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3%% Note: This page was decided to be kept under the French title rather than the localized title, as an exception to the usual rule, to avoid custom title and subpages collision with other "Once Upon a Time" works, following this thread:
4%% https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=1410205152029880400
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8[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/il_etait_une_fois_6098.jpg]]
9[[caption-width-right:350:From ''Il était une fois... la Vie'' (''Once Upon a Time... Life'')]]
10
11''Il était une fois...'' (''Once Upon a Time...'' in English) is a French animated franchise which [[LongRunners ran from 1978 until deep into the 2000s]].
12
13It was created by Albert Barillé and produced by Procidis, and Music/MichelLegrand composed the scores for all of the series. Each series revolved around some main subject, intended to educate the young viewers about history, biology or science using [[UniversalAdaptorCast the same bunch of characters, no matter the time period or context]].
14----
15!! The nine different series:
16
17* ''Il était une fois... l'Homme'' (1978) (''Once Upon a Time... Man''). The first series. Explaining human history from the creation of the universe until UsefulNotes/WorldWarII. In the final episode, it branches slightly as part of future predictions concerning pollution and warfare, by presenting an optimistic path. The show's famous opening music is a rendition of Music/JohannSebastianBach's ''Music/ToccataAndFugueInDMinor'' with a MOOG synthesizer.
18
19* ''Il était une fois... l'Espace'' (1982) (''Once Upon a Time... Space''). The second series. The only series that is pure fiction and with little educational intent. It's a science-fiction story taking place in the far future when space travel is in vogue.
20
21* ''Il était une fois... la Vie'' (1986) (''Once Upon a Time... Life''). The third series in which the human body is explored as AnthropomorphizedAnatomy, with the characters acting as various cells and organs.
22
23* ''Il était une fois... l'Amérique'' (1989) (''Once Upon a Time... the Americas''). The fourth series, telling a chronological history of North, Central and South America.
24
25* ''Il était une fois... les Découvreurs'' (1994) (''Once Upon a Time... the Discoverers''). The fifth series, a chronological history of famous inventors.
26
27* ''Il était une fois... les Explorateurs'' (1996) (''Once Upon a Time... the Explorers''). The sixth series, a chronological history about famous explorers.
28
29* ''Il était une fois... la Musique'' (2008) (''Once Upon a Time... Music''). The seventh series, about the history of music, only released in Spain.
30
31* ''Il était une fois... notre Terre'' (2008) (''Once Upon a Time... Planet Earth''). The eighth series, about environmental issues.
32
33* ''Il était une fois... ces Drôles d'objets'' (2024) (''Once Upon a Time... the Objects''). The ninth series, about everyday objects.
34----
35!!Once Upon a Time... Tropes:
36[[foldercontrol]]
37
38[[folder:Once Upon a Time... every series]]
39* AmbiguouslyBrown: Psi. Her name and nickname allude of Greek origins.
40* AndKnowingIsHalfTheBattle: All series are educational in tone. Sometimes they tend to be a bit too difficult and/or confusing for the target audience by assuming that they already know a lot about the topic. Especially in ''Il était une fois... l'Homme'', certain historical events or people are quickly glossed over or merely name-dropped. Too much time will be spent on zany {{Slapstick}} antics involving the main characters instead of explaining historical events more clearly.
41* ArtEvolution: Each consecutive series looks more polished and has better animation than the previous one, and the art style goes through some subtle changes too, often reflecting the decade the series was made in. The final series, which aired in 2008, looks ''radically'' different.
42* BeautyEqualsGoodness: The nice characters are more conventionally attractive than Le Teigneux and Le Nabot, the main antagonists.
43%%* CoolOldGuy: Maestro.
44%%* CranialEruption: Damaging head injuries result in one.
45%%* {{Depraved Dwarf}}: Le Nabot.
46* HammerspaceHair: Maestro tends to hold large objects in his hair.
47* InsufferableImbecile: Most of the less intelligent characters in this show (e.g. Le Teigneux) are portrayed in a negative light, with [[DumbMuscle Le Gros]] [[KindheartedSimpleton being the biggest exception]].
48* LimitedAnimation: Made during UsefulNotes/TheDarkAgeOfAnimation and it often shows. Particularly ''Il était une fois... l'Homme'' suffers from stiff animation, not always matching up with the soundtrack and characters making odd facial expressions and poses.
49* MinimalistCast: Four good children, two bad and one old wise man who serves as the narrator, though a lot of generic background characters also pop up. In the historical episodes an anthropomorphized clock appears.
50* NationalGeographicNudity: There are occasional adult themes, such as sex and nudity. Sometimes merely suggested, other times casually shown. They probably got away with it because it's all meant to be educational.
51* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed: Maestro appears to be based on Creator/LeonardoDaVinci.
52* OncePerEpisode: Usually the sneaky small Le Nabot tries to get what he wants, but is thwarted by Pierre and Le Gros. He will run to Le Teigneux a.k.a. the big villain for help, but Gros always fights and defeats Teigneux, causing Nabot to run away in fear.
53* OnceUponATime: Every series has this phrase in the beginning of its title.
54* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: Psi's real name is Mercedes, but nobody ever calls her that, instead using her nickname "Psi".
55* RegularCharacter: The same characters are shown in each episode -- with each episode being a different section of history.
56* UniversalAdaptorCast: No matter whether they are children or adults, in space or in the human body or what historical time period they're in, the same characters in their distinctive characteristic roles are always re-used. In fact, especially in ''Man'', it's not uncommon to see two or more duplicates of certain characters in the same episode or even at the same time (like Arab versions of Pierre and Le Gros meeting their Frankish counterparts in the "The Conquests of Islam" and "The Carolingians"). At times, they'll even replace an historical figure (Maestro as Phidias and Da Vinci, Le Teigneux as Attila and Thomas Doughty...).
57* WizardBeard: Maestro, while not a wizard per se, is a wise old mentor figure with a long white beard that covers most of his chest.
58* WomenAreWiser: In the times when Pierre isn't meant in the right, Pierrette tends to gently straighten him up.
59[[/folder]]
60
61[[folder:Once Upon a Time... Man]]
62* AdolfHitlarious: The penultimate episode provides a rare Francophone example. Here, Hitler only appears in a newsreel shown in a movie theater, and he is depicted as a bug-eyed goofball whose dialogue is obviously dubbed over by a recording of one of his actual speeches.
63* AfterTheEnd: Ironically enough during the intro of ''Il était une fois... l'Homme'', where people escape Earth before it blows up.
64* AscendedToCarnivorism: ''Edmontosaurus'' is shown eating ''Triceratops'' eggs.
65* BadFuture: The very last episode, narrating the post-war world, goes far into this territory when recounting how the earth gradually gets more and more polluted, and the cities more and more crowded and unlivable. The core family manages somehow to find a peaceful spot in this mess at the end of the series.
66* TheBlacksmith: In the Hundred Years War episode, the former soldiers Le Gros and Pierre arrive to a French village, save it from bandits (led by Le Teigneux) and settle down there. The local blacksmith is impressed and takes Le Gros as his apprentice, and from then on he's seen doing blacksmith work. In a later episode, set in the era of industrial revolution, he is ''still'' a blacksmith, presuming his family has been carrying on with the trade for 400 years give or take. The present incarnation of Le Gros goes on to work on the railroad.
67* BunglingInventor: While Maestro does show inventions, there are plenty of episodes where they break down. In some cases, the mechanical devices explode.
68* BurnTheWitch: The fiery executions of Jan Hus and Joan of Arc are shown onscreen.
69* ButtMonkey: Le Teigneux. He is ''always'' on the wrong end of Le Gros's fist, and is the one to get shot, decapitated or killed in several ways during the series, more than anyone else. At worst, he is [[TheyKilledKennyAgain prone to die violently almost every other episode]].
70* ByTheHair: A variation, where the pre-humans pull their desired women by the hair. The women offer no resistance, as if they want to be dragged along.
71* CharlieChaplinShoutOut: In the episode about the interbellum the characters watch a Creator/CharlieChaplin film in the theater. It features Chaplin falling down and the audience laughing as a result.
72* {{Conscription}}: There's at least two means of conscription shown. The eleventh episode shows a man dragging two to the volunteer booth for the crusades. Later episodes use thugs to force signatures, and an even later one has them sign while drunk.
73* CreatorProvincialism: ''Once Upon a Time... Man'' has its own problems on occasion. In 26 episodes, aired between 1979 and 1981, the show covers world history from the birth of planet Earth and the evolution of life up to the 1970s. While fairly accurate and attempting to be objective, the show covers important events and eras as seen from a Western perspective. Most of the action takes place in Europe, Western Asia and North Africa. Figures like Pericles, Julius Caesar, Muhammad, Charlemagne and Peter I of Russia get entire episodes devoted to them. But the cultures of the rest of Asia, Africa and pre-Colombian America are hardly represented. For example, out of the entire history of China, only Kublai Khan gets the spotlight treatment and then only through his interactions with Marco Polo. However, unlike a number of examples, this can at least be justified as budget constraints. You can only condense so much global history into 26 episodes at 25 minutes each without becoming too general; as such, it makes sense for an educational children's TV series to show the history of places that are the most immediately important for them -- which is, for a French kid, Europe and surroundings. The creators tried to make up for this by making a sequel entitled ''Once Upon a Time... the Americas'', which [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin focused on the history of the Americas]], including pre-Colombian times.
74* ADayInTheLimelight: The "French Revolution" episode features Pierrette more than usual, being the leader of the women storming the Bastille.
75* DownInTheDumps: The final episode shows attempts to clean up a junkyard that's become aggressive.
76* DubNameChange: In the English dub of certain episodes (most notably Episodes 10, 11, and 13), Pierre is called Bert and Le Gros (usually called Jumbo) is called Lurch.
77* TheDungAges: Best shown in Episode 18 ("The Great Reign of Louis XIV"). TruthInTelevision when you consider that Louis XIV himself took only two baths in his entire life.
78* {{Eagleland}}: The episode "America" showcases American history from the Mayflower Voyagers to the beginning of UsefulNotes/TheAmericanCivilWar. For a European edutainment show that makes use of CreatorProvincialism, this is actually a smart move.
