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Pee-wee's Big Adventure

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Pee-wee's Big Adventure (Film)
"There's a lotta things about me you don't know anything about, Dottie. Things you wouldn't understand. Things you couldn't understand. Things you shouldn't understand."
Pee-wee, describing himself

Pee-wee's Big Adventure is the 1985 big-screen adaptation of Paul Reubens' nightclub comedy act, starring Paul Reubens as Pee-wee Herman (though the credits say "Pee-wee Herman As Himself").

One day, Pee-wee's treasured bike is stolen by a rival Manchild. Desperate to get it back, he embarks on a cross country journey, meeting many bizarre characters along the way (and considering the sort of guy Pee-Wee Herman is, that's one hell of a mouthful).

Though ostensibly Reubens' baby, it's famously Tim Burton's feature directorial debut and then-Oingo Boingo frontman Danny Elfman's first score for a major motion picture. In fact, the three coming together was somewhat serendipitous: Burton and Reubens were huge fans of the 1980 no-budget cult film Forbidden Zone, which Elfman had scored, and their mutual love for the film not only convinced them to hire Elfman as the composer, but to base the entire film's quirky tone on it. The script was penned by Reubens and the late great Phil Hartman.

Followed by the children's TV series Pee-wee's Playhouse (1986-90) and the films Big Top Pee-wee (1988) and Pee-wee's Big Holiday (2016).


This film provides examples of:

  • Accidental Innuendo: In-Universe; Pee-wee tries to get Simone to realize her dreams by telling her, "Everyone I know has a big 'but'. Come on, Simone, let's talk about your big 'but'." After their conversation, Simone tells Pee-wee, "No one's ever put it to me like that before!" Simone's eavesdropping boyfriend is quite enraged by what he thinks he's hearing.
  • All Bikers Are Hells Angels: The "Satan's Helpers" are implied to be a rough and dangerous bunch, but they take a liking to Pee-wee's "Big Shoe Dance" once he starts smashing things. They can also identify with his quest for his stolen bike.
  • Ambiguous Criminal History: Mickey tells Pee-wee he got in trouble with the police because he got angry and used a knife to... cut off one of those mattress tags that say "Do Not Remove Under the Penalty of Law". While there's some indication that he amended his crime to avoid scaring Pee-wee, it's never elaborated on.
  • Ambiguously Gay: Mickey can't help but eye Pee-wee while he's Disguised in Drag, and parts ways with him using the same "I'm a loner..." speech that Pee-wee gives to Dottie earlier in the movie.
  • Ambulance Cut: After Pee-wee exits the biker bar and crashes through a sign. The ambulance is escorted by all the bikers on their bikes.
  • Anti-Hero: Pee-wee is bratty, selfish, and willing to go to obsessive lengths to get what he wants, but he's a Nice Guy at heart who befriends others easily and is capable of feeling guilt for his actions. He has the innocence of a kid, and all the bad behavior that comes with it.
  • Apathetic Citizens:
    • The movie clearly establishes the strip mall Pee-wee visits is busy - with hordes of people walking around, riding bikes and skateboards. However evidently no one seems to have said anything about a person cutting a hundred pounds of chain off of a bike and leaving with it.
    • Earlier, when Pee-wee is trying to hitch a ride to Texas, he at one point is literally collapsed on the ground like a dead body (either asleep or as a ruse to get someone to stop)... but the cars still just drive by.
  • Artistic License – Law: Pee-wee tries to sneak a file to Mickey in a hot dog at the end of the film. The police officer who catches it merely says "hold it," and then takes the file out, though actually attempting to break someone out of jail is fairly serious. Also falls under Rule of Funny.
  • Ascended Meme: That "The stars at night! Are big and bright!" call-and-response that Pee-Wee does to prove he's in Texas has become a popular thing to do at Dallas Stars games.
  • Attractive Bent-Gender: While Pee-wee is Disguised in Drag, both the cop that pulls him over and Mickey (who knows he's a guy) seem quite taken by him.
  • Author Appeal:
    • Burton's love of stop-motion animation appears twice in the film.
    • Similarly, Paul Reubens' love for vintage kitsch is on full display, particularly during the opening sequence in Pee-wee's house; many of the props came from his own personal collection.
  • Auto-Kitchen: Pee-wee has a kitchen equipped to prepare breakfast automatically, though it looks like a large amount of work to reset everything, and not too useful when all he eats is two pieces of Mr. T cereal. He's probably trying to watch his diet.
  • "Awkward Silence" Entrance:
    • Pee-wee enters a diner, but when he says, "Large Marge sent me", everyone drops what they're doing and turn towards him, all with shock and disbelief on their faces.
    • Pee-wee's entrance to the biker bar is ignored, but when he tries to shush them so he can use the phone, they all fall silent and stare at him incredulously.
  • Bad "Bad Acting": In the Show Within a Show that ends the film, Pee-wee mouths the actors' lines along with them and keeps glancing at the camera. At one point he can be seen glancing off camera (presumably at the director waving at him to get out of the shot) and then sliding partially out of view.
  • Bad Guy Bar: Home of "Satan's Helpers".
