Follow TV Tropes

Following

YMMV / Miles from Tomorrowland

Go To

  • Awesome Music: The theme song, "Way Out". It's so awesome and catchy that the Disney Junior DJ Shuffle 2 album contains an extended version and a karaoke version.
  • Fridge Brilliance: Haruna is meant to embody math, yet has not done much to showcase it, being more adept to combat. Seems counterintuitive right? Not really. He's the ship's navigator, meaning that it would require critical thinking, a component of math, due to the various angles and obstacles they have to overcome and dodge. As for why he's more into combat and less into math, it's because he tends to go his own way on things.
  • Genius Bonus: There are many references to astronomy that are likely to go over the preschoolers' heads.
  • Growing the Beard: As with most Disney Junior shows at the time, this show ended up undergoing this. The show already started out strong, but it's gotten even better in season 2 thanks to a heavier emphasis on adventures and relationships, as well as having more interesting plots in general.
    • Mission Force One, the name for season 3, really takes the show to new heights.
  • He Really Can Act: Felicia Day is surprisingly chilling as Grendle, the villain of "How To Build A Better Villain".
  • Incest Yay Shipping: Miles and Loretta have some rather intimate interactions that can be seen by the fanbase as Belligerent Sexual Tension. This is especially prevalent in season 3, where they're the only human characters from the family on Mission Force One, meaning a lot more time to spend together. Not helping things is how there's a good amount of fanfiction and fan art that pairs them up romantically.
  • Les Yay: Light example but a case could be made for Loretta/Mirandos, given how quickly the pair bond over their shared interest in coding and Mirandos' line in "Unfair Getaway" that "I would do anything for Loretta".
  • Spiritual Successor: The show can be considered the Disney Junior version of Transformers: Rescue Bots due to also focusing on a family primarily known for rescue work to a degree, follows similar themes on family and heroism, and even has some principle crew members.
  • Viewer Gender Confusion: Miles is often seen as a girl from those unfamiliar with the show.
  • What Do You Mean, It's for Kids?: Though lacking in violence, the show has several instances where characters are in mortal danger. A notable instance is when Miles, Loretta, and Merc are sucked up by a Star Sweeper, an automated space cleanup vehicle which shreds and incinerates whatever it sucks up. They get out okay, but still...

Top