![]() ![]() The attempt was unsuccessful, and police reported no increased volume of calls afterward. The glasses were included because when BTK murdered Nancy Fox, there was a pair of glasses lying upside down on her dresser police felt that seeing the glasses might stir up remorse in the killer. The subliminal message included the text "Now call the chief", as well as a pair of glasses. In 1978, Wichita, Kansas television station KAKE-TV received special permission from the police to place a subliminal message in a report on the BTK Killer (Bind, Torture, Kill) in an effort to get him to turn himself in. ![]() These are instances of subliminal messages that have led to controversy and occasionally legal allegations. ( Learn how and when to remove this template message) ![]() JSTOR ( August 2010) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message).Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.įind sources: "Instances of subliminal messages" – news Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Nevertheless, the discovery of the topless frames led to the recall of around 3.4 million videotapes when the film was released on VHS in 1999 - and an apology from Disney.This article needs additional citations for verification. The two images, one per frame, could not be seen in ordinary viewing because the film runs too fast - at 30 frames per second on video. This is perhaps the most subliminal of all Disney’s adult moments, but it’s also the one that’s hardest for them to explain away.ĭuring the scene in which Miss Bianca and Bernard are flying on Orville’s back through New York City, two images of a topless woman are present in the background. Yes, Disney’s habit of filth-ifying their films stretches all the way back to the 70s, with this 1977 family favourite. ![]() Our suggestion: get off the computer, fellas, and go take a walk outside. Pausing the film frame by frame, as the YouTube user below felt it necessary to do, one can see that Jessica flashes rather more skin during the crash than is appropriate for a kid’s film.Įven today, Jessica Rabbit fans online still debate whether or not Jessica Rabbit is wearing underpants in this scene. Sure, she was a cartoon, but a lot of people still had the hots for Jessica Rabbit, star of the 1988 live action/animated hybrid Who Framed Roger Rabbit? Seems Disney were happy to play up to her sex appeal: in this scene from the film, Jessica and her human co-star Bob Hoskins are ejected from a car following a cartoony crash. Those with purer minds than us insisted that the fulsome trouser-mountain was actually the priest’s knobbly knee - but, as with Aladdin, Disney thought it best to quash all rumours by digitally removing the offending pants-tent from the DVD release of the film. The short, stumpy Bishop marrying the pair has an unsightly bulge in his trousers that suggests he’s REALLY happy to be there. At the end of this 1989 flick, a disguised Ursula walks up the aisle to marry Prince Eric. Nobody loves weddings more than this priest, it would seem. Animator Tom Sito insists that the letters actually spell ‘SFX’, an in-jokey ‘hello’ from the film’s art and special effects (or ‘SFX’) department. Scandal!Īn animator on the film has confirmed that yes, there was indeed a word intentionally spelled out in the dust - but it’s not what you think, filthy viewers. For a moment, the dust seems to form into the letters: S-E-X. As Lion King Simba slumps on the ground, he sends a cloud of dust swirling up into the night sky. This moment in the 1994 hit was paused on many a kid’s VHS copy. As the shot cuts away, we can still hear Aladdin stammering to the angry tiger in the background - including what sounds suspiciously like the line, ‘Good teenagers, take off your clothes’.ĭisney claimed that the actual line was ‘Good kitty, take off and go,’ - but did replace it with the phrase ‘Down, kitty’ for the DVD release of the film. There’s a scene in this 1992 children’s classic in which Aladdin tries to woo Princess Jasmine on her balcony, only to be confronted by her tiger. Here are five Disney flicks that seemed to slip rude little surprises past the censors: If you’re a child of the ‘90s, you might have heard the playground whispers that your favourite Disney flicks harboured blink-and-you-miss-em moments that weren’t exactly G-rated. There’s a perfectly innocent explanation for the code - but some viewers allege Disney used to have a much less innocent habit of sticking subliminal messages into their films. YESTERDAY we uncovered the truth behind the mysterious code that appears in countless Pixar and Disney films, ‘A113’. ![]()
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