last two episodes of Season 1, which adapt ''Hilda and the Black Hound'', keep the subplot about Hilda failing to get any Sparrow Scout badges. However, this contradicts "The Lost Clan", which contains an animated series-exclusive story in which Hilda, David, and Frida succeed in gathering a Blue Nettle for their botany badge.
42* AdaptationalDiversity: At least one schoolmate of Hilda (who is also a member of the Sparrow Scouts) and her mother wear a [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hijab hijab]].
43* AdaptationalEarlyAppearance: In the graphic novels, Hilda joins the Sparrow Scouts and meets David and Frida in ''Hilda and the Black Hound''. This story was split over three episodes, with multiple new stories in between, for the animated series. David and Frida are introduced in episode 2, and Hilda befriends them when she joins the Scouts in episode 4, but the other characters introduced in ''The Black Hound'' (including the Nisse and the Hound) don't appear until episode 12.
44* AdaptationalNiceGuy: In the comic books, Hilda is confrontational, a bit of a brat, and even more overconfident. In the series, Hilda is much nicer, kinder and friendly.
45* AdaptationalPersonalityChange: Both Hilda and her mother get something of an overhaul, making them less confrontational and more compatible with each other's personalities.
46* AdaptationalWimp: [[AllThereInTheManual According to a book shown at the end of the first graphic novel]], ''some'' trolls are mostly or entirely immune to sunlight, but in the animated series, none were shown or said to have this immunity.
47* AdultsAreUseless: Usually played straight, leaving Hilda and company to accomplish most of the heroics on their own, but fortunately, the series has its fair share of {{reasonable authority figure}}s, like [[GoodParents Johanna]], [[MagicLibrarian Kaisa]], or [[CoolOldLady Tildy]]. It's justified by Hilda often being resistant to the idea of involving adults, normally believing she can handle things herself. Whether she's right or not tends to vary, and she has been called out on this.
48* AlienGeometries: In "The House in the Woods", Hilda and the Woodman end up in a magic house that gives them everything they desire, but doesn't want them to leave. When they try to escape anyway, the house starts adopting alien geometries in order to keep its prisoners captive, like forming rooms with stairs going in all directions (and a door in the floor), and an attic door that leads straight back to the living room downstairs.
49* AllAccessibleMagic: Magic is a power that anyone can use, as proven in "[[Recap/HildaS1E8 Chapter 8: The Tide Mice]]" when Hilda uses a spell she found in a library book to summon the titular tide mice, despite never having used magic before. Season 2 reveals there's a community of witches in Trolberg, but they are not a MageSpecies but simply people who have turned magic into a career and devote their time to the study and understanding of magic.
50* AllAnimalsAreDogs: Twig, despite being a deer fox, very much acts like one, including barking, whining and defending Hilda as a dog would.
51* AllTrollsAreDifferent: One of the first magical creatures seen in the show and among the most recurring. They're dormant rock formations with long noses during the day and only animate at night. The city of Trolberg has a history of conflict with them and have tools and plans to repel or counter them, which led to the city building a massive wall around it. How much of a threat they really are varies depending on when and how people approach them. Pretty much everyone tries their best to keep their distance, including Hilda, as they are still capable of crushing an unsuspecting person.
52* AlternateContinuity: To the graphic novels; a lot of elements carry over in the adaptation, but are combined with new stories and characters having expanded roles (like David and Frida). The Tie-In novels are also this to the animated series, with the episodes they adapt occurring in a different order and again by adding new scenes. Thus, the Hilda-franchise currently has 3 continuities.
53* AmbiguousSituation: Due to the LawOfConservationOfDetail, many of the magical creatures will have large gaps in their origins. [[note]]Check the characters page for more information.[[/note]]
54* AmbiguouslyAbsentParent: Hilda's father is never seen or even alluded to, but it is made clear that her mum is a single parent of some description. [[note]]According to Luke Pearson, Hilda's father is "around somewhere but currently lives apart."[[/note]] [[spoiler:He finally appears in season 3]].
55* AmnesiaDanger: In "The Bird Parade", due to getting hit by a rock, The Great Raven can't remember any of his powers, or even how to fly. This becomes a problem when he is accosted by cats and Trevor.
56* AndroclesLion: A flashback reveals that Hilda first met Twig when [[spoiler:she rescued him while he was trapped under a pile of rocks. He repaid the favor by saving her from falling off a cliff, sacrificing his chance at being with the rest of his kind]].
57* AnimatedAdaptation: Of the comics.
58* ArbitrarySkepticism: David and Frida don't believe in the existence of fairies in "The Fairy Mound"... even though they reside in a world home to trolls, giants, elves, water spirits, ghosts, and witches (which Frida is by the way), amongst a plethora of other supernatural creatures.
59* ArtEvolution: Hilda's artwork has undergone this InUniverse. In the first two seasons, her art is shown to be cruel, inconsistent, and simple, sometimes only barely resembling the creature at best. By season 3, however, Hilda's artwork [[https://www.reddit.com/media?url=https%3A%2F%2Fpreview.redd.it%2Ff6re5d613uvc1.png%3Fwidth%3D960%26crop%3Dsmart%26auto%3Dwebp%26s%3D8dee993df1f42f48b6acd30ab7512caf5d8c1fe9 has improved to the point of resembling the show's art style by "The Fairy Isle".]] This can be justified by the two-year TimeSkip between season's 2 and 3, giving Hilda plenty of time to better her abilities.
60* AscendedExtra:
61** Hilda's friends Frida and David have their roles significantly expanded from the graphic novel, where they were only supporting characters in 1 story.
62** Alfur, the elf who approached Hilda, gets a lot more screen time here, traveling to Trolberg with Hilda to make reports on it.
