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* ActorAllusion: Mooch isn't very bright, much like [[WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants a certain starfish]] also voiced by Bill Fagerbakke.

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* {{Foreshadowing}}: [[RunningGag The first time Angel tells Buster she's not "his girl"]],]], she adds, "I don't belong to anyone." We later learn her backstory, namely that she had five previous owners before joining the Junkyard Dogs, adding a new meaning to his sour delivery of the aforementioned line.

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* {{Foreshadowing}}: {{Foreshadowing}}:
** When Scratchy starts telling Scamp the (false) story of what happened to Tramp, Scamp morphs into Tramp and the other Junkyard Dogs morph into dogcatchers, and the ensuing story is about Tramp escaping from them. [[spoiler:In the end, Scamp "escapes" from the Junkyard Dogs when he realizes having a home is better.]]
**
[[RunningGag The first time Angel tells Buster she's not "his girl"]],]], she adds, "I don't belong to anyone." We later learn her backstory, namely that she had five previous owners before joining the Junkyard Dogs, adding a new meaning to his sour delivery of the aforementioned line.

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* IJustWantToBeFree: Scamp's song, ''A World Without Fences'' could be the song version of this trope.

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* IJustWantToBeFree: This is Scamp's song, character motivation, as he dislikes the rules of the house and wants to be a wild dog. His song ''A World Without Fences'' could be the song version of this trope.exemplifies this.


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* LovingAShadow: Scamp's song "A World Without Fences" has him fantasize about going on all sorts of adventures with Buster, who is portrayed as a benevolent mentor and leader to Scamp. However, [[CharacterDevelopment Scamp eventually comes to realize]] how nasty Buster truly is.
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* ManChild: The Dogcatcher shows shades of this.

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* %%* ManChild: The Dogcatcher shows shades of this.
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* {{Foreshadowing}}: [[RunningGag The first time Angel tells Buster she's not "his girl"]],]], she adds, "I don't belong to anyone." We later learn her backstory, namely that she had five previous owners before joining the Junkyard Dogs, adding a new meaning to his sour delivery of the aforementioned line.
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* TokenRomance: The romance between sc

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* TokenRomance: The romance between scScamp and Angel doesn't contribute to the main plot to any significant degree.
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* TokenRomance: The romance between sc
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** During an argument with his father, Scamp insists that [[DramaticIrony Tramp was never like him], then scratches his ear in the exact same way Tramp just has. Later, Buster sees the two of them scratch their ears in that same way and decides they must be related.

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** During an argument with his father, Scamp insists that [[DramaticIrony Tramp was never like him], him]], then scratches his ear in the exact same way Tramp just has. Later, Buster sees the two of them scratch their ears in that same way and decides they must be related.
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** While evading the dogcatcher, Scamp accidentally takes a lady's wig. He shakes it off, and the camera holds on it slowly falling down a drain. Later, Tramp thinks he found Scamp

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** While evading the dogcatcher, Scamp accidentally takes a lady's wig. He shakes it off, and the camera holds on it slowly falling down a drain. Later, Tramp thinks he found ScampScamp in the water, but it turns out to be the wig.
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* ChekhovsGun:
** During an argument with his father, Scamp insists that [[DramaticIrony Tramp was never like him], then scratches his ear in the exact same way Tramp just has. Later, Buster sees the two of them scratch their ears in that same way and decides they must be related.
** While evading the dogcatcher, Scamp accidentally takes a lady's wig. He shakes it off, and the camera holds on it slowly falling down a drain. Later, Tramp thinks he found Scamp
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* BigBadEnsemble: [[EvilFormerFriend Buster]], [[NoCelebritiesWereHarmed The Dogcatcher]], and [[BewareOfViciousDog Reggie]].

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* BigBadEnsemble: [[EvilFormerFriend Buster]], [[NoCelebritiesWereHarmed The The]] [[DiabolicalDogcatcher Dogcatcher]], and [[BewareOfViciousDog Reggie]].

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A sequel to Creator/{{Disney}}'s 1955 classic ''WesternAnimation/LadyAndTheTramp'', and the first DirectToVideo sequel for one of Creator/WaltDisney's animated movies. The story finds Lady and Tramp being the proud parents of a litter of pups, which includes three well-behaved girls and one rambunctious boy puppy named Scamp (voiced by Scott Wolf). In search of adventure and a "real" dog life, Scamp strays far from home and meets the cute Angel (voiced by Creator/AlyssaMilano), Buster (voiced by Chazz Palminteri), and Buster's gang of Junkyard Dogs. Although he found the adventure he was looking for, Scamp finds his thoughts returning to home and the loved ones he left behind.