  • Beware of Hitchhiking Ghosts: Inverted. Pee Wee Herman is lost in the countryside and hitches a ride with a truck driver. Just after they get going, the driver tells him the story of a terrible accident she witnessed. At one point, she shows him how badly managled the driver's body was by shifting into a Nightmare Face. After she drops him off, she says "Be sure to tell 'em 'Large Marge sent ya!'" Pee Wee then walks into the nearest restaurant and tells the patrons "Large Marge sent me." They react in shock and horror and one tells him the same story of the accident. He also reveals that night is the anniversary of said accident which killed Large Marge. Pee Wee then realizes he got a ride from her ghost.
  • Big Red Devil: Pee-wee's second nightmare ends with his bike being taken to Hell, ruled by Francis as the Devil. There are other devils dancing around the giant cauldron.
    "Now. [dunking the bike into the fire] NOW!!!"
  • Big Shadow, Little Creature: We see an enormous shadow stretch across a wall at night, only to discover that it's our pint-sized hero Pee-wee storming down the street in a very bad mood.
  • Biting-the-Hand Humor: Done the climax. Pee-Wee Herman sneaks into the Warner Bros. studio to find his stolen bike and escapes on it, but ends up being chased by studio security guards. It then goes further than this when the studio strikes a deal with Pee-wee to turn his life story into a film called Pee-wee's Big Adventure. Unlike the "real" film, the fictional film is totally inaccurate - and instead of allowing Pee-wee to play himself, they cast James Brolin in the title role and only allow Pee-wee to do a cameo as a bellhop.
  • Brick Joke: When Pee-wee reports his bike stolen, we cut to a police officer asking "So what made you think the Soviets were involved?" Later, in the Show Within the Show, James Brolin's James Bond expy, "P.W. Herman" must reclaim his "bike" from the Soviets.
  • Bull Seeing Red: Andy goes after Pee-wee, who is riding a bull. The bull sees Andy's red shirt and chases him right out of the movie.
  • By the Lights of Their Eyes: Pee-wee, when hitchhiking through the desert at night.note 
  • The Cameo:
    • Director Tim Burton appears as the leader of the gang of thugs who threaten and are subsequently scared off by Pee-Wee near the beginning of the movie.
    • Twisted Sister is recording a music video during Pee-wee's chase across the backlots.
    • Pee-wee hides in Milton Berle's entourage to sneak into the Hollywood backlot.
    • The actor wearing fantasy armor in the Hollywood backlot is John Paragon, who played Jambi the Genie in Pee-wee's stage show and later in Pee-wee's Playhouse.
    • The bus clerk is played by John Moody, who played Mailman Mike in the original stage incarnation of The Pee-wee Herman Show.
    • The actress portraying Mother Superior on the Kevin Morton movie is portrayed by none other than Lynne Marie Stewart, who played Miss Yvonne in The Pee-wee Herman Show and, of course, Pee-wee's Playhouse.
    • The Badass Biker babe who says "I say you let me have him first" is played by Cassandra Peterson, aka Elvira, Mistress of the Dark.
    • James Brolin and Morgan Fairchild play "P.W." and Dottie, respectively, in the "movie within a movie" at the end.
    • In-Universe Pee-wee has a cameo as the bellhop in the movie based on him.
  • Celebrity Paradox: When Pee-wee first enters Mario's Magic Shop, a signed Elvira poster is visible on the wall. Cassandra Peterson cameos later on in the movie as the Biker Mama.
  • Celibate Hero: Pee-wee seems to be aware that Dottie has a crush on him but actively rebuffs her attempts at attaining a Relationship Upgrade with him. Despite this, it's hinted that they become a couple in the end, with two adorable matching doggies to boot!
  • Chekhov's Armoury: The magic shop. The only item to not see use in the movie was the Boomerang Bowtie. It's a deleted scene.
  • Chekhov's Gun: Pee-Wee buys several strange items at the magic shop at the beginning of the movie, including a boomerang bowtie. However, it is only used in a deleted scene, whereas most of the other items do get used in the movie.
  • Circle of Shame: "There's no basement in the Alamo!" - eveyone laughs at him, and a kid takes his picture.
  • Cloudcuckoolander: Pee-wee Herman, especially with all of his zany antics throughout the movie.
  • Coincidental Broadcast: Twice — the radio talking about Mickey's escape, and the TV talking about Pee-wee's bike at the hospital.
  • Cold Reading: When Pee-wee goes to the sham psychic Madame Ruby, he first demands that she tell him why he's there. She thinks for a moment before saying, "You're here because you... want something," which could apply to virtually anything. This satisfies Pee-wee. She then uses his wallet to make more informed statements.
  • Cold Turkeys Are Everywhere: With shades of Alone Among the Couples. After his bike is stolen, Pee-wee sulks on a bench in the strip mall as he watches bikes of various shapes and sizes (many comically so) go by.
  • Companion Cube: Pee-wee talks to his bike and treats it like it's alive. This is one of the reasons why he's so crushed when it's stolen. If it were just a cool bike, he could simply try to build another one.
  • Contrived Coincidence: Pee-wee is just randomly watching the right channel of television at the right time to see his bike.
  • Cool and Unusual Punishment:
    Lead biker: I say, we kill him.
    Rest of the gang: Yeah!
    Biker #2: I say we hang him then we kill him.
    Rest of the gang: Yeah!
    Biker #3: I say we stomp him!
    Gang: Yeah!
    Biker #3: Then we tattoo him!
    Gang: Yeah!
    Biker #3: Then we hang him!
