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Also Clumsy was promoted to the main character hero in the live-action movie.

  • Balcony Speech: King Smurf in the comic book story of the same name (and its Animated Adaptation) delivers one from the balcony of his newly-finished royal palace, thanking his "loyal" subjects for its completion. You know? This is a big plot point throughout the movie.

    smurf gay

    in fact, many of the albums seem to be about a new idea or trend coming to the village, winning over the Smurfs (with Papa Smurf as the Only Sane Smurf), before leading to widespread chaos and the ultimate conclusion that the status quo is actually better.

  • Stern Chase
  • Stewed Alive: Gargamel's original plan in the comics was to make a potion to create a Philosopher's Stone.

    In Beauty Is Only Smurf Deep, Vanity chooses to befriend the vain, beautiful pixie princess rather than seducing her. Throughout the story in the original comic book version, the Smurfs keep him asleep during their travels to and from the extinct volcano by making him drink more of the potion.

    • Papa Smurf in the comic book story "The Smurfs And The Book That Tells Everything" was given a glass of smurfonade after he had collapsed and was brought back to the village, which was laced with a formula that the book gave to Lazy for curing insomnia.

      Unfortunately, Brainy had cut corners in completing the transformation formula Papa Smurf used to transform the Smurfs into Swoofs, so they changed back a bit too soon, revealing to Dreamy that he had never really traveled to the stars.

  • Feathered Fiend (type C): The Cracoucass/Howlibird, a giant mutant bird that laid waste to the Smurf village.
  • Flight: The main method of air travel for the Smurfs is to ride storks.

    (Their stories in the Johan and Peewit series could be considered a fifth continuity, since their Smurf Village is located in the Cursed Land instead of the Smurf Forest.) Sometimes for the sake of merchandise like the Smurfs Village game app, there would be mixing of characters from most if not all of these continuities.

  • Always Lawful Good: The Smurfs can be the embodiment of negative emotions like greed or pride, but in the end, they'll always do the right thing.
  • Ambiguously Gay: Vanity Smurf.
    • This gets hinted at in the comic book story Bathing Smurfs as Vanity and another Smurf sit with each other at Handy's new private beach resort, with the other Smurf commenting that it's a great place to "watch the Smurfs".
    • In the cartoon show episode "Hats Off To Smurfs", Vanity is told to "come out of the closet" when Papa Smurf wants to examine his face after Vanity put on a strange hat that disfigured it.
  • Anachronism Stew: Numerous references to chocolate are mentioned in "The Dark-Ness Monster." The thing is, chocolate was unknown in Europe until it was imported from the Americas in the early 16th century, and the background of the Smurf cartoon series is the late Middle Ages.
    • Same thing with the comic books, such as You Don't Smurf Progress.
    • More a case of the Smurf Forest being a fantastical setting, since "The Dark Ness Monster" reveals that the Smurfs get their chocolate from the pools of the Dark Ness Cavern.
      • The Chocolate can be Hand Waved, - the balloons that also show up in the episode cannot, unless you want to say "they invented it first".
  • And I'm the Queen of Sheba:
    • In Smurf Versus Smurf, when Papa Smurf has switched bodies with Gargamel (long story), and the smurfs have caught not-Gargamel, he reveals that he's really Papa Smurf.

      In the 1981 TV series it's Smurfberries.

    • TV Genius: Brainy Smurf.
    • Tyrant Takes the Helm: King Smurf's arc. For obvious reasons, the Hanna-Barbera cartoon The Smurfs and most other adaptations of the story have the infected Smurfs turn purple.
    • David Versus Goliath: Usually played straight in that the Smurfs always win against Gargamel.

      Narrator from the film series and Snappy and Slouchy Smurfling are the only male Smurfs that avert this trope.

    • Warp Whistle: The magic whistle in "Traveling Smurf" and its Animated Adaptation episode "Dreamy's Nightmare".
    • We Are as Mayflies: The Smurfs are definite long-livers compared to humans — they can live up to 600 years (Grandpa Smurf is a few centuries beyond that) and still remain active and sprightly.

      In episodes like Romeo and Smurfette Smurfette contemplates choosing a husband but realizes that she could not choose a single smurf to marry. An adventurous Smurf built himself a space rocket but couldn't even get it to take off. They did appear in the comics that were issued in the short-lived Schtroumpf! magazine, though

    • A lot of the spin-off merchandise have Smurf characters who don't appear in either comic or cartoon.
  • Captain Ersatz: Wild Smurf is essentially Tarzan as a Smurf, and Don Smurfo was Zorro as a Smurf.
  • Casual Interstellar Travel: Failed.

    Done several times.

    • One time in the 1981 cartoon show, Jokey was magicked so that his surprises actually contained gifts.
    • In the comics, Slouchy Smurfling turns Jokey's prank against the jokester, then shrugs the prankster off by calling him and his old prank as something outdated.
  • Ghibli Hills
  • Giftedly Bad: Harmony Smurf.

    Apparently they interpreted the "essentials" to mean everything that they couldn't live without, as Papa Smurf sees that they're ready to take the whole village with them!

  • Ludd Was Right: Whenever a Smurf decides to bring a new technology or system that is meant to make their lives easier, it will always be dropped by the end.
  • Mad Libs Catch Phrase:
    • Grouchy Smurf: "I hate (X) !"
    • Dopey Smurf confusing an object with another: "Bring me a (X)!" "Sure." "No!

      It is not a swear-word replacement but is somet-, usu-, ALL THE SMURFIN' TIME parodied as such.

    • Explosions in Papa Smurf's workshop.
    • Papa Smurf leading the other Smurfs on a long journey.

    The Smurfs in all forms of media provide examples of the following tropes:

    • Absurdly Ineffective Barricade: In the comic book story "The Smurfs And The Howlibird" (and its Animated Adaptation), a Smurf tries to keep the Howlibird from destroying his house by piling a lot of furniture around his front door, only to realize that the bird destroys the house from above.
    • Affirmative Action Girl: Sassette.
    • All There in the Manual: An old Smurfs music album released in the early 80's called "Smurfing Sing Song" has a song called "Smurfing Land" which explains the origin of how the Smurfs were created.

      Smurfs used to not only walk, but they were mostly seen bouncing/hopping from place to place. urr...