63** Tontu, the Nisse that lives in Hilda's home, becomes a supporting character after the end of the first season.
64** The trope also applies to locations. In the graphic novels, the village of Tofoten, the Forest of Nott and the Witch Tower only make 1 appearance on a map of Trolberg and surrounding areas at the end of "Hilda and the Bird Parade" but play no part in any of the stories. The show turns all these places into important locations.
65* AttentionDeficitOohShiny: David gets distracted by a cool rock while holding the rope while Hilda descends underground to save Frida.
66[[/folder]]
67
68[[folder:B-D]]
69* BaitAndSwitch: [[spoiler: Season 1 seemed to be setting up that Hilda could become a witch, with her love of magic and adventure. Hilda even considered herself something of one after performing the Tide Mouse Spell. In Season 2 though, Hilda and Frida meet actual witches and they find out it takes more than just casting a spell or two to be considered a witch. Witchcraft is more about knowledge and study than spell casting. Hilda's interest in magic begins and ends with "doing cool stuff". It turns out Frida is the one capable of becoming a witch thanks to her love of studying.]]
70* BaitAndSwitchComment: In "The Nightmare Spirit", when Hilda and Frida catch up the the mysterious girl, Frida tells Hilda to stop while she's tying a knot on a rope to climb down a wall. Hilda inteprets this as Frida telling her to stop tracking the mysterious girl, but it turns out she just wanted to recommend a different way to tie the rope.
71* BatmanGambit: In "The Draugen" Hilda knows that provocating the weather spirit will cause it to rain heavily, which would summon the Draugen.
72* BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor: In "The Tide Mice", Hilda uses a spell to make sure that David and her mother achieve their goals. However, she never read the whole thing and ends up finding out that the Tide Mice are actually part of a spell to steal the souls of the people whose wishes they grant.
73* BittersweetEnding: Several episodes end this way:
74** "The Midnight Giant": [[spoiler: Despite managing to reunite Jorgen with his lost love and having the Elf King allow her family to stay, Jorgen [[AllForNothing accidentally destroys Hilda's house]], prompting Hilda and Johanna to move to Trolberg]].
75** "The Storm": [[spoiler: Hilda has managed to put an end to Victoria's operation and save the city from being buried six feet under, but she is now stranded in the wilderness and the status of her friendship with Frida remains uncertain.]]
76** "The House in the Woods": [[spoiler: While she's unable to keep the copy of Frida's book, Hilda comes out of the ordeal with the realization that through all the ups and downs, Trolberg has indeed become her home. The Wood Man also admits that he considers her a friend, but not before giving her some food for thought in how you never truly leave your old homes behind.]]
77** "The Black Hound": [[spoiler: Hilda fails to earn any merit badges, and her role in dealing with the titular hound go mostly unrecognized, but Johanna makes it clear that she is [[SoProudOfYou proud of Hilda anyway]] and recognizes her good deed. Also, Jellybean and his owner have been reunited, Tontu now lives at Hilda's house, and the kids are all friends again, but the main characters don't realize that Jellybean and his owner made it out of Nowhere Space safely.]]
78** "The Windmill": [[spoiler: Victoria ultimately reveals herself to have not changed one bit and disappears to who knows where — and as far as Hilda and her friends know, she's as good as dead. However, they do get solace in seeing the windmill be left to the local wildlife.]]
79** "The Fairy Isle": [[spoiler: Hilda, Joanna, and Astrid escape Fairy Country, and despite the Fairy Entity remaining in control of the land, it is stated to be dying. However, Joanna's parents are not allowed to leave, and she and Hilda can only content themselves in knowing that they remain safe, watching over them.]]
80* BlackComedy: [[spoiler:After David loses his head (because touching an amulet made him a FearlessFool), Hilda and Frida manage to reattach it... backwards. Sigurd then kills him again so they can put his head back on correctly.]]
81* BlessedWithSuck: In "The Tide Mice", Hilda uses an echantment from a magic book to summon magical mice to help David sing well and Johanna get a job she loves. This turns out amazing but goes awry when [[spoiler: David and Johanna begin showing side-effects of the enchanment, such as their eyes turning white or mysterious steam releasing from their head. These both mean that their soul will be taken over, unless Hilda completes a disenchantment ritual]].
82* BloodlessCarnage: Any characters who are hit with the weapons of the Viking Clans have glowing wounds that don't seem to allow blood to come out. This is handy because the show would be a ''lot'' darker otherwise. Briefly {{Averted|Trope}} during "The Forgotten Lake" in season 3, where blood is plainly shown coming out of a cut Johanna gets [[spoiler:as she runs away from the Spider-Frog]].
83* BlueAndOrangeMorality: Like TheFairFolk of lore, while many supernatural creatures Hilda encounters are friendly enough, most have their own internal values and motivations that are very different from that of humans. The best Hilda can do is try to understand what they want and reach a compromise that benefits all parties, even if they don't always understand one another.
84* BluntYes: In "The Troll Rock", when Hilda asks David if she is being disruptive in school", he replies with a simple "Oh yes", much to Hilda's exasperation.
85* {{Bookends}}:
86** The first episode, "The Hidden People", ends with a fade-in transition from the final scene to the credits. The third episode, "The Bird Parade", ends with the same transition, as does the final episode of Season 2, "The Stone Forest".
87** Season 1 both begins and ends in the same place, overlooking Hilda's [[spoiler:destroyed]] cottage.
88* BreatherEpisode: "The Yule Lads" is a decidedly frivolous ChristmasEpisode following the emotional rollercoasters "The Fifty-Year Night" and "The Deerfox."
89* CallBack: In "The Midnight Giant", when Hilda stumbles upon the she-giant and talks to her, the giant doubts Hilda's real, and asks whether she isn't just "a voice in her head". This a call-back to the previous episode, where Alfur, an elf, (to whom Hilda is similarly a giant), sneaks into Hilda's room and talks to her, and Hilda also asks him whether he isn't just a voice inside her head.