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A sequel to Creator/{{Disney}}'s 1955 classic ''WesternAnimation/LadyAndTheTramp'', and the first DirectToVideo sequel for one of Creator/WaltDisney's animated movies. The story finds Lady and Tramp being the proud parents of a litter of pups, which includes three well-behaved girls and one rambunctious boy puppy named Scamp (voiced by Scott Wolf).Creator/ScottWolf). In search of adventure and a "real" dog life, Scamp strays far from home and meets the cute Angel (voiced by Creator/AlyssaMilano), Buster (voiced by Chazz Palminteri), and Buster's gang of Junkyard Dogs. Although he found the adventure he was looking for, Scamp finds his thoughts returning to home and the loved ones he left behind.



* AloneAmongFamilies: During "Always There", the stray dog Angel, who wishes she had a family, is seen walking down a neighbourhood by herself and observing some dogs who live happily with their owners.

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* AloneAmongFamilies: During "Always There", the stray dog Angel, who wishes she had a family, is seen walking down a neighbourhood neighborhood by herself and observing some dogs who live happily with their owners.



* BigBad: Buster.


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* BigBadEnsemble: [[EvilFormerFriend Buster]], [[NoCelebritiesWereHarmed The Dogcatcher]], and [[BewareOfViciousDog Reggie]].
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A sequel to Creator/{{Disney}}'s 1955 classic ''Disney/LadyAndTheTramp'', and the first DirectToVideo sequel for one of Creator/WaltDisney's animated movies. The story finds Lady and Tramp being the proud parents of a litter of pups, which includes three well-behaved girls and one rambunctious boy puppy named Scamp (voiced by Scott Wolf). In search of adventure and a "real" dog life, Scamp strays far from home and meets the cute Angel (voiced by Creator/AlyssaMilano), Buster (voiced by Chazz Palminteri), and Buster's gang of Junkyard Dogs. Although he found the adventure he was looking for, Scamp finds his thoughts returning to home and the loved ones he left behind.

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A sequel to Creator/{{Disney}}'s 1955 classic ''Disney/LadyAndTheTramp'', ''WesternAnimation/LadyAndTheTramp'', and the first DirectToVideo sequel for one of Creator/WaltDisney's animated movies. The story finds Lady and Tramp being the proud parents of a litter of pups, which includes three well-behaved girls and one rambunctious boy puppy named Scamp (voiced by Scott Wolf). In search of adventure and a "real" dog life, Scamp strays far from home and meets the cute Angel (voiced by Creator/AlyssaMilano), Buster (voiced by Chazz Palminteri), and Buster's gang of Junkyard Dogs. Although he found the adventure he was looking for, Scamp finds his thoughts returning to home and the loved ones he left behind.
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* FurryConfusion: Reggie. He doesn't talk like any of the other dogs.
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* VillainDecay: While they weren't portrayed as evil, the dogcatchers in the first movie were still shown to be a serious threat to any street dog they came across. Here, the only dogcatcher we see onscreen is a bumbling fool doubling as a huge ButtMonkey.

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* {{Flanderization}}: The kindly dogcatcher and pound workers of the first movie are nowhere to be seen; in their place is a [[Series/TheAndyGriffithShow Barney Fife]] caricature. Though he's still just doing his job, his assholish qualities are played up here, particularly when [[IHaveYouNowMyPretty he taunts Scamp after capturing him]].

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* {{Flanderization}}: {{Flanderization}}:
**
The kindly dogcatcher and pound workers of the first movie are nowhere to be seen; in their place is a [[Series/TheAndyGriffithShow Barney Fife]] caricature. Though he's still just doing his job, his assholish qualities are played up here, particularly when [[IHaveYouNowMyPretty he taunts Scamp after capturing him]].



* OdeToFamily: The film has "Always There", a song about how your family is always there for you, sung by characters who desperately miss their family.