    Gang: Yeah!
    Biker #3: And then we kill him!
    Gang: Yeah!
    Pee-wee (in a tiny voice): I say we let him go.
    Biker gang: NO!
    Biker Babe: I say you let ME have him first.
  • Cool Bike: The driving force of the whole movie is Pee-wee's quest to find his. The bike itself has rocket boosters, an Ejection Seat, can unleash an Oil Slick, and has spare handlebars pop out if one gets pulled off. Pee-wee's about to add a truck horn when the bike gets stolen.
  • "Could Have Avoided This!" Plot: The entire chase scene on the Warner Bros. lot could have been avoided if Pee-wee had just showed everyone the sign on his bike that said it belonged to him, proving it was stolen.
  • Crapsaccharine World: The movie begins with a typical day of breakfast and a bike ride to the shopping mall — and ends with Pee-Wee's bicycle being stolen and his becoming so distraught that he slowly goes deranged.
  • Crashing Dreams: Pee-Wee easily wins the Tour de France in his big coaster bike, in his gray suit — a crowd is gathered to watch him get crowned, an alarm bell sounds, everyone runs off, he stands there waiting, eyes shut, giddy with anticipation — then wakes up to the sound of his alarm clock.
  • Creator Cameo:
  • Dark Is Not Evil: Overlaps with Creepy Good. Large Marge may be a creepy truck driving ghost and all, but she's still rather nice, offering rides to hitchhikers. She delivers Pee-wee to the nearest diner without any sort of catch, and does nothing worse than spook him a little along the way (and even that seems to be solely so he can carry the message to her old buddies that she's still out there as a ghost).
  • Dead All Along: Immediately after she finishes giving Pee-wee a ride, Large Marge is revealed to have been the ghost of a trucker who died in a crash.
  • Deadpan Snarker: As goofy as Pee-wee acts, there are actually people out there that exasperate even him.
  • Déjà Vu: Earlier in the film, Pee-wee tells Dottie, "You don't want to get mixed up with a guy like me. I'm a loner, Dottie. A rebel." Later, after messing up driving Mickey, the escaped convict, Mickey tells Pee-wee the same thing, and Pee-wee responds, "Déjà vu!"
  • Demon Head: Large Marge's face morphs into one of these after she finishes telling Pee-wee her backstory.
  • Did Not Think This Through: Francis having Pee-wee's bike stolen falls into this. He clearly believed that just getting the bike meant he could enjoy it all he wants, and the thought that Pee-wee wouldn't stop searching for his lost bike didn't occur to him.
  • Ding-Dong-Ditch Distraction: A variation. After Pee-Wee's bike is stolen, he goes to Francis' house to get it back. However, Francis' butler refuses to let him in and closes the door in his face. After knocking at the door twice, we hear knocking a third time. The butler answers it to find Pee-Wee attached a robotic hand to the door to repeatedly knock on it while he snuck in another way.
  • Dirt Forcefield: Despite the vast array of filth and Gunge he encounters, Pee-wee's suit returns to spotlessness at the beginning of each new scene.
  • Disguised in Drag: Pee-wee. Both the policeman and Mickey seem to like what they see.
  • Disproportionate Retribution: Mickey claims to be on the run from the law for cutting a tag off of a mattress, though there's some indication that he's lying. Either way, Pee-wee sympathetically remarks "I always thought that was the dumbest law." after hearing it.note 
  • Dream Intro: The film begins with Pee-wee winning the Tour de France, but as the crown is about to be placed on his head, an alarm is heard, prompting everyone in attendance to just up and leave; we then fade to Pee-wee waking up to the sound of his alarm clock.
  • Drive-In Theater: Where Pee-wee and Dottie finally go on their date at the end. Also surrounded by the people he met along the way and where the movie about his trip hosts its premiere.
  • Early-Installment Weirdness: Since this was Tim Burton's first film, and he was working essentially as a hired gun to realize someone else's vision, so it doesn't have as many of his trademark flourishes. The Large Marge Jump Scare and the nightmare scenes are perhaps the most characteristic of his later work.
  • Ejection Seat: Pee-Wee's bike has an ejector seat, as Francis discovers. It delivers nothing but poetic justice.
  • "Eureka!" Moment: "Everyone wanted my bike. This morning, right before it got stolen, Francis offe- Francis!"
  • Evil Laugh:
    • Large Marge, twice. One right before she shows him what she looked like when the first responders showed up to her crash, and another when she tells Pee-wee to make sure he tells the diners that Large Marge sent him. Somewhat subverted in that while Large Marge is very creepy, she's actually far from evil, and is one of the few people in the film to give Pee-wee straightforward help moving along on his journey.
    • Devil Francis, when he lowers Pee-wee's bike into a vat of molten steel.
  • Exact Words:
    • At the end, Francis presses Pee-wee to let him sit on the bike by pointing out Pee-wee wouldn't have gone on his adventure or gotten his movie deal if it weren't for Francis' own actions. He is right in that if he hadn't had the bike stolen, Pee-wee wouldn't have gone through everything he did, something Pee-wee concedes.
    • When Pee-wee confronts Francis about his bike being stolen, the latter claims it wasn't him. Francis really didn't steal it, but he did hire someone to do so on his behalf.
  • Expy: Andy, Simone's brutish boyfriend, is pretty much Bluto.