90* CameraAbuse: After Trevor's mother scolded her son for not wanting to keep away from Hilda and even pulling his ear, he kicked up snow right into the camera out of frustration.
91* CanonForeigner: Victoria Van Gale, Kaisa, and the Marra (among others) are series-exclusive characters.
92* CastingGag: Hilda is a fearless, take-charge girl who goes her own way but knows when to take responsibility. Sounds a lot like [[Characters/GameOfThronesHouseMormont Lyanna Mormont]]!
93* CerebusSyndrome: {{Downplayed}}. Season 2 is a tad bit darker than the first season, featuring non-graphic death, non-graphic [[DeathOfAChild child death]] and significantly higher stakes compared to the first season. However, the show doesn't quite go ''too'' far into Cerebus Syndrome, and still keeps its general tone.
94* ChristmasEpisode: "The Yule Lads" can easily count as one, as it takes place during the winter holidays, and the creature of the episode is Kertasníkir, a Santa-like character from Icelandic folklore.
95* CitadelCity: Trolberg is surrounded by a huge wall to keep Trolls out.
96* CityOfAdventure: Trolberg functions as this due to Hilda and her friends encountering several supernatural occurrences throughout the city.
97* TheCityVsTheCountry: This is a major source of conflict for Hilda and her mother because she dreads the thought of being forced to move to the city from her idyllic life in the wilderness.
98* {{Cliffhanger}}: [[spoiler: Season 2 ends with Hilda apparently turned into a troll and Johanna discovering the troll baby in Hilda's bed, leading into the events of ''Hilda and the Mountain King''.]]
99* ClockRoaches: When Hilda [[spoiler: plays matchmaker with Mr.Ostfeld and Tildy in the past, which causes them to get together and grow old in the future]], a Time Worm appears, who wants to eradicate everyone from the "old" timeline.
100* CoolOldLady: In "The Lost Clan" Agnes, and old elf Bragga lady is a fierce [[LilliputianWarriors rabbit warrior]].
101* CowardlyLion: David shows bursts of bravery on occasion.
102* CommonplaceRare: Hilda gets a lindworm to do her a favor by offering common weeds to add to her garden. They're all over the place in a human town, but the dragon having social anxiety caused her to keep putting off actually going out there to collect anything.
103* ColdOpen: Happens in three episodes of Season 1, but happened more frequently in Season 2 as the plot begins to get intense.
104* CreativeClosingCredits: Averted. While a catchy, suitably, nice and supple adventurous tune does play in the background, [[https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/s0e00_end_screen_2.jpg the actual credits are backed by a black screen]].
105* CreatorsCultureCarryover: The setting is not specified and seems closer to Scandinavia than anything else. However, the show is produced in both Britain and Canada and some aspects of being made there show up.
106** The characters mostly have English accents, which probably has something to do with creator Luke Pearson being English himself.
107** Some aspects things appearing in the show are found in North America but not Europe, including some of the fauna (raccoons, skunks, white-tailed deer, chipmunks), the word "sweater" instead of "jumper", and the electrical outlets.
108* CrossoverCosmology: While most of the creatures are Scandinavian in origin there are a few from other mythologies, such as a Thunderbird (Native American), Barghest (English) and Pooka (Celtic).
109* DarkerAndEdgier: Subtle, but [[spoiler:during season 2 there are multiple disturbing casualties and near casualties, such as [[FearlessFool the Vikings and David]] under the influence of Sigurd's medallion, multiple time-displaced versions of Hilda, Alfur and Mr. Ostenfeld, a wolf that [[DisneyVillainDeath falls off a cliff to its presumed death]], and even a random witch doorman that fell victim to the Void of No Return. Certainly, a step up from Season 1, where the only three implied deaths turned out to merely be swallowed by the Black Hound (but not dead).]]
110* DarkIsNotEvil: Many of the creatures Hilda encounters are shadowy and intimidating, but all have their own sympathetic reasons for what they do, even if it puts them at odds with Hilda and her friends. Generally, the show's humans and monsters have a lot more in common than they realize, and neither group has a clear moral high ground over the other.
111* DeusExMachina: In "The Stone Forest" Hilda gets saved just in time by a white woff flying under a cliff when she's running away from a rolling troll rock.
112* DisappearedDad: Hilda lives alone with her mother Johanna, her father not even being mentioned or seen once in the show. [[spoiler: Even when he does appear in Season 3, there's little discussion about where he's been and what happened to his and Joanna's relationship]].
113* DisguisedInDrag: In "The Nightmare Spirit", Hilda and David disguise themselves as the other, so Hilda can sleep in David's bed to confront [[spoiler: the marra]].
114* DisproportionateRetribution: A downplayed case is brought up in "The Troll Rock"; after Hilda and Frida find out that David unknowingly brought in a Troll Rock, he mentions that he heard a story of a kid who got [[JuvenileHell locked up for fifty years]] because he willingly brought a troll into Trolberg. While this is understandable, even if harsh, given that the kid brought it in on purpose, and trolls are TheDreaded in Trolberg, after Hilda asks what if it was an accident, it's quickly revealed by David that the punishment for ''accidentally'' bringing in a troll is imprisonment for ''a hundred years'', which is significantly harsher than the punishment for doing it on purpose..
115-->'''Frida''': "They really, ''really'' don't want anyone doing it by accident."
116* DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything: [[spoiler:The Marra giving Frida a taste of bad dreams might be equated to her being given drugs for the first time.]]
117* DoomedHometown: Downplayed, but the cottage in which Hilda and her mother live acts as this, with its destruction forcing the move to Trolberg.