* OlderThanTheyLook: Although she looks to be around the same age as Scamp (who's not even a year old), Angel is old enough to have been through five families and linger a while with each one.
** A sad bit of TruthInTelevision. If you've ever dealt with animal rescues in any way, you'd know that this is completely possible even with a puppy or young dog. [[note]]She mentions new babies in the family being one reason she was abandoned again, which ''could'' indicate a long time period, but we have no way of knowing how far along the expectant mother was, or even if she was expecting at all, at the time Angel was taken in.[[/note]]

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* OlderThanTheyLook: Although she looks to be around the same age as Scamp (who's not even a year old), Angel is old enough to have been through five families and linger a while with each one.
**
one. A sad bit of TruthInTelevision. If you've ever dealt with animal rescues in any way, you'd know that this is completely possible even with a puppy or young dog. [[note]]She mentions new babies in the family being one reason she was abandoned again, which ''could'' indicate a long time period, but we have no way of knowing how far along the expectant mother was, or even if she was expecting at all, at the time Angel was taken in.[[/note]]

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* EarnYourHappyEnding: [[spoiler: After being adopted and abandoned by five families throughout her life, Angel finally finds her forever home with Scamp's family]].



* {{Irony}}: According to Angel, the reason she's been abandoned by so many families is because they had a baby on the way. [[spoiler: In the end, Junior happiness at meeting her is part of what gets her adopted.]]



* KickTheDog: Buster makes it his business to mock Angel wanting to be a house dog when she doesn't deny it.

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* KickTheDog: Buster makes it his business to snidely mock Angel wanting to be a house dog when she doesn't deny it.
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* PoorCommunicationKills: As far as Scamp knows, his father was a house dog all his life, and Tramp opts against correcting him (and presumably leaving out the parts where he had corned beef dinners and a new girlfriend every other week.) If his father had come clean about his past as a stray, perhaps Scamp would've known second-hand what life as a junkyard dog is ''really'' like. What's more, Scamp probably would've found it easier to [[NotSoDifferent relate]] to his father.

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* PoorCommunicationKills: As far as Scamp knows, his father was a house dog all his life, and Tramp opts against correcting him (and presumably leaving out the parts where he had corned beef dinners and a new girlfriend every other week.) If his father had come clean about his past as a stray, perhaps Scamp would've known second-hand what life as a junkyard dog is ''really'' like. What's more, Scamp probably would've found it easier to [[NotSoDifferent relate]] to his father.

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* DramaticIrony: Scamp believes his father Tramp has ''always'' been a proper, well-behaved house dog, when the audience knows that once upon a time, the latter used to be a stray dog who lived on the streets eating restaurant food and chasing chickens.



* KickTheDog: Buster makes it his business to mock Angel wanting to be a house dog when she doesn't deny it.



* PoorCommunicationKills: As far as Scamp knows, his father was a house dog all his life, and Tramp opts against correcting him (and presumably leaving out the parts where he had corned beef dinners and a new girlfriend every other week.)

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* PoorCommunicationKills: As far as Scamp knows, his father was a house dog all his life, and Tramp opts against correcting him (and presumably leaving out the parts where he had corned beef dinners and a new girlfriend every other week.)) If his father had come clean about his past as a stray, perhaps Scamp would've known second-hand what life as a junkyard dog is ''really'' like. What's more, Scamp probably would've found it easier to [[NotSoDifferent relate]] to his father.
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* AwardBaitSong: "I Didn’t Know That I Could Feel This Way" and "Always There (Family)".
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A sequel to Creator/{{Disney}}'s 1955 classic ''Disney/LadyAndTheTramp''. The story finds Lady and Tramp being the proud parents of a litter of pups, which includes three well-behaved girls and one rambunctious boy puppy named Scamp (voiced by Scott Wolf). In search of adventure and a "real" dog life, Scamp strays far from home and meets the cute Angel (voiced by Creator/AlyssaMilano), Buster (voiced by Chazz Palminteri), and Buster's gang of Junkyard Dogs. Although he found the adventure he was looking for, Scamp finds his thoughts returning to home and the loved ones he left behind.

to:

A sequel to Creator/{{Disney}}'s 1955 classic ''Disney/LadyAndTheTramp''.''Disney/LadyAndTheTramp'', and the first DirectToVideo sequel for one of Creator/WaltDisney's animated movies. The story finds Lady and Tramp being the proud parents of a litter of pups, which includes three well-behaved girls and one rambunctious boy puppy named Scamp (voiced by Scott Wolf). In search of adventure and a "real" dog life, Scamp strays far from home and meets the cute Angel (voiced by Creator/AlyssaMilano), Buster (voiced by Chazz Palminteri), and Buster's gang of Junkyard Dogs. Although he found the adventure he was looking for, Scamp finds his thoughts returning to home and the loved ones he left behind.
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* IWasNamedMyName: Angel gets "her name" at the end of the film by Scamps family.
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* ButNowIMustGo: [[spoiler:Angel's sad reaction after Scamp gets reunited with his family. [[SugarWiki/HeartwarmingMoments Scamp stops her.]]]]