79* EarthThatWas: The opening nearly names the trope (''"and the Earth... was"''). The final episode seems to be narrated by a future space-faring being descended from humans who fled the destruction of Earth, eons before; [[spoiler:but at the end the narrator is revealed to be a present-day academic, giving a public lecture in character as such a being.]]
80* EtTuBrute: The English version plays the trope straight. The original French version has Caesar saying "Toi aussi, mon fils" ("You too, my son"), which ''is'' the French translation of the historical quote ("Tu quoque, Brute, fili mi") rather than the Shakespeare one.
81* TheFaceless: During the segment about the rise of Islam, UsefulNotes/TheProphetMuhammad is only ever represented from the back, his face never being seen.
82* FamilyUnfriendlyViolence: While it is kept within certain limits, the depiction of historical realities like murderous brutality, implied sexual violence and death can be rather startling with the cartoony imagery of the series.
83* FlorenceNightingaleEffect: In Episode 11 ("Cathedral Building - The Crusades"), Pierre and Maestro create and build huge structures (walls, churches, etc.). At some point, one of the prospective cathedrals collapses and Pierre is pinned under some debris; some bystanders go help him out, including Pierrette who bandages his wounded arm. The next scene has a bed-bound Pierre thanking Pierrette for taking care of him, and soon they're shown HappilyMarried with three kids.
84* FromBeyondTheFourthWall: The clock at the corner of the screen sometimes reminds characters of an error they're making. For example, Maestro using modern numbers in 350 BC, or a Viking woman upset that her lover isn't monogamous.
85* YeGoodeOldeDays: All of the episodes depict this to some extent.
86* GoryDiscretionShot:
87** The guillotine is only shown chopping the head off a cigar, to symbolize an execution.
88** Averted when Viking Teigneux [[spoiler:kills Viking Pierre and then is slain by Viking Pierrot]]. Probably because [[BloodlessCarnage there was zero blood]].
89* ISurrenderSuckers: The Vikings have difficulty assaulting a fortress. Because of the failure, they approach the castle to parley, saying that their chief was killed in battle -- and as such, they wish to convert to Christianity; the chief is to be buried with his weapons as per their tradition. Once inside, the chief jumps out of the coffin, passes the weapons to his allies, and they start the rampage.
90* JudgmentOfSolomon: Depicted as originally described. Then, a later episode spoofs the judgement with two men fighting over ownership of a pig, with a suggestion to cut the pig in half.
91* LovesMeNot: Happens twice in the series:
92** In "The Cathedral Builders," Le Gros does this with one of the ducks his love interest is selling. Apparently, he has gotten to "she loves me" with the last feather, since the next time we see Le Gros and his girlfriend, they are married and have a baby.
93** In "The Golden Age of Spain," Le Teigneux, who has a crush on Pierrette, does this with the standard flower. However, when he sees that she loves another, namely our hero Pierre, he storms off in a huff.
94* MuggedForDisguise: In the episode set in the Netherlands, Pierre and Le Gros lure a Spanish officer into a trap. They capture him, don his armor and leave him BoundAndGagged while posing has him.
95* NationalGeographicNudity: Early episodes have the humans with a breast drawn and uncovered -- usually when the woman is carrying her baby. However, there are one or two {{Discretion Shot}}s or SceneryCensor mixed in. In the "Hundred Years War" episode, Pierrette actually shows off her nipples, although briefly (she is quick to cover behind her bedsheets).
96* NonFatalExplosions: During the Storming of the Bastille, a child cheering on the attackers.
97* NoSell: Jumbo/Le Gros shrugs off any attack. Even weapons used against him break, whether they're clubs, swords, or whips. When history needs it, however, [[TheWorfEffect it's subverted]]. In the "Hundred Years War" episode, he and Pierre are severely beaten by a number of highwaymen (who outnumber them). In the Crusade sequence, he is actually ''shot'' in the heart with an arrow and does not survive it (one of the sadder moments in the series).
98* PillowPistol: Shown in the French revolution episode.
99* PublicDomainSoundtrack: Music/ToccataAndFugueInDMinor, BWV 565 by Music/JohannSebastianBach is used as the introduction theme. You may sometimes hear other classical {{Standard Snippet}}s as well.
100* RaptorAttack: ''Archaeopteryx'' incorrectly has four fingers on its wings, with the feathers attached at its wrist.
101* RightOnQueue: Episode 14, where assassins burst into a house, having the door slammed after the third one. The first three are hung from the window above. The door then opens, asking for the next in line to enter.
102* RoadSignReversal: In the episode with the 1890's automobile racing, one group is ahead of the pack, and decides to mess everyone behind by adjusting a road sign to Bordeaux. However, the previous scene showed the sign being spun by a breeze, and the cheaters actually correct the sign before going down the wrong road.