118* EvolvingCredits:
119** The opening credits shows Hilda running through different scenes depending on what she, along with her friends and family, will be facing this season.
120** The most significant change is that the montage, before the logo, ends with Hilda and her Mum, Johanna. In Season 1, Mum is seen smiling and spins Hilda around. However, in Season 2 the new opening features a concerned Johanna as she struggles to keep up with Hilda and fails to catch her in time when she falls, only for a white woff to fly Hilda to safety. This can easily foreshadow that Hilda and her Mum have a rift and falling out.
121[[/folder]]
122
123[[folder:E-L]]
124* EnchantedForest: Hilda's cottage and the city of Trolberg border a mystical forest, filled with enormous trees and [[OurGiantsAreBigger forest giants.]]
125* ExtraLongEpisode: Excluding credits, the average episode is 22 minutes long; "The Deerfox" is 30 minutes and "The Stone Forest" is 44 minutes. The series' GrandFinale, "The Fairy Isle" tops the chart at 72 minutes.
126* TheFairFolk: Most of the supernatural creatures Hilda encounters are friendly enough, but they all operate on their own value system and can be [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking dangerous, unpredictable, or just a bother]] by human standards.
127* FantasyKitchenSink: The magical creatures introduced thus far include a [[MixAndMatchCritters deer-fox]], giants, elves, [[RockMonster rock trolls]], a [[GiantFlyer thunderbird]], a RatKing, the ghostly [[DreamWeaver Marra]], actual ghosts, [[OurSpiritsAreDifferent water spirits]], [[{{Cumulonemesis}} weather spirits]], a [[OurDragonsAreDifferent lindworm]], a [[GildedCage trapping house]], the [[PocketDimension Nisse]], and a [[{{Hellhound}} Barghest]].
128* TheFarmerAndTheViper: An overarching theme of the first season where Hilda and her friends are sometimes nearly killed or are simply unjustly wronged by the supernatural creatures they encounter simply following their natures. It's capped off at the end where Hilda's [[spoiler:original Nisse and the Black Hound]] stumble across the ruins of Hilda's old house with the Wood Man presiding over the wreckage. When asked what happened, Wood Man replies that it was the home of a little girl who befriended a giant. The Nisse scoffs and derisively states that the girl probably learned her lesson. The Wood Man shrugs and says that "she'd probably do it again."
129* FearlessFool: Any character who touches Sigurd's Amulet turns into this. The two clans are probably just this by default, though.
130* FictionalBoardGame: The game Dragon Panic is an example of this. The game involves a board with 19 hexagon-shaped squares in various colors, blue and red dice decorated with symbols (a heart, a # and a shield), and various pieces like pawns and rocks. The exact rules are unknown though.
131* ForcedTransformation: In "The Stone Forest", after being invaded by trolls, Frida wants to use an invisbility spell. She accidentally uses the wrong spell and turns Ahlberg into a bug.
132* ForWantOfANail: Learning that rooms don't just clean themselves makes Frida question her entire life, as she realizes not having to take time to clean her room every day left her plenty of time to study and pursue extracurricular activities. She wonders who and what she would be like if she'd had to spend so much time learning to clean her room every day like everyone else has to.
133* FourFingeredHands: All human characters have these, as well as only four toes on their feet.
134* FreezeFrameBonus: Pausing at a particular moment in episode 9 "The Ghost" reveals that The Librarian appears to have visible fangs.
135* GeographicFlexibility: The graphic novels, the animated series and the tie-in books all provide multiple maps of Trolberg and the surrounding area, but they frequently contradict each other, making it hard to get a good idea of what the area is like. To name a few; is the fjord that borders Trolberg at one side on the north side of the city or on the south side? And the Huldrawood; is it a small forest entirely enclosed within the walls of Trolberg, or is it a huge forest of which only a small section is within the walls? The maps also cannot always agree where in Trolberg locations like the houses of the protagonists, the school, the library etc. are.
136* GirlsHaveCooties: In "The Nisse", there's this dialogue:
137-->'''Willy:''' I heard it's a demon who only eats girls.
138-->'''Girl:''' What kind of demon only eats girls?
139-->'''Willy:''' Someone with terrible taste, it seems.
140* GoshDangItToHeck: In "The Ghost", David says "flipping".
141* TheGreatWall: Trolberg is surrounded by a giant stone wall intended to keep trolls and other hostile creatures out. It doesn't seem particularly effective.
142* HartmanHips: Most of the adult female characters have them.
143* HeroicSacrifice: A non-lethal example. [[spoiler:A flashback reveals that Twig gave up being with its own kind to save Hilda from falling off a cliff]].[[spoiler: Also in the series finale, Aunt Astrid was willing to give up her life in exchange for allowing Joanna & Hilda to leave the Fairy Isle, but an alternative happens to come along just at the last second.]]
144* HumansAreTheRealMonsters:
145** Averted. While the human and magical worlds certainly may not always get along, the humans in the show always have very sympathetic motivations for what they do. Even in stories where a monster needs to be protected from humans, the humans' fear isn't wholly irrational. A few exceptions to this are Victoria Van Gale, whose motivations aren't exactly selfish, but aren't noble enough to justify what she does; Trevor, who is [[KidsAreCruel just mean]]; and [[WasOnceAMan the]] [[TeensAreMonsters Marra]], who just seem to enjoy the fear of others, [[LiteralMetaphor on top of being, well... monsters]].
146** Season 2 introduces the new head of the Safety Patrol, Erik Ahlberg, who rings a bell at trolls despite ''knowing'' that trolls are more annoyed than scared of the sound, because he wants to [[GlorySeeker have a glorious legacy]] and sees setting himself up as an anti-troll hero as the best way to do it.