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* ButNowIMustGo: [[spoiler:Angel's sad reaction after Scamp gets reunited with his family. [[SugarWiki/HeartwarmingMoments Scamp stops her.]]]]]]
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* AnachronisticAnimal: A stray Dobermann (or mix, as Buster is a bit stocky for a Dobermann) in TheEdwardianEra, especially in America, is unusual considering it was a new breed dating back only a few years.
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* AloneAmongFamilies: During "Always There", the stray dog Angel, who wishes she had a family, is seen walking down a neighbourhood by herself and observing some dogs who live happily with their owners.
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None


A sequel to Creator/{{Disney}}'s 1955 classic ''Disney/LadyAndTheTramp''. The story finds Lady and Tramp being the proud parents of a litter of pups, which includes three well-behaved girls and one rambunctious boy puppy named Scamp (voiced by Scott Wolf). In search of adventure and a "real" dog life, Scamp strays far from home and meets the cute Angel (voiced by Alyssa Milano), Buster (voiced by Chazz Palminteri), and Buster's gang of Junkyard Dogs. Although he found the adventure he was looking for, Scamp finds his thoughts returning to home and the loved ones he left behind.

to:

A sequel to Creator/{{Disney}}'s 1955 classic ''Disney/LadyAndTheTramp''. The story finds Lady and Tramp being the proud parents of a litter of pups, which includes three well-behaved girls and one rambunctious boy puppy named Scamp (voiced by Scott Wolf). In search of adventure and a "real" dog life, Scamp strays far from home and meets the cute Angel (voiced by Alyssa Milano), Creator/AlyssaMilano), Buster (voiced by Chazz Palminteri), and Buster's gang of Junkyard Dogs. Although he found the adventure he was looking for, Scamp finds his thoughts returning to home and the loved ones he left behind.
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Getting Crap Past The Radar misuse, see definition


* GettingCrapPastTheRadar:
** Buster (male grown dog) pursuing Angel (female teen-aged dog that ''looks like a puppy''').
** Another similar example is Ruby (female grown dog) ''flirting'' with Scamp (male teen-aged dog).
** Danielle nearly saying the word ass (see CurseCutShort).
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* BookEnds: The movie starts and ends with Scamp getting a bath, much to his chagrin. The movie also opens with a pan down from the sky, and it ends as the view pans [[PanUpToTheSkyEnding up to the sky]] again.


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* DiegeticSwitch:
** The opening song "Welcome Home" is sung by an offscreen chorus, briefly switching to Lady, Tramp and their daughters singing in the bridge, then it ends with the citizens singing together.
** "A World Without Fences" begins with Scamp singing, but for the verses, it switches to his internal thoughts.


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* FallingInLoveMontage: Between Scamp and Angel during "I Didn't Know That I Could Feel This Way".


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* MusicalWorldHypotheses: The songs "I Didn't Know That I Could Feel This Way" and "Always There" are sung in the characters' internal thoughts as All In Their Head, while "Welcome Home" and "A World Without Fences" each feature [[DiegeticSwitch Diegetic Switches]] from Alternate Universe to All In Their Head and vice versa. Only "Junkyard Society Rag" is completely Alternate Universe.


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* PanUpToTheSkyEnding: The movie ends this way, [[BookEnds in a reverse of how it began.]]


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* TriumphantReprise: The movie ends with a reprise of "Welcome Home" as Scamp annoyingly has a bath, [[spoiler: Angel is adopted, and the Junkyard Dogs each have owners of their own.]]
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** A sad bit of TruthInTelevision. If you've ever dealt with animal rescues in any way, you'd know that this is completely possible even with a puppy or young dog. [[note]]She mentions new babies in the family being one reason she was abandoned again, which ''could'' indicate a long time period, but we have no way of knowing how far along the expectant mother was, or even if she was expecting at all, at the time Angel was taken in.[[/note]]
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* ArtisticLicenseMedicine: During the Junkyard Society Rag song, there's this line: "No distemper shots from the vet!"/"Show your temper"/"Mean as you can get!" Distemper has absolutely nothing to do with an animal's temperament - it's a serious upper respiratory disease that can also progress into a neurological form. Left untreated, a dog can die from it. Possibly justified in that the dogs themselves might not know this.

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