103* RuleOfSymbolism: ''Progress'', symbolized by the opening track, which also fast-tracks the entire story from creation to the space age. The main character (Pierre), is seen walking in a steady line through several epochs and periods of human history, changing his clothing on the way. When the medieval era begins, he suddenly stops horrified when the "barbaric" tribes arrive (and then the vikings). The next stop for Pierre is when Le Gros beckons him to assist in building a cathedral. The "walking forward" is also halted by a right-wing turn at the castle of Versailles before a short depiction of the French Revolution. From then on, progress goes faster and faster, by train, and then by cars, until the car becomes a plane, and finally a space rocket. Yet, when the core gang appears in the Cro Magnon episode, they walk from right to left. Later, in the "America" episode, the natives (more or less on the same level of development as the Cro Magnon tribe) walk from ''left to right'', symbolizing that they, given the stated time slot, no longer are in progress.
104* ShoutOut: In the penultimate episode of ''Il était une fois... l'Homme'', the characters watch Creator/CharlieChaplin and WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse in the movie theater.
105* {{Slapstick}}: A lot of humor is based off of AmusingInjuries.
106* SleepsInTheNude: Episode 11 states that Medieval people slept nude; the narrator says it while showing a nude Pierre getting out of bed and getting dressed while a presumably also nude Pierrette sleeps next to him.
107* SolidClouds: A pilot in World War I dives out of the plane and lands on a cloud to catch his breath, before using the parachute to reach the ground.
108* StockSoundEffects: In ''Il était une fois... l'Homme'', sometimes movie or audio clips are used from 1920's and 1930's films, like ''Film/{{Faust}}'' by FW Murnau and ''Valentine'' by Creator/MauriceChevalier.
109* TotemPoleTrench: The second episode has two children use a grass skirt to look taller.
110* WalkThisWay: The episode for Louis XIV has one drill sergeant try to train new recruits. The instructor trips over a rock, tossing the rifle into the air, and hitting the other instructor. The three recruits do the exact same thing, landing their thrown rifles on the same instructor.
111* WilliamTelling: In the Viking episode, one of the contests Viking Pierre has with Viking Teigneux is shooting a ball off the son's head with a bow and arrow. Pierre succeeds, but Teigneux gets (understandably) hesitant; even when he fires his arrow within a foot from his son, he ends up shooting through Maestro's beard hair (though, thankfully, not his body).
112[[/folder]]
113
114[[folder:Once Upon a Time... Space]]
115* TwoDSpace: In the penultimate episode, the admiral of the Cassiopeian fleet talks several times about lines of ships, when in a three-dimensional space one would be talking of walls, even if both his fleet [[spoiler:and the Humanoid one]] are deployed so. As if [[SpaceIsAnOcean space was an ocean]].
116* AbsentMindedProfessor: Maestro as commented in the tropes for all series.
117* AlwaysChaoticEvil: General Pest, GloriousLeader of Cassiopeia -- said to be chosen because masses follow him. From using slaves to build a massive base in a planet near of a star close to going supernova (and when it happens preferring to save first the hardware and later the people) to allying with the Humanoids hoping to betray them later.
118%%* ArtificialIntelligence. The Great Computer.
119* ArtisticLicenseSpace: Despite this cartoon having an educational side teaching basic astronomical concepts, there're some examples of this trope. Most notably, the different alien races are said to come from different constellations -- examples include Auriga, Cassiopeia, Centaurus, and many others, with Cassiopeia even using the W formed by the brightest stars as seen from Earth as their symbol, when from their homestars those constellations would be unrecognizable as the stars that form them are usually at very different distances one of each other. This goes even further in the episode three ("The Green Planet"), where we see and are said how Cassiopeia controls several and even two crude starmaps showing those asterisms can be seen as background.
120* AsteroidThicket: Several examples, starting with Sol's one as appears quite prominently on the show's opening credits. Avoided, however, with the rings of Saturn who appear as dense as in RealLife.
121* BattleThemeMusic: Four different music pieces are used for combat scenes.
122* BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor: In the episode "A Planet Blown to Pieces", Le Gros wishes Kohler's Sun exploded as supernova as the Omega Confederation will be unable to complete in time its heavy cruisers to counter Cassiopeia's attack. Guess what happens shortly after.
123* BigCreepyCrawlies: The episode "The Giants" takes place in a planet inhabited by giant insects such as termites. There's a GiantSpider there, too.
124* CoolStarship: ''Lots'' of them, from the Cassiopeian Murene and Nautilus to the Omega Confederation heavy cruisers or the Ursus freighter.
125* CompilationMovie: In the early days of [[Creator/{{Nickelodeon}} Nickelodeon,]] they would sometimes broadcast a compilation movie of ''Revenge of the Humanoids'' on their weekend ''Special Delivery'' block.
126* ConstellationsAsLocations: Cassiopeia is said to control the neighboring constellations of Cepheus, Draco, and Andromeda, and aliens are described as coming from constellations such as Auriga or Centaurus.
127* CurbStompBattle:
128** [[spoiler:The near-complete destruction of the Cassiopeian Navy by the Humanoids in the episode "The Battle of the Titans".]]
129** [[spoiler:The ending of the series, with the Humanoids being destroyed by the beings of light met by Psi in the episode "The Infinity of Space" counts too.]]
130* DeflectorShields: There're at least two types: magnetic ones, used by the Confederation to deflect metallic asteroids, and subnucleonic ones, used by the Humanoids.