147* IdiosyncraticEpisodeNaming: Every episode begins with a "the", paralleling the original novels' ''Hilda and the...'' title format.
148* ImageSong: To promote the show's second season on November 25th, Bella Ramsey wrote and sang a song in her character's voice titled "The Life of Hilda", which explains about Hilda's everyday life as an adventurer.
149* InstrumentalThemeTune: The theme tune is an electronic piece with no words.
150* JerkassBall:
151** In Season 1, Frida grabs this when she discovers her status as ThePigPen, shattering her self-image as ThePerfectionist. [[spoiler:Not helped when David and Hilda fail to fulfill their promises after constantly reassuring her that they can fix the situation.]] This causes tensions to rise to the point that their friendship is torn apart.
152** In Season 2, Hilda starts to lie to her mother and becomes more confrontational and ruder when things don't go her way, [[spoiler:especially when Johanna puts her foot down]].
153* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: The Wood Man; he's usually quite obnoxious and doesn't respect people's privacy, but he has his nice moments, like giving Hilda and Johanna wood for the fireplace in their new house at the end of Chapter 2.
154* KidCom: Combined with adventure and drama, the series revolves around Hilda, Frida, and David, with Johanna and other adults as supporting roles, despite Johanna earning more episodes in Season 2.
155* KidnappedForExperimentation: MadScientist Victoria [[spoiler: kidnaps a baby weather spirit]] in an attempt to the control the weather. This lures the other weather spirits there, and wreaks havoc over Trolberg.
156* KryptoniteFactor: Many magical beings such as trolls, woffs, elves and nisse, are badly effected by the ring of a bell, the louder it is, the worse it gets.
157* LastKiss: [[spoiler:The alternate versions of Mr. Ostenfeld and Ms. Pilqvist share one last kiss before they [[HeroicSacrifice sacrifice themselves to save the timeline]].]]
158* LearningToRideABike: In "The Nightmare Spirit" it is revealed that Hilda never learnt how to ride a bike. She tells this secret to the Rat King, who tells her that the mysterious girl they have been seeing has been causing the nightmares of David. When Hilda challenges the girl, the marra to see if she could get scared by her nightmares, the Marra uses the previous secret to her advantage, and implements Hilda not knowing how to ride a bike in her nightmare. This scares Hilda, and the next morning, she asks her friends to teach her how to ride a bike.
159* LikeMotherLikeDaughter: While Hilda and Johanna are very different on the surface, they do have some things in common, as they're both socially awkward, are both talented artists, and can be very resourceful and quick thinking in tight or dangerous scenarios.
160* LilliputianWarriors: The titular elves in "The Lost Clan" can easily defeat David and tie him down.
161* LimitedWardrobe: Played with; all three main characters have multiple outfits for different occasions, namely their regular daily clothes, their school uniform, their Sparrow Scouts uniform, pajamas, and winter clothes. Within these groups however, there is no variation; they always wear the same attire.
162* LoopholeAbuse: In "The Laughing Merman", the kids make a deal with Eugene to ensure that if he can't make them laugh within the next five minutes, then he would have to set them free. While they seem to fail the challenge by laughing at Louise's fart costume, David points out to Eugene that he didn't make them ''all'' laugh since Louise didn't find it funny, meaning they technically won. While Eugene is seemingly accepting of this, he quickly invokes this and ''only'' sets Louise free, since they never said he needed to make them all laugh in the first place.
163-->'''Frida:''' [[JerkassHasAPoint He's right]]. Semantics are very important in these situations.
164[[/folder]]
165
166[[folder:M-P]]
167* MageTower: Season 2 introduces the Witches' Tower, which serves as the headquarters for all witches in Trolberg. In a unique twist on this trope however, the tower is built upside down, into the ground, beneath the Trolberg Library.
168* MagicalLibrary: The Trolberg public library is filled with books about magical creatures and the supernatural. It even has a secret room with books [[SpellBook for more practical uses.]] Season 2 further reveals that the entrance to Witches' Tower is hidden in the Library, and that the librarian herself is a witch.
169* TheMagicGoesAway: Downplayed, but this is definitely a recurring theme of the series. Certain rare breeds of magical creatures, such as [[OurGiantsAreBigger the old giants]] and lindworms, are being driven from the land by human development.
170* MakeAnExampleOfThem: Deliberately bringing a troll rock inside the city walls of Trolberg earns the offender a 50-year prison term. Accidentally bringing a troll rock inside the city walls is punished by a ''100 year'' sentence [[InsaneTrollLogic because the city really doesn't want people doing this by accident]].
171* MegaCorp: The snack brand Jorts becomes a huge monopoly in "The Jorts Incident", to the point where they actively control the media, such as newspapers.
172* MeritBadgesForEverything: Subverted. It's a bit of a running gag that Hilda can't get any badges because all the fantastic things she does don't align with any badges.
173* MissedHimByThatMuch: In "The Bird Parade", Alfur and the Great Raven unknowingly end up at the bearded man statue at which Hilda and Johanna were also going to find the duo, knowing that they'll be there. However, Trevor snatches the raven moments before Hilda and Johanna reach the statue, causing them to miss the two.
174* MonsterOfTheWeek: Very much follows this formula. Each episode or "Chapter" will involve Hilda and friends having an encounter or a conflict with some sort of magical creature, although the stories often bleed into each other in a much less episodic way than this trope normally implies.
175* MonsterIsAMommy: Used a couple of different times, such as the Troll that rampages in the fourth episode (turns out that David took its child thinking it was a funny-looking rock).
176* MonsterProgenitor: The Old Giants is this to many magical creatures. While not explained in the show, [[AllThereInTheManual in Hilda and the Midnight Giant]] it is said that Trolls and Nisses are descendants of a giant who [[IChooseToStay went into hiding rather than leave with the others]], and that many others come from a giant so large his beard contained its own ecosystem.
