![]() ![]() Digging to China: One episode contains a Running Gag where the two characters repeatedly drop onto a traffic light from great height, driving it deeper and deeper into the ground with each landing.Come on!", before unceremoniously kicking the Count back to the machine. The agent mumbles: "Yeah, such a moment for counts to show up. Unfazed, Filemón delivers a single slap to the vampire's face, leaving him groggy, and drags him by an arm. Filemón tries to catch the bat so that they can swap it back with Mortadelo, when the bat suddenly turns into a very menacing (for the comic standards) Count Dracula. In "La máquina del cambiazo" ("The swapping machine"), Mortadelo is warped into a creepy old castle through the titular swapping machine (a teleportation device, which swaps one person on item for another), and a bat enters the TIA offices instead. ![]() But, unfortunately, this does little to help him relieve himself. What do you do? If you are the Súper, deliver a SINGLE slap so that it dissolves into nothing and stops obstructing your way. OK, you have an urgent necessity to go to the bathroom, but the unstoppable Muck Monster that has been terrorizing the city for the last week is obstructing your way. In at least a short story it becomes a plot point. He is usually late delivering them, though. Detail-Hogging Cover: Ibáñez prides himself in these.Deranged Animation: While Ibanez's style is very well drawn (particularly when it comes to buildings, ships, etc.), it can also get pretty over the top/wacky at times, occasionally due to Depending on the Artist in the case of The '80s installments.Those "apocryphal" stories tend to have Continuity Nods to the previous "official" stories, much more than the ones actually written by Ibáñez. Depending on the Writer: Some stories were written during the late 80s by other authors, since Ibáñez didn't have the rights to write his own stories during that time.It works to a degree, as the captain quickly instructs the crew to move the ship somewhere else outside of his throwing range. Defiant Stone Throw: In La cochinadita nuclear, when a ship arrives at a seaside town to dump the nuclear waste there, a random villager starts throwing bricks at the crew.except for one candidate who managed to gather two votes and is subsequently named president. Decided by One Vote: At the end of ¡Elecciones!, which parodies the Spanish general election of December 2015, it's revealed that there were so many parties in the running that each of them got one single vote.Given the context (a big, strong, angry criminal chasing down the man who got him sent to prison fifteen years ago), the clear implication is that Tronchamulas is out to kill Filemón. ![]()
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