  • Failed a Spot Check: While riding in Mickey's car, Pee-wee's bike is seen on a truck behind Pee-wee. Now if only he had turned around and not been bent on going on a Wild Goose Chase to the Alamo.
  • Fake Static: Pee-wee does this to avoid asking Dottie out to the drive-in. She seems to buy it.
  • Fat Bastard: Francis Buxton, Pee-wee's arch-nemesis.
    Pee-wee: I want to see Francis!
    Butler: Francis is busy.
    Pee-wee: Busy doing what?!
    Butler: He's having his bath.
    Pee-wee: Oh really, WHERE ARE THEY HOSIN' HIM DOWN?!
  • Foreshadowing: At the bike shop, Pee-wee tells the BMX bikers that he's doing some top-secret James Bond stuff to his bike. We later see that the bike has been outfitted with an Ejection Seat, rocket boosters, and a mechanism that can create an Oil Slick. The movie-within-a-movie also has Pee-wee, here portrayed by James Brolin, doing some actual James Bond stuff.
  • Foreign Culture Fetish: Simone the truck stop diner waitress and her adoration of the beauty and romance of France! She even gets a handsome, beret-wearing French boyfriend in the end.
  • Forgotten Phlebotinum: The boomerang bow tie. It only gets used in a deleted scene on the DVD, which extends the chase scene through the Warner Bros. studio lot. At one point, Pee-wee hides out on the set of an old western town, and as the guards make their way through, he tosses the bow-tie to disorient them long enough to allow him to slip away once again.
  • Fortune Teller: Madame Ruby offers palm reading, fortune telling, and income tax assistance. She's a crook who does a Cold Reading on Pee-wee, steals his wallet, and sends him on a wild goose chase to the Alamo.
  • The Friendly Texan: A scene where Pee-wee is at the Alamo and he calls his friend Dottie. In order to convince her that he's in Texas, he sings, "The Stars at night, are big and bright!" Cue the exuberant, friendly Texans all around him clapping the beat and singing the refrain, "Deep in the heart of Texas!"
  • Gadgeteer's House: Pee-wee Herman's home got itself an upgrade with a fully-automated breakfast-making machine.
  • Get Out!: Right after the car makes a soft landing:
    Mickey: Out!
    Pee-wee: But—
    Mickey: OUUUTTT!!
  • Ghost Story: Large Marge tells Pee-wee the story of a driver who died in a gruesome accident a decade earlier. Wether or not she was referring to herself or someone else, we don't know. Afterwards, the people at the diner tell Pee-wee one for one the very same story, and that it was her, and the "Large Marge" he was riding with was her ghost.
  • Greaser Delinquents: The thief hired by Francis to steal Pee-wee's bike is a greaser, wearing a typical outfit and hairstyle.
  • Greasy Spoon: The Wheel Inn beside the Cabazon Dinosaurs, which was a real diner but has since closed.
  • HA HA HA—No: This is Pee-wee's reaction to Francis wanting to buy his bike: Pee-wee falls to the ground, laughing uproariously. Francis asks him what's so funny, and Pee-wee stops laughing, rises to his feet and tells him sternly, "It's not for sale, Francis!"
  • Hammerspace:
    • Pee-wee pulls hundreds of pounds of chain out of that tiny bike compartment. This was rather infamously ruined in a version of the film re-cropped for home video, which reveals the chain being fed up from the hollow bottom of the compartment.
    • Where that magic store clerk must've pulled that giant head from.
  • Harmful to Hitchhikers: Subverted, then played straight.
    • Early on in his journey, Pee-wee hitches a ride with Mickey, who is quickly established as an escaped convict. However, he never harms Pee-wee and even lets him drive. When Pee-wee almost crashes the car, he still doesn't kill him but instead forces him to find new transportation; Mickey isn't entirely sure what Pee-wee swerved to miss, but he knows it isn't Pee-wee's fault, as he is aware of how utterly harmless Pee-wee is - he just doesn't want any more of the zaniness, nor does he want Pee-wee to get dragged into his run-ins with the law.
    • Much later, Pee-wee hitches a ride with Large Marge, again a scenario where the driver is far more menacing than the hitchhiker. In fairness, she does drop Pee-wee off at the nearest diner without physically harming him in any way... but not before scaring the hell out of him with her Nightmare Face, and even that seems partially so he'd tell her old buddies about her and make them realize she still is around in some form.
  • Heroic Fire Rescue: Peewee runs into a burning pet shop to rescue all the pets... including the snakes, although he waited until the last minute.
  • Hiss Before Fleeing: Parodied. Pee-wee is stalking down the street on a rainy night, slowly going insane from the theft of his bicycle. A group of gang members walk up and threaten him - and Pee-wee frightens them off with a feral hiss.
  • Historical Badass Upgrade: In-universe, when Pee-wee's life gets made into a movie, his film counterpart "P.W." Herman is portrayed as a James Bond-style super-spy badass played by James Brolin. The bike as well becomes an experimental vehicle of some sort called the X-1. Dottie becomes a sultry Morgan Fairchild who's the scientist Bond girl Expy love-interest.
  • Hobo: Pee-wee meets one of these in a train box-car.
  • Hostage-Handler Huddle: The biker gang Satan's Helpers all try to discuss what to do Pee-wee, not only for his barging into their club rudely, but also for his accidentally knocking over their parked motorcycles like dominoes:
    Biker #1: I say... we kill him.