177* MundaneFantastic: The various magical creatures that exist in this world are treated more as annoying and sometimes dangerous animals than anything remarkable. Many unknown phenomenons are still a surprise to some who discover them, such as ghosts and even time travel.
178* MythologyGag: Johanna's sketch of Hilda in "The Forgotten Lake" has her depicted with YouthfulFreckles like in ''ComicBook/HildaAndTheMidnightGiant''.
179* AMythologyIsTrue: Gives this treatment to {{Myth/Norse Mythology}} and Scandinavian folklore.
180* NamedByTheAdaptation: Hilda's mum is never referred to by name in the comics. The animated series gives her name as Johanna.
181* NewFriendEnvy: In "The Nisse", Hilda and David feel like this when their friend, Frida, makes a new friend named Kelly, a Marra. They even had a secret handshake. [[spoiler:Eventually, it becomes clear that Kelly was deliberately keeping Frida away from her old friends to manipulate her]].
182* NewWeird: The show has a blend of several conventional fantasy tropes used in various unconventional ways. [[OurElvesAreDifferent Elves]] are invisible, paperwork-obsessed LilliputianWarriors, giants are mostly gone ([[spoiler:presumably to space]]) to avoid stepping on people, and the Nisse are gnomes that live in the [[PocketDimension Nowhere Space]] of houses. [[OurSpiritsAreDifferent Spirits]] in particular take all sorts of forms: there's your basic ghosts, then there are the Marra (AmbiguouslyHuman teenage {{Nightmare Weaver}}s), some spirits inhabit and shift bodies of water, and some influence the weather. The most notable trait of the show, however, is the way ''people'' view them. While they are mostly not ignorant of them, modern society tends to isolate themselves from magical creatures; Trolberg has a wall around it to keep out the rock trolls, and its denizens are mostly averse to the presence of the supernatural (with the exception of [[FishOutOfWater Hilda]]).
183* NiceMeanAndInbetween: David is a reserved kid who is meek and cowardly, but also kind and fiercely loyal to his friends (nice), Frida is a bossy perfectionist who, while caring, can be aggressive when her perfectionism is called into question (mean), and Hilda is a well-meaning and caring AllLovingHero, but prone to being unwillingly inconsiderate to others and bratty when things don't go her way (in-between).
184* NoFullNameGiven: None of the main characters have surnames.
185* NoNameGiven: Surprisingly common for the magical creatures that Hilda encounters, with most of them simply never mentioning their names and usually just becoming known by their species.
186* NoodleImplements: The Pooka has a habit of asking to borrow random things from Astrid. We learn what he wants ''some'' of them for -- he gives a SuspiciouslySpecificDenial that he ''doesn't'' want to wash his feet in the casserole dish -- but no explanation is ever given for why he wants a big wooden hammer and a pineapple.
187* NotSoWellIntentionedExtremist: Erik Ahlberg in season 2 is the new head of the city's safety patrol, but while he does occasionally [[JerkassHasAPoint point out legitimate security concerns]], like Vittra tunnels running under the wall being a way that trolls could get into the city, he's a GloryHound who, in his debut episode, nearly gets himself and Hilda killed by a troll because he keeps ringing a bell despite having read Hilda's essay and thus ''knowing'' that trolls are more annoyed than scared of bells.
188* NothingExcitingEverHappensHere: Hilda resists moving to the big city because she worries she'll never encounter any magical creatures like she does in the wilderness. Sure enough, an [[GiantFlyer enormous bird]] has perched on the roof of her new apartment by the end of the second episode.
189* OffscreenTeleportation: Frida's friend Kelly has the disquieting habit of appearing right behind people - even when they've just opened a door to let her into a house. [[spoiler:She's eventually revealed to be a Marra, justifying this ability as actual teleportation.]]
190* OneSteveLimit: Averted in two cases:
191** All Nisse are named Tontu.
192** There are two Abigail’s in Season 2: the captain of the Draugen and one member of the Witches triumvirate.
193* OOCIsSeriousBusiness: Much of Season 1 depicts Hilda getting in over her head, due to not thinking about the consequences of her actions or looking before she leaps. In the Season 2 premiere, she becomes the OnlySaneMan when touring the city with the Safety Patrol. Hilda even lampshades that she's not used to being in this role.
194* OurElvesAreDifferent: One of the most recurring magical creatures is a race of elves standing at about two inches high, who are completely invisible to other creatures [[ItMakesSenseInContext until they fill out the proper paperwork.]] They also have an obsession with paperwork that is similar to the [[Literature/TheHitchhikersGuideToTheGalaxy Vogons']] (although they are more high-functioning about it).
195* OurGhostsAreDifferent: Ghosts in this show's universe are white/transparent humanoid beings, whose form still somewhat resembles how they looked when they were alive. They have glowing skulls with black eyes and a mouth, and visibly carry their skeletal remains inside their bodies. While their ghost bodies and skulls can phase through solid matter, their bones cannot and thus remain behind if they enter a building. They can only come out at night and must be back in their graves before sunrise. They can absorb objects and people inside their bodies.
196* OurGiantsAreBigger: Two types of giants have been seen. The first are the size of mountains and gentle but a bit careless. The majority of them left the planet when it became clear humans were tired of them accidentally stepping on their houses. The second are "forest giants" that are "only" the size of large trees, have antlers, and are a bit more obnoxious - or at least, the one we meet is.
197* OurSpiritsAreDifferent: Though only a few are seen, it's implied that there are several species of nature spirits that exist as [[ElementalEmbodiment physical manifestations]] of their respective elements.
