Huh. When I think of this trope, I automatically think of a two picture example. You show a non-Disney work, as well as showing the Disney work it resembles. I was quite surprised it was not set up this way.
Are we just assuming that everybody is familiar with what Disney works look like?
Everyone Has An Important Job To DoOut of curiosity, how long does a crowner usually last?
Regarding captions, this excerpt from Roger Ebert's Quest For Camelot review might work if someone knows how to trim it:
"Quest for Camelot, like so many animated features, is a template onto which superficially new characters are plugged. We need a young hero, and get one in Kayley, the brave teenage daughter of Lionel, one of Arthur's knights. Lionel of course is killed in an early scene while defending Arthur, because the heroes of animated films must always lack at least one parent (later, Kayley's mother is conveniently kidnapped).
We also need—let's see, a villain (Ruber, the evil and jealous knight), a villain's cruel sidekick (the wicked griffin) and a villain's good-hearted sidekick (Bladebeak the chicken). We need a young man to help the heroine on her quest (Garrett, the blind forest dweller), and a hero's noble friend (a silver-winged falcon) and the hero's low comedy team (Devon and Cornwall, the two-headed dragon). Then have Ruber steal the magic sword Excaliber, and have Kayley and Garrett try to recapture it, throw in some songs and a lot of animated action, and you have your movie."
edited 29th Jan '11 9:41:42 PM by dsneybuf
Crown Description:
Nominations for replacement images:

"Yet another animated Disney classi-wait, Warner Bros.?"