    Bikers: Yeah!
    Biker #2: I say we hang him, then we kill him.
    Bikers: Yeah!
    Biker #3: I say we stomp him!
    Bikers: Yeah!
    Biker #3: Then we tattoo him!
    Bikers: Yeah!
    Biker #3: Then we hang him!
    Bikers: Yeah!
    Biker #3: And then we kill him!
    Bikers: Yeah!
    Pee-wee: [under his breath] I say we let him go.
    Bikers: No!
    [suddenly, there is the sound of someone whistling to get the bikers' attention; it's a female biker who comes up and grabs Pee-wee]
    Biker chick: I say you let me have him first!
    Bikers: [all laugh]
  • Hyperspace Wardrobe: Pee-wee apparently has the ability to insta-change both his own clothes and someone else's simply by saying, "I have a plan..."
  • I Meant to Do That: The Trope Namer. Pee Wee crashes his bike spectacularly in front of a couple of aloof kids, albeit ending up neatly on his feet at the end, giving the claim a little credibility. Although pratfalls had been a staple of comedy since the beginning of time, Pee Wee's priceless quip made this one famous in its own right.
  • Improvised Parachute: Pee-Wee and Mickey drive off a cliff, and the convertible top of their car serves as a parachute.
  • Inconsistent Spelling: In the DVD commentary, Reubens points out that Pee-wee's flyer incorrectly capitalizes the "W" in "Pee-wee."
  • Informed Loner: A running gag has people who try to ditch someone claim to be "a loner, a rebel..." Pee-wee says it to worm out of a date with Dottie, which is mirrored in the Film Within a Film. Mickey also ditches Pee-wee with the same words in an Ironic Echo.
  • Innocent Innuendo: Simone, the Greasy Spoon waitress, is overheard by her boyfriend Andy talking to Pee-wee. He assumes something else when Pee-wee says
    "Everyone I know has a big 'but'note . Come on, Simone, let's talk about your big 'but.'"
  • Instant Awesome Just Add Ninjas: In the movie-within-the-movie, P.W. Herman and Dottie are suddenly ambushed by ninjas. The studio apparently added them to Pee-wee's story to make it more awesome.
  • It's Always Mardi Gras in New Orleans: While on the run from Andy, Pee-wee smacks into a Mexican Day of The Dead parade and uses it to slip away.
  • Jail Bake: Not in a cake, but in a footlong hot dog.
  • Jaywalking Will Ruin Your Life: The hard-boiled Mickey character on the run after breaking out of jail. He is imprisoned for the crime of removing the "Do Not Remove" tag from a mattress.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold:
    • Pee-wee is very hostile to his friends and neighbors after his bike gets stolen and is often a bit of a smart aleck, but he's also capable of being an absolute sweetheart, particularly in his interactions with Simone, and he eventually apologizes to Dottie for his initial outburst.
    • Mickey is established as a hardened criminal early on, but he never harms Pee-wee, and he kicks him out of his car because he knows Pee-wee is too innocent for his own good and doesn't want him to get mixed up in his run ins with the law.
  • Karma Houdini: The thief Francis hired to steal Pee-wee's bike vanishes from the film, having received his money to steal and dispose of it.
  • Last Request: The title character asks an angry biker gang for a last request before they kill him. They agree, and he uses a jukebox to perform his signature Big Shoe Dance. This impresses the gang so much, that they not only decide to let him live, but help him out.
  • Lemming Cops: The security guards at Warner Bros. take chase (and crash rather impressively) instead of just cutting off all the studio exits. They crash into signs, giant props, and fly through the sets while filming was in progress.
  • Line-of-Sight Name: How Pee-wee gets duped by a fortune teller into going on a wild goose hunt to the Alamo.
    "The Alamo! In... the basement."
  • Lighter and Softer: The film is the halfway mark between Paul Reubens' original nightclub act and the TV show he developed afterwards. The nightclub act presents itself as a kids' show but has raunchy humor in it for adults. The film has a few lightly risque jokes but is otherwise pretty family friendly. The TV show is firmly aimed at kids, though with an occasional innuendo designed to go over the kids' heads.
  • Like Reality, Unless Noted: The world seems to mildly run on Cartoon Physics. Big-budget Hollywood studios film their movies in the same manner as very-early silent films. Cars' convertible canopies can act as parachutes. Chimps are sold as pets in pet stores. Tiny bike horns can emit massively-loud truck horn sounds. Ghosts in ghost vehicles can transport living flesh-and-blood people. Attempting to break an acquaintance out of prison will just get you a disapproving look from a prison guard. Said prison will happily take a presumably-dangerous convict to see a movie based on an acquaintances' life. A major Hollywood studio would be willing to forgive you for trashing the entire studio in exchange for creating a movie about your adventure (which will be retconned as a cheesy spy flick).
  • Loud Gulp: Pee-Wee, when he learns that Large Marge is a ghost.
  • Magnetic Hero: For a given value of "hero", of course, but Pee-wee has a striking knack for befriending nearly everyone he meets on his quest (with the notable exception of Andy), and seems exceptionally well-liked in his hometown by everyone but Francis (including numerous characters who seem like types who would antagonize him in a more cynical film, like a gang of cool BMX-riding kids and his elderly neighbor). Both his new friends and the friends he already had in his hometown all come together in the end to cheer him on at the premiere of his movie.