198* PanUpToTheSkyEnding: "The Hidden People", "The Midnight Giant", "The Bird Parade", "The Tide Mice", and "The Black Hound" in Season 1; "The Windmill", "The Deerfox", and "The Yule Lads" in Season 2.
199* {{Paperworkaholic}}: Elves are this by default, since paperwork is the cornerstone of their entire society.
200* PercussiveMaintenance: In "The Troll Circle", a Safety Patrol dirigible is struck by lightning because they ticked off some sapient clouds, and starts falling out of the sky. When using the controls fails, the pilot strikes the console out of frustration, which gets it to spark to life briefly. Noticing this, she does it again, managing to get the airship working in time to pull up.
201* PeriodPiece: The series seems to be taking place between the late '80s and early '90s, going off of the technology we see.
202* PintSizedKid: Hilda is eleven years old, yet she and other kids her age are barely half the size of the adult characters.
203* PowerTrio: Hilda, Frida, and David.
204* PrecisionFStrike: {{Downplayed|Trope}} in "The Ghost". As Hilda and David are leaving Frida's room after Hilda's fight with her, David tells Frida that "she could learn to tidy her own [[GoshDangItToHeck flipping]] room."
205* PushedAtTheMonster: At the start of "The Black Hound", when [[CanisMajor the Hound]] has Hilda, David, Frida and a group of Marra cornered, Kelly, a Marra who had befriended Frida with the intention to make her a Marra as well, finally shows what a FalseFriend she truly is and pushes Frida towards the Black Hound as a distraction while she and the other Marra flee the scene. It's only thanks to Hilda distracting the Black Hound with a bag of potato chips that Frida escapes.
206[[/folder]]
207
208[[folder:R-Y]]
209* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: David gives one to the marra in "The Nisse" right as the [[spoiler: not-so-imaginary beast circles in on them]].
210-->'''David:''' What's scary about a sad bunch of creeps with nothing better to do than sit around being nasty about people behind their back?
211* RelationshipSalvagingDisaster: After Mum and Hilda have an argument and Hilda tries to sneak out of the house using the Nowhere Space with Tontu, Mum catches her just in time and tries pull her back. This causes a rift in the Nowhere Space and both Mum and Hilda get transported inside a magical mountain. Being far away from home, they have to work together to get out, and this saves their relationship.
212* RitualMagic: The only form of FunctionalMagic that has so far been seen in the show comes from procedures in spellbooks.
213* RunningGag: People pointing out that there's a bug on David.
214* SafetyWorst: Erik Ahlberg, who ''drastically'' expands the city's anti-troll protocols, and carries a bell ''knowing'' that it riles trolls up rather than scaring them away just so he can [[GloryHound look like a hero fighting them]], which nearly kills him and Hilda in "The Troll Circle" and causes multiple problems throughout Season 2.
215* SceneryPorn:
216** The show has a tendency to linger on wide, panoramic shots of the wilderness - or, occasionally, the Trolberg skyline - and the creatures that inhabit it. The opening of the first episode is almost entirely devoted to showing off the lavish scenery and the creatures that inhabit it.
217** Season 2's "The Deerfox" includes a peek at the natural habitat of the deerfoxes: an ethereal world of light roads and a constant aurora borealis in the background.
218* ScoutOut: The Sparrow Scouts of which Hilda and her friends are members. The Scouts' lodge also fills the role that the school normally would, linking the main trio together socially.
219* SecondChapterCliffhanger: The first season has a [[Recap/HildaS1E13 bittersweet ending]] with Hilda having adjusted to life in Trolberg and Frida successfully mending her friendship with Hilda and David. In the second season, Hilda and Johanna successfully mend their friendship. And then, [[MoodWhiplash Hilda is teleported from Trolberg]] and begins [[ForcedTransformation learning what life is like as a troll]] while Johanna begins her search to bring back Hilda before Erik Ahlberg kills her.
220* SeriesFauxnale: ''WesternAnimation/HildaAndTheMountainKing'', which adapts the most recent graphic novel and resolves the cliffhanger ending of Season 2. A third and final season was announced before ''The Mountain King'' aired.
221* SettingUpdate: A mild example. ''Hilda and the Stone Forest'' took place partly around the time of the Bird Parade, which is why the Great Raven was in Trolberg during the events of the comic. Season 2, which adapts ''Stone Forest'', takes place closer to the winter, away from the Bird Parade, and the Great Raven is thus absent for the season.
222* ShooOutTheClowns: Tontu has a habit of [[ScrewThisImOuttaHere showing himself out]] before dramatic scenes, notably [[spoiler:before Johanna and Hilda's argument at the end of "The Beast of Cauldron Island".]]
223* TheShowOfTheBooks: Of the graphic novel ''{{ComicBook/Hilda}}'', also called ''Hildafolk'', written and illustrated by Luke Pearson, who also produced the show.
224* ShoutOut:
225** In the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=26fBRrCdiWU season 2 trailer]], there's a Viking warrior that wields what looks like a [[Franchise/StarTrek Bat'leth]].
226** In "The Troll Circle", Hilda runs by a steam engine that looks just like [[WesternAnimation/ThomasAndFriends Edward]].
227** David's winter clothing in Season 2 makes him look like [[WesternAnimation/SouthPark Stan Marsh]].
228** One of the items Hilda and friends collect for their donation drive appears to be an [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atari_2600 Atari 2600]] controller.
229** In "The Laughing Merman", when the Merman realizes that Hilda and her friends have been choosing the correct exit based on whether he laughs or not, he smiles like the [[Literature/HowTheGrinchStoleChristmas the Grinch]] and magically alters his expression.
230* SleepParalysisCreature: The Marras are young female human-like spirits who haunt streets and houses at night to give people nightmares, inspired by the Maras from European folklore. [[https://hildatheseries.fandom.com/wiki/Chapter_6:_The_Nightmare_Spirit/Gallery?file=Marra_book.png This illustration]] used in a book in Recap/HildaS1E6 resembles more closely the creatures of this trope, showing a marra tormenting a man by sitting on his chest.