131* DoAnythingRobot: Metro, the robot built by Maestro and sidekick of the two main protagonists, who looks ''a lot'' like its maker. Of the many abilities it has, the most used are a pair of antennae that can be used to hack into another robots or computers, EyeBeams ({{Ray Gun}}s), wheels, and can open the plates of its body to become a helicopter.
132* DontMakeMeDestroyYou: The Humanoids demand that rather often, as they don't want to ''kill'' the livings else but conquer and educate them and know they have an overwhelming advantage in firepower.
133* EarthShatteringKaboom:
134** The Humanoids try their planet-destroying ship, actually formed of six smaller vessels that join together, with what looks like a Moon-like planet. [[spoiler:After defeating the Cassiopeians, the Great Computer menaces to do that with their homeworld if they do not surrender]].
135** There're two others involving stars, one of them natural when an unstable star (Kohler's Sun if memory is correct) goes supernova, in the episode "A Planet Blown to Pieces", and [[spoiler:the other of them induced by energy beings to destroy the Humanoid fleet in the last one.]]
136* EnergyBeings: Psi, the female protagonist who has psionic abilities, knows some of them [[spoiler:who destroy the Great Computer and its fleet in the last episode.]]
137%%* TheFederation: The Omega Confederation.
138* FictionalConstellations: The "constellation" of the Triton is actually a multiple star system formed by a red supergiant star orbited by a white dwarf and a red dwarf.
139* TheFuture: The show takes place in the year 3000.
140* TheFutureWillBeBetter: Even if there's evil aliens and other menaces, the show presents a galaxy where different alien races live in peace and the Earth is recovering (see HumansAreBastards below).
141* GettingHotInHere: At the beginning of the "Revenge of the Humanoids" story arc, the spaceship of Peter and Psi crash-lands on a desert planet and the internal heat regulator is busted. This leads the male and female leads to strip off their tops. The desert part of the trope is then averted when they venture outside, though, as they wear heat-repellent suits.
142* HammerSpace: Metro. As his maker within his beard, he stores a lot of things between the plates that make its body. He qualifies, too, as HyperspaceArsenal.
143* HollywoodTactics: Fleet officers of all sides seem to be very fond of having their ships flying in ''very'' compact formations, even if there's ''more than plenty'' of space to deploy their ships and if it's a ''very'' bad idea as can be seen next:
144** At the end of the episode "A Planet Blown to Pieces", when a fleet of five Cassiopeian warships go to the planet where they have their base [[spoiler:[[TooDumbToLive even if that planet was destroyed by the Kohler's Sun becoming supernova]]. The flaming meteors produced by the supernova (don't ask) impact in one of the ships blowing it up, its debris hitting the other four and destroying all but one of them.]]
145** "The Battle of the Titans" features even better ones starting with the (admittedly cool and even more with the background music) shots of the Cassiopeian navy marching to battle. [[spoiler:During the battle with the Humanoid fleet, the first shots of the latter destroy many ships of the first battle line (battle wall actually) being so tightly deployed. Much later, one unfortunate Nautilus is blown apart both by Humanoid fire as well as debris from another that was close and was hit at the same time. Finally, at the end of the episode, the ship where Pierrot and his crew landed and left explosive charges blows up apart destroying in a chain reaction what seems to be a sizable chunk of the Humanoid navy.]]
146* HumanAliens: Those prehistoric humans in one planet of the Andromeda Galaxy in "The Cro-Magnons".
147* HumanoidAliens: Some in the Omega Confederation and others not.
148* HumansAreBastards: The episode "The Long Voyage" features a ship launched by the Earth in the 21[[superscript:st]] century and that finds Omega. One of the things they bring is a set of what look like video tapes depicting the human species in a good, lighthearted and optimistic way, that are stolen by Cassiopeian agents and played in their planet. Among other things, the video starts with two hunters shooting a deer, continues showing a heavily polluted, over-populated planet and a '''''huge''''' traffic jam said to last more than a day and having beaten a previous record, and ends showing tanks and nuclear missile-launching trucks boasting with the high number of explosives per inhabitant on Earth.
149* HumanSubspecies: Some dialog and images (in the episode "Earth") suggest what seem to be alien races may actually be that.
150* InsignificantLittleBluePlanet: While the leaders of the Omega Confederation are humans, Earth itself is just a minor member of it.
151* InsufferableGenius: Metro. He's arrogant, always bragging of his ability to do various things better than humans and other robots, and then doing it, assuming he hasn't already done it. Best shown by the events of "The Revolt of the Robots" and "The Revenge of the Robots": in the first he declared he'd defeat [[DavidVersusGoliath the much larger combat robot Goldenbar]], and then, [[LampshadeHanging after reminding him of David and Goliath]], [[CurbStompBattle gave him an hilarious beating before]] [[LetsGetDangerous getting pissed at Goldenbar's one successful hit and brutally destroying it]]; after that battle he would sometimes brag about defeating Goldenbar until "The Revenge of the Robots", where he had to deal with the improved Goldenbar II and Goldenbar III, at which point he started bragging about destroying ''Goldenbar III'' (because Goldenbar II wasn't ''that'' hard to defeat, but Goldenbar III was).