  • Manchild: Pee-wee and his archnemesis Francis Buxton. It's never clear whether they're supposed to be childish men or actual juveniles played by adult actors. Pee-wee is referred to as a "boy" several times.
  • Matchlight Danger Revelation: Taken to the extreme, when Pee-wee discovers that he's surrounded by every animal in the desert.
  • Mattress-Tag Gag: The reason Mickey is a wanted criminal, or so he tells Pee-wee.
  • Mickey Mousing: Danny Elfman's score often includes musical stings for actions that occur on screen, such as when Pee-wee attempts a wheelie and when he knocks on the front door of Francis's home.
  • Missed Him by That Much: Pee-wee's bike is being towed on a trailer, as he's riding alongside it in Mickey's car, but he fails to turn his head and see it. Had he did, Pee-wee's adventure would've ended much sooner.
  • Monster Clown: Pee-wee's nightmares are full of them, due to the fact that his bike was stolen while chained to a clown statue.
  • Motorcycle Dominoes: Caused twice by Pee-wee, first with bicycles in Dottie's store, then later with the Satan's Helpers' hogs.
    Pee-wee: I barely touched them!
  • Mythology Gag: The giant bald head that Mario pulls out is a recreation of the head of Pee-wee's Doctor Mondo puppet from his stand-up and stage show. Both are modeled after Aleister Crowley.
  • The Name Is Bond, James Bond: "P.W." Herman announces himself this way in the movie of the movie.
    "Reservation under Herman... P.W. Herman."
  • Nice Character, Mean Actor: The nasty child star playing the sweet little orphan boy in the film where Pee-wee's bike is a prop.
  • Nightmare Face:
    • Large Marge tells a story of the night a trucker crashed, and she shows exactly what they looked like.
    • The various evil clowns in one of Pee-wee's nightmares.
  • Nightmare Sequence: Pee-wee's nightmares.
  • No, You: "I know you are, but what am I?"
  • #1 Dime: The whole plot is about Pee-wee looking for his tricked-out bike, which Pee-wee loves more than anything in the world and everyone else seems to think is pretty awesome as well.
  • Object Ceiling Cling: Done intentionally. He has a breakfast machine Rube Goldberg Device that prepares pancakes and flips them onto the ceiling. In the end, he catches them on a plate, neatly stacked.
  • Odd Friendship: Pee-wee is a bratty Manchild yet has no problem befriending virtually everyone he meets on his journey, including those whom you'd assume would hate his guts. Particular standouts include the hardened criminal Mickey and the Badass Biker gang the Satan's Helper's. In fact, one of the only characters in the movie who doesn't come around to liking Pee-wee is fellow Man Child Francis, and this is explicitly due to him being jealous of Pee-wee rather than him having any problems with his personality.
  • Oh, Crap!:
    • Accident or not, Pee-wee knows that knocking over the badass bikers Harleys is forfeiting his life.
    • Everyone at the diner falls silent when Pee-wee said "Large Marge sent [him]".
      Trucker: Did-did you say Large Marge?
      Pee-wee: She just dropped me off.
      Trucker: That's impossible. Large Marge? She's...
    • Pee-wee has another when he sees Andy for the first time, and again later when he sees Andy at the ticket station.
    • Andy himself has one when he realizes the bull that Pee-wee was riding notices he's wearing red.
  • One of the Kids: Pee-wee, as well as Francis; assuming they aren't supposed to be kids.
  • Out-of-Context Eavesdropping: Pee-wee and Simone talk about her "big 'but,'" the thing holding her back from following her dreams. Simone's eavesdropping boyfriend mistakes their conversation for pillow talk and attacks Pee-wee.
  • Phony Psychic: Madame Ruby's precognition is limited to Line of Sight Naming. Pee-wee's whole trip to the basement of the Alamo is entirely due to her pulling a random combination of words out of her ass so he'd pay her.
  • Photo Identification Denial: At the traffic stop, Pee-wee (in drag) and his escaped convict pal (in disguise) are shown a picture of... the escaped convict pal. The convict, thanks in part to Pee-wee's over-the-top cutesy shenanigans, successfully fools the police officer into believing that he doesn't recognize his own photo.
  • Precision F-Strike: A PG variant, and only shocking because of who's saying it: when Dottie offers an especially emotional Pee-wee a good deal on a new bike, he snaps back at her "I don't want some other crappy bike!"
  • Prisons Are Gymnasiums: Pee-wee asks Mickey what "the big house" is like.
    Mickey: You get to lift weights, watch TV, write up appeals, take long showers, lift weights. You get used to it.
  • Privileged Rival: Francis has his father buy him everything he wants. His rivalry with Pee-wee is rooted in the fact that, as Pee-wee's bike is one-of-a-kind, it's the only thing he can't have.
  • Puny Parachute: When Pee-Wee drives Mickey's Edsel convertible off a cliff, after several seconds of screaming, he raises the top, which balloons out a small amount and floats the two-ton car to a soft landing.
  • Real Dreams are Weirder: Waitress Simone confides her wishes to break free:
    Simone: Do you have a dream?
    Pee-wee: Yeah. I'm all alone. I'm rolling a big doughnut, and this snake with a vest...