231* SmallRoleBigImpact: The Nisse that lives in Frida's house. We only see him once in a brief scene near the end of "The Ghost", but his actions ripple across multiple episodes; he stole a book from Frida, which caused Craigie Williams to stop cleaning Frida's room every night, which in turn cracks Frida's [[ThePerfectionist perfectionist image]] and eventually results in her falling out with Hilda and David, which goes unresolved until the end of Season 1.
232* SpoilerOpening: The opening sequence for both seasons features most of the important characters and mythical creatures that appear throughout the season: Season 1's opening shows Jorgen, the Great Raven, the Vittra, a ghost, the Black Hound, and Tontu; Season 2's shows the Witches' council, the Vikings, the Yule Lads, and the white woff.
233* SpottingTheThread:
234** When Hilda and David switch places in "The Nightmare Spirit", Johanna notices that it's not Hilda sleeping in Hilda's bed, since David is snoring, which Hilda doesn't do.
235* SummoningRitual: Most of the spells Hilda has used were for summoning creatures. Most notably the Tide Mice, which was followed by a BanishingRitual when she found out they were stealing her friends' souls.
236* SwampMonster: "The Eternal Warriors" features a swamp creature called Sigurd; a tall, green, humanoid being whose body is mostly covered in the mud from the swamp. [[AllThereInTheManual The tie-in book "Hilda's Book of Beasts and Spirits"]] mentions that Sigurd's race is actually made from mud and vegetation.
237* ThePerfectionist: Frida. Though she learns through her friendship with Hilda that she doesn't have to be the best at everything.
238* TechnicianVsPerformer: Hilda is an adventurous girl who is good at thinking on her feet, but is not very studious. While Frida is an excellent student who loves researching and studying. [[spoiler: It's why Frida is chosen to become Tildy's apprentice while Hilda is asked never to do magic again. When told being a witch is all about studying Hilda loses interest and later complains it sucks all the fun out of magic, while that's exactly the kind of thing Frida is interested in.]]
239* TeensAreMonsters: The Marra definitely count, in more ways than one, being supernatural beings that may or may not be actual human teenagers.
240* TimeSkip: A small one of at least a year happens during the epilogue of ''Hilda and The Mountain King''. Season 3, being a direct follow-up to ''Mountain King'', will take place in this period.
241* TitleTheAdaptation: Some marketing refers to the show as ''Hilda: The Series''.
242* TrailOfBreadCrumbs: In "The Sparrow Scouts", Hilda leaves a trail of sandwich crumbs in the cavern while looking for Frida, lest she gets lost herself.
243* TwoGirlsAndAGuy: The main trio of friends are made up of Hilda, Frida, and [[TheOneGuy David]].
244* UncannyValley: At the end of Season 2, [[spoiler:the troll baby known as Baba is a {{Moe}} in troll form, but not so much in human form. She retains her facial characteristics and TheUnintelligible BabyTalk, with the nose and flat mouth. This freaks out Johanna, along with the realization that the troll baby must have replaced Hilda and demands to know where her daughter is]].
245* UnknownCharacter: Hilda's grandfather who built the cottage she and her mother live in. [[spoiler:He finally appears in season 3.]]
246* UnseenNoMore: In the first two seasons, Hilda's [[spoiler:father has gone unacknowledged, with the only allusion to his existence being Hilda asking Trylla if she had a troll dad in ''The Mountain King''. Come season 3 and not only is he finally acknowledged, but in "The Job", he is finally shown on screen]].
247* VocalEvolution: In [[https://youtu.be/dsYhnDU438M?si=1YQJG3uZT8GfdZs_ the season 3 sneak peek footage]], David's voice has become noticeably deeper compared to the first two seasons. {{Justified|Trope}}, as David is [[TimeSkip aged up to a teenager]] in season 3.
248* WhereTheHellIsSpringfield: It's never specified where Trolberg or the surrounding areas are in the world, though the characters mostly talk with English accents. This might be a TranslationConvention, as the setting is otherwise vaguely Scandinavian for the most part, and you can hear some rather Nordic inflections in a few voices.
249* WhiteAndGreyMorality: No one in the series is outright evil. Every character who is antagonistic in the series has sympathetic reasons for why they come into conflict with Hilda and her companions.
250* WitchWithACapitalB: Trevor's mom once described Hilda as "[[BitchInSheepsClothing a witch in sheep's clothing]]".
251* WithAFriendAndAStranger: David and Frida were already friends for some time before Hilda came along, as they attended the same school and were both in Sparrow Scouts together.
252* WomenAreWiser: Gerda Gustav, Erik Ahlberg's deputy in the Trolberg Safety Patrol, is shown to be more rational and less vainglorious than her superior officer.
253* YouAreGrounded: [[spoiler:At the end of "The Beast of Cauldron Island", Johanna grounds Hilda because she lied to her and snuck off, which carries over into "The Fifty Year Night".]]
254* YouAreWhatYouHate: [[spoiler:The Yule Lads are {{Knight Templar}}s who insist on punishing naughty children, but Hilda finds out that the Lads were, in fact, naughty themselves, and many of the deeds that the Lads ask the kids if they did, such as harassing innocent sheep, are the Lads' own misdeeds.]]
255* YourSoulIsMine: The Enchanted Tide Pool Mice take the soul of the person they're created for and give it to their creator after a 30-day trial period. Which category it falls under is unknown because Hilda stops the only two she summoned before the end of the 30-day trial period.
256[[/folder]]
257----
258->''"Well, that was pretty traumatic. But such is the life of an adventurer."''

Top