152* TheJuggernaut:
153** The Nautilus warships of Cassiopeia are proved to be more than a match for the Omega warships, until the Confederation develops heavy cruisers to counter them.
154** The greatest Humanoid warships qualify too, [[spoiler:mopping the floor with an armada of Nautilus]].
155** The rocket featured in the episode "The Unstoppable Menace", launched by the Humanoids against Earth. Faster than any other ship of the Confederation (see below), impossible to intercept, and protected by a very powerful shield. [[spoiler:Pierrot and his friends are able to intercept it, slip through the shield, and change its course [[HurlItIntoTheSun to the Sun]]. Later is known the Humanoids planned to have it burning on Earth's atmosphere without hitting it -- unlike what Pest wanted.]]
156** The heavy cruisers of the Omega Confederation are presented as a ship able to defend against any threat. [[spoiler:They, however, never fire their weapons in anger during all the series.]]
157** On smaller scale, the combat robot Goldenbar III. Where Metro could inflict a CurbStompBattle on the first model and quickly found a way to blow up the second, Goldenbar III was impervious to anything Metro had. Unluckily for him, Goldenbar wasn't ''that'' bright, and Metro found ''four'' different ways to destroy it (because Goldenbar III could create up to four alter-egos. Two were destroyed in one go).
158* LightspeedLeapfrog: In an episode, the first interstellar spaceship from Earth -- a SleeperShip [[LostColony believed lost]] for nearly a millennium -- arrives unannounced to its destination, near Omega. The crew has to cope with the fact that humankind has already colonized space in their absence, and their thousand-year journey now takes about a week.
159* MasterComputer: The Great Computer.
160* MeaningfulName: [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yama Yama]], the planet from which the Humanoids come from.
161* NumberTwoForBrains: The Dwarf, Consul of Cassiopeia and General Pest's second-in-command. Besides serving as a representative of Cassiopeia for Omega and the Humanoids among others, in all the series he does little more than flatter Pest.
162* OldSchoolDogfight: Space battles follow this trope quite well, with ships being really close to each other when fighting ([[SeeTheWhitesOfTheirEyes within what seems as visual range]]) and moving -- the most maneuverable ones, at least -- like planes. For large fleet engagements, however, StandardStarshipScuffle applies.
163* OnlySaneMan: The few senators of Cassiopeia, who include a long-beard equivalent of Maestro, described as liberals, are against General Pest's militaristic antics and want to come back to the Confederation. They are worried about the alliance with the Great Computer, and finally are against going to war with Omega, even asking Pest to join forces with them against [[spoiler:The Great Computer's fleet when it sends an unconditional surrender message to Cassiopeia]].
164* TheParalyzer: Paralyzing guns are standard sidearms for the Space Police, although they have deadlier {{Ray Gun}}s too. Interestingly enough, the protagonists use the paralyzers against living targets; against non-living ones such as robots they use the lethal guns. As seen in "In the Land of the Dinosaurs", though, the paralyzers aren't terribly efficient against large predators, only affecting them for a few seconds.
165* PlanetOfHats: In several episodes the protagonists travel to planets that turn around this trope, such as a planet inhabited by the Greek Gods (episode "The Planet Mytho"), other by Incas (episode "The Incas"), and other by prehistoric humans -- oddly enough, this one is in the Andromeda Galaxy -- in "The Cro-Magnons".
166* PointDefenseless: The Nautilus as seen in the episode "A Planet Blown to Pieces". After finding how it's nigh invulnerable to the Omega warships attacking it as well as destroying one of their vessels, Pierrot has the ship where he's dodging the shots of the Nautilus and approaching it to point-blank range to torpedo the enemy ship down the throat.
167* RaptorAttack: "In the Land of the Dinosaurs" features a nest-raiding ''Deinonychus'' that looks more like a downsized ''Tyrannosaurus''. Later on, we see an ''Archaeopteryx'' that eats a lizard and then [[AlwaysABiggerFish falls prey to a constrictor snake]].
168* RobotWar:
169** [[spoiler:The conflict first between the Humanoid and Cassiopeian forces, and when the latter are defeated the one between the Humanoids and Omega]]. There're two other episodes ("The Revolt of the Robots" and "The Revenge of the Robots") where this trope appears too. [[spoiler:Both other instances are revealed to have been engineered by the Humanoids]].
170** There is another in the backstory of Earth: while Earth was recovering from WorldWarIII, computers had been put in control of most aspects of human life, only to become so pervasive and ''annoying'' that mankind at one point collectively decided to demolish them. While it was a fast war, as the computers' enforcers were all humans and just as pissed as the rest of mankind, that generated an ingrained mistrust of artificial intelligence that is both the reason for [[DoAnythingRobot Metro]] suffering from mild discrimination and is the indirect cause of the others.[[note]]The scientist who would go on and create the Great Computer was shunned for his ideas and practically ran out of the planet. Being a proud but good-willing individual he moved to another planet to develop his computers and robots, also helping a group of colonists when they arrived on his planet... Only for the colonists, due their mistrust of artificial intelligence, to trash his lab [[InsaneTrollLogic because he preferred to make extremely useful robots rather than use his limited physical strength]], at which point he started making ''combat'' robots to ''force'' mankind under the enlightened dictature of the Great Computer he built specifically for that.[[/note]]
171* SciFiWritersHaveNoSenseOfScale: In "Towards Andromeda", the Omega Confederation as well as Cassiopeia are implied to have arrived so far away as [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NGC_7052 NGC 7052]], a galaxy at around 190 million light-years from the Milky Way (assuming they're referring to what we know as NGC 7052 in RealLife). Also one of the races that form the Omega Confederation says to come from the Andromeda Galaxy itself, acting as proxies of Cassiopeia in the council fearing them.