  • Reasonable Authority Figure: Mr. Buxton. Aside from clearly spoiling the hell out of his son Francis, he seems like a pretty decent guy and evidently has no idea Francis was behind the theft of Pee-wee's bike (because Francis was clever enough to set up an alibi and hire someone else to steal it). In response to Pee-wee trespassing into their house and attacking his son, Mr. Buxton is willing to leave it all as water under the bridge so long as Pee-wee apologizes to Francis and the two shake hands. Of course, Pee-wee still pranks him with trick gum anyway...
  • Remember the Alamo!: Parodied. As Pee-wee Herman searches for his missing bike, he is told that the bike can be found in the Alamo's basement, but he is told there is no basement in the Alamo. Later, he tries to hide from a bully by disguising himself as a cowboy — and is promptly put in a rodeo, with the bull he is riding violently knocking him off so hard that he is knocked out. He is revived, but he has trouble remembering who he is or where he came from. Asked if he can remember anything at all, he says, "I remember... the Alamo." Everyone tending to him cheers.
  • Rent-a-Zilla: Subverted here, as during Pee-wee's backlot chase scene the monster movie set he rides through features the actual Godzilla fighting the actual King Ghidorah (using the actual sound effects, no less), for which Warner Bros. was sued by Toho.
  • Rewatch Bonus: The Large Marge sequence is one. At first viewing, she's simply a creepy old woman who gives a nightmare face jump-scare. But watching it again, it's easy to see all the signs that she's actually a ghost; namely that she never acknowledges Pee-wee while driving him until she drops him off, she talks only about a horrible accident (the same one that led to her death), the aforementioned nightmare face, and that she never actually blinks.
  • The Rival: Francis Buxton, the other resident Manchild on the block, who regularly antagonizes Pee-wee.
  • Rube Goldberg Device: What Pee-wee uses to make his breakfast, as seen here.
  • Rules of the Road: Pee-wee passes increasingly absurd signs while driving at night.
  • Sanity Ball: Despite being a childish Cloudcuckoolander with a mean streak, Pee-wee assumes the role of the Only Sane Man in most scenes after he hits the road by virtue of all the people he runs into being even weirder than he is.
  • Juxtaposition Gag: Santa Claus and Godzilla. Together at last!
  • Scare Chord: When the diner patrons tell Pee-wee the identity of "Large Marge".
  • Self-Deprecation: Warner Brothers Studios portray their productions as being ludicrously cheap and shoddy-looking on top of being incredibly trite during Pee-wee's visit to their sets.invoked
  • She Cleans Up Nicely: After spending most of the movie in Wrench Wench coveralls, Dottie wears a ravishing pink dress and then a similarly stunning red one during her final few scenes. Although still not exactly devouring the eye candy, our Celibate Hero seems a little more willing to spend time with her.
  • Shout-Out:
    • Large Marge is an homage to the classic ghost story of Big Joe (also the subject of an old song called "Phantom 309"). Unlike Marge, Joe is a friendly fella who tells a similar story but doesn't try to scare his passengers, and gives them money to eat at the diner where he drops them off.
    • Pee-wee's "I'm a loner, a rebel" speech is from Rebel Without a Cause.
    • When Pee-wee is being chased though a Tarzan set on the Warner Bros. lot, he does the trademark yell at one point... then one of the security guards does it.
    • When Pee-wee gets chased throughout the studio on his bike, a variation of the Wicked Witch's theme from The Wizard of Oz plays throughout.
  • Show Within a Show: The movie based on Pee-wee's life at the end.
  • Signs of Disrepair: Pee-wee crashes through a sign reading "Apache Bar" on a motorcycle. He takes out the second and third letters of "Apache", leaving it to say "Ache Bar".
  • Sly Exaggerated Wink: In the magic shop, Pee-wee uses X-ray glasses to look at an attractive woman, then removes them and gives her a very obvious wink. Later, when he hands Mickey a hot dog with a file inside, he announces "One...footlong!", then gives several very obvious winks.
  • Snipe Hunt: Pee-wee's entire trip to Texas - despite being the driving force of over half the movie - is this. There is no basement in the Alamo; the fortune teller came up with the lie by line of sight to convincingly rip Pee-wee off.
  • Spiking the Camera: Done in-universe. In the Show Within a Show at the end, when Pee-wee is having a cameo as a bellhop, he can't help himself but glance at the camera and corpse all throughout the scene. Then he glances off to the side and slides mostly out of frame, as if the director was frantically motioning him to get out of the shot and stop ruining the take.
  • Squirting Flower Gag: Pee-wee goes to the joke shop to "stock up". One of the things he buys is a squirting flower.
  • Stop Copying Me: The argument between Pee-wee and Francis becomes this after Pee-wee says, "Infinity".
  • Stout Strength: Andy the jealous boyfriend is a giant of a man with great strength and an impressive gut.
  • Strange Minds Think Alike: When describing the accident that killed Large Marge, both her ghost and the patron at the diner claim the collision sounded like "a garbage truck falling off the Empire State Building."
  • Stylistic Suck:
    • The movie that is made at the end is an over the top action movie, where the Soviets have stolen P.W.'s top secret motorcycle, and random ninjas attack.
    • Warner Brothers Studios movies in production (a 'Beach Party' movie, a 'Christmas/Santa/North Pole' movie, a Japanese 'Godzilla' flick, etc.) are depicted as cheesy affairs filmed on small sound-stages with cheap painted backdrops.