172* ShapeShifterShowdown: Psi is prisoner of the Humanoids, and they try to interrogate her for information. To this end, they bring a Cassiopeian telepath who tries to read her mind, but Psi's own PsychicPowers proves to be a match. The ensuing BattleInTheCenterOfTheMind takes this form, the telepath first taking the shape of a giant rat in her mind, which she counters by turning into a cat. The caught rat then turn into a snake, and Psi counters with a coyote, etc. This quickly escalates to a battle between Kaiju-like monsters and dinosaurs.
173* ShoutOut:
174** One race that comes from the Andromeda Galaxy look like green-skinned Andorians (from ''Franchise/StarTrek''), and like them they're heavily militarized and aggressive (second only to the Cassiopeians).
175** There're also other shout-outs in the dialog, such as when the Computer greets the people from Omega using the phrase "Welcome to the [[Literature/RendezvousWithRama Rendezvous with Yama]]".
176** In the episode "Earth", we visit an Earth that is recovering of centuries of pollution and worse and there's an orbiting theme park named "Barillé's Land". Albert Barillé was the creator of the series.
177** Metro is described as a positronic brain android, the same as Creator/IsaacAsimov's robots.
178* ShownTheirWork:
179** In one of the episodes ("The Rings of Saturn") the protagonists visit the largest planets of the Solar System. While the moons of Jupiter are described in some detail showing the knowledge of them that existed at the epoch the cartoon was made (what the Voyager probes found there in 1979 and 1980 such as a ring around Jupiter or the volcans of Io), the moons of the others are described much more vaguely and even appear as nearly featureless orbs since at that time knowledge about that topic was very limited. This can be noted, too, in the opening credits.
180** The times given for the rocket that appears on the episode "The Unstoppable Menace" to cross the orbit of the different planets of the Solar System are consistent with it moving at around 240,000 kilometers per second (0.8 times the speed of light).
181** In the episode "A Planet Blown to Pieces" Maestro lists the supernovae that have taken place in the Milky Way. After mentioning the one that appeared in 1604 in Ophiuchus and while he's attempting to remember the next, he's interrupted and the conversation follows with another topic. The last ''recorded'' supernova that took place in our galaxy is [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SN_1604 SN1604]], in that constellation.
182* SleeperShip: The first interstellar mission to leave Earth, which arrives unexpectedly near Omega after [[LostColony having been though lost for a millennium]], was of this kind.
183* SpaceIsAir: See OldSchoolDogfight above.
184* SpaceIsNoisy: From the sounds made by the engines of ships to the one caused by their weapons. Not that it's exclusive just to this show, though.
185* StarfishAliens: Some alien races mentioned in the episode "The Cro-Magnons".
186* StartOfDarkness: The creator of the Great Computer started out as an InsufferableGenius at worst, and certainly he had many good points. When on Yama and helping the local colonists he was even considering revising his ideas... Then the colonists trashed his lab because [[InsaneTrollLogic he preferred to make extremely useful robots and have them do the hard work rather than using the limited physical strength of his aged body to do it himself]], and decided that sentients were just too ''stupid'' to be left unchecked and needed to be forced under the rule of the smarter Great Computer he built specifically for that.
187* {{Telepathy}}: Psi (also known as Mercedes or Kira in other languages).
188* TerrorDactyl: In "In the Land of the Dinosaurs", the protagonists get attacked by oversized ''Rhamphorhynchus''.
189* ThemeAndVariationsSoundtrack: The soundtrack of this series has some themes that follow this trope, being variants in different musical styles of a single theme (from synthesizer or jazz to chamber or orchestral music).
190* ThemeMusicAbandonment: Or maybe ExecutiveMeddling. In the Spanish doubling the title song and the ending credits song in the latest episodes were changed by the ''very'' different theme sang by ''Parchís'', a child band very famous in Spain at the time. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vN2wLbNYnHI See it]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ALN9zw9DxGU by yourself]]
191* TooDumbToLive: Psi in the episode "The Rings of Saturn". Her ship is chased by Humanoid fighters into the ([[AsteroidThicket dense as hell]]) Solar System's asteroid belt. After playing cat-and-mouse with them hiding among space rocks she decides to [[ScrewThisImOuttaHere enter hyperspace]] within the belt, ignoring Metro's warnings of that being a ''very'' bad idea. Of course she crashes into an asteroid. [[spoiler:After that, with the ship destroyed and Metro out of commission, and while near death she telepathically communicates with Peter and is rescued by him]].