  • Take the Wheel: A very low-key example, as Mickey has Pee-Wee hold the wheel while he lights a cigarette driving down the highway. It takes maybe five seconds, but Pee-Wee is on the verge of panic.
  • They Wasted a Perfectly Good Sandwich: Played for comedy. After Pee-wee uses his Rube Goldberg device to make "Mr. Breakfast," consisting of pancakes, eggs, bacon, and a strawberry, he dumps a pile of Mr. T cereal on top of it, eats two small bites of cereal, and leaves.
  • Too Dumb to Live: Pee-wee, in a bar full of murderous bikers, shouts, "Shhhh! I'm trying to use the phone!"
  • Train-Station Goodbye: The movie features a bus depot goodbye as Simone (the waitress he befriended earlier) waves goodbye to Pee-Wee as she goes on her way to Paris, complete with handkerchief.
  • Tsundere: Pee-wee spends most of the movie being rude to and dismissive of Dottie, but he accepts her request to go on a date to the drive-in by the end, and the two end up Riding into the Sunset together at his suggestion.
  • Uncanny Valley Makeup: The doctor who eviscerates Pee-wee's bike in his nightmare.
  • The Unintelligible: Simone's boyfriend, a giant, oafish, Bluto-esque guy who's dialogue consists entirely of "RAAAAHHHRRR!"
  • Universal Group Reaction: After hitching a ride with a trucker named Large Marge, Pee-wee goes into a bar and tells them that Large Marge sent him. One patron explains that Large Marge died in a fiery crash (which she'd told Pee-wee about as a third person). Pee-wee looks astonished and say it must have been, prompting the whole bar to state the obvious at once, "Her ghost!"
  • Vague Age: Pee-wee lives on his own and is rather obviously played by a grown man, but is consistently referred to as "boy" by other characters; it's unclear whether he's simply a Manchild or if Artistic Age is in effect and he is in fact Younger Than He Looks. The same goes for his rival Francis (producers wanted Corey Feldman for the role, who was barely in his teens).
  • Very Loosely Based on a True Story: In-Universe. Pee-wee's story about traveling cross-country to find his missing bike gets turned into a cheeseball action flick where James Brolin and Morgan Fairchild have to recover an experimental motorcycle stolen by ninjas, before the Soviets can intercept a top-secret microfilm stashed inside.
  • Vine Swing: While eluding the security squad in the movie studio lot, Pee-Wee vine swings over a large pond, on his bike, doing a high-pitched little Tarzan yell. A security guard in pursuit tries to do likewise, but misses the vine and goes into the water halfway through his Tarzan impression.
  • Visual Pun: As part of his morning routine, Pee-wee weighs himself on his bathroom scale. Turns out he's a literal 98-pound weakling.
  • Vocal Dissonance: Pee-wee's voice is dubbed when he makes his cameo in the movie based on his life. Needless to say, it sounds ridiculous.
  • Wham Line: After being dropped off by Large Marge at a diner, Pee-Wee, at her insistence, tells them that she sent him there. Everyone else reacts in horror & disbelief. One of the patrons then describes how ten years ago a woman died in a horrible accident, and shows a memorial dedicated to her… the same Marge who drove Pee-wee:
    Pee-Wee: But that means the Large Marge I was riding with was…
    Patrons: Her ghost.
  • What Happened to the Mouse?: Fortune teller Madame Ruby and the thief Francis paid vanish from the narrative despite both having stolen from Pee-wee.
  • When the Planets Align: After his bike is stolen, Pee-wee has all his friends assemble in his basement as he manically pieces together clues to the crime — including planetary alignment.
  • Whole-Plot Reference: The film can be seen as a Denser and Wackier remake of Bicycle Thieves.
  • Who Would Want to Watch Us?: The movie ends with a producer turning his story into a movie - an action thriller with James Brolin as "P.W.", Morgan Fairchild as his geeky girl-pal Dottie, and a high-end motorcycle as his bike. He leaves early at the premiere:
    Dottie: But Pee-Wee, don't you wanna watch the rest of the movie?
    Pee-Wee: I don't have to watch it, Dottie... I've lived it!
  • Why Did It Have to Be Snakes?: One of the animals sold in the burning pet shop are snakes, which Pee-wee is rather squeamish about touching. When there's no other animals left to be saved, he grabs as many as he can and runs out of the building screaming. According to the DVD commentary, Paul Reubens really is afraid of snakes. Those screams weren't fake.
  • Work Off the Debt: Pee-wee washes dishes for his meal at a diner after discovering that he left his wallet at Madam Ruby's.
  • Wrench Wench: Dottie, Pee-wee's Love Interest, works at a bike shop and is noted to be great at repairing them. Pee-wee's Cool Bike is implied to have at least in part been built by her, and judging by some of the bike's abilities (self-replacing handlebars, deployable oil slicks, jet propulsion), she's also got shades of Gadgeteer Genius mixed in.
  • X-Ray Vision: Jokingly used by the title character. While fooling around in Mario's Magic Shop, Pee-wee dons a set of novelty X-Ray glasses and pretends to ogle a female customer, capping it off with an approving thumbs up. The customer only responds with a look of vague annoyance.

 
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The Brat With The Bike

Pee Wee's bike is used as a prop in a movie about a sweet orphan boy, who is played by a bratty child star.

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