192* TurnedAgainstTheirMasters: The robots in the episodes "The Revolt of the Robots" and "The Revenge of the Robots", both taking place in the same planet and wanting to be treated as humans.
193* WellIntentionedExtremist: The Great Computer and the scientist who created it, who offered it to their fellows as a way to have the humans living in peace. The scientist first proposed it to prevent the rise of new dictators (such as Pest, that came centuries after the proposal), and after being laughed out of Earth he moved to Yama, and when colonists arrived he tried to help them with his robots... [[InsaneTrollLogic Only for them to wreck his lab because he preferred do the most useful thing he could instead of coming out and building houses with his own hands and limited physical strength]], at which point he decided humans are ''too stupid'' to be allowed to be free and built combat robots to subdue the colonists on both Yama and the nearby Apis and force them to have limited technology, and then built the Great Computer to extend his control to the known space and ''find a better way to give them peace'' (the Great Computer hasn't succeeded yet, but it's experimenting).
194* WhatASenselessWasteOfHumanLife: [[spoiler:During the battle between the Cassiopeia and Humanoid fleets, and when their finest warships, the Nautilus-class, are being slaughtered by dozens, one of the officers onboard the flagship begs the admiral to think about how useless is the battle and how it's more of a suicide. In the same battle, the Humanoids tell ''two'' times their opponents to surrender, the third and last one coming with the threat of destroying their homeworld if they don't comply]].
195* WorldTree: A big, sentient tree found in one lush planet of the Pegasus sector without intelligent animal life, that appears in the episode "The Green Planet". It turns it dislikes those people who mess with nature.
196* WorldWarIII: According the episode "Earth", that narrates the backstory of that planet, there was that followed by a "Second Renaissance" (or something alike) -- an epoch of, by the way, [[CrystalSpiresandTogas Crystal Spires and Togas]].
197[[/folder]]
198
199[[folder:Once Upon a Time... Life]]
200* AnthropomorphizedAnatomy: Most of the characters are personification of white cells, red cells, microbes, virus, nutrients, and "workers" inside the cells themselves. They do look like the UniversalAdaptorCast of the other series in the franchise, and we do also see the humans whose activities lead to whatever drama happens inside their bodies.
201* BirthDeathJuxtaposition: Pierre's grandfather is very old. Inside his body, we see that things keep falling apart and repairs don't always work. The cells are shown to have aged. Once Pierre's grandfather passes away on his death bed, the cells all acknowledge that this is the end. After a TimeSkip, we see Psi has given birth to a baby boy. The cells inside the baby are young, even Maestro who has much shorter beard.
202* DiseasePreventionAesop: Frequent within the episodes, both on the human side of the show and within the body. For example by demonstrating the importance of physical exercise or vaccination.
203* EatingTheEnemy: The white blood cells look like comical policemen, but have no compunctions about devouring viruses and bacteria whole.
204* ExplosiveBreeder: Like its real-life counterpart, virus/Le Nabot attacks a cell, causing it to explode with hundred of copies of itself spreading out.
205* GhostInTheMachine: This metaphor is used extensively, up to the point that the nucleii of every cell in the body were represented by fully staffed command centers. Maestro runs the brain.
206* GRatedSex: The opening has Pierre's father and mother embracing while naked (you don't see their naughty bits). They both float in the air and merge into a sphere and fly far away into the sky. The sphere explode in a shower of bright lights and a young Pierre lands softly on the ground, also naked. As the opening continues, Pierre grows up into adulthood and at the end, he embraces Psi and the cycle begins anew.
207* HeroicSacrifice: Devouring too many hostiles will kill a white blood cell[[note]]Which is TruthInTelevision, as neutrophil white blood cells often die after phagocyting antigens[[/note]], but that doesn't deter them from rushing into battle.
208* {{Homage}}: To reflect how iodine is a rare but precious element for the human body, one character inspired by Creator/{{Moliere}}'s ''Theatre/TheMiser'' is seen hoarding iodine, like Harpagon was hoarding gold. More specifically, he looks like the version of Harpagon played by Creator/LouisDeFunes in his film adaptation of the play.
209* MissionControl: Maestro is in command inside the body and lay the orders to cells from his control room.
210* MonstrousGerms: Germs are portrayed as ugly blue humanoids with facial features resembling Le Teigneux, and viruses as yellow, worm-like creatures with faces resembling Le Nabot.
211* MrExposition: The three red blood cells show up in practically every episode to explain what's going on (with the old guy serving this trope while the two others being Watsons). Justified since blood vessels are connected to everything in the body.
212* NatureTinkling: The episode about the toxins ends with a child peeing in front of a tree.
213* {{Reincarnation}}: The cells and enzymes in the body mention "past lives", and we see a newly born red blood cell shaped like a kid version of Maestro after the one shaped like Maestro dies.
214* ShoutOut: The antibodies that fight against the tetanus toxins are spoofing ''Theatre/CyranoDeBergerac''.
215* SleepyHead: The chromosomes are always shown sleeping in beds.
216* StickySituation: The episode about the polluant toxins shows the enzyme responsible for gluing the RNA ribbons struggling with his big glue stick, ending up spreading the stuff everywhere and getting stuck in it.
217[[/folder]]

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