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Atlantis: The Lost Empire

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"...in a single day and night of misfortune, the island of Atlantis disappeared into the depths of the sea."
Plato, 360 B.C.

Entry #41 in the Disney Animated Canon, this 2001 movie begins with a great cataclysm that occurred in the distant past which swallows up an entire, highly advanced civilization. Only through the Heroic Sacrifice of the queen is the civilization spared complete destruction, but to the rest of the world, it seems as if it was wiped from the face of the planet...

Flash forward to 1914. Milo Thatch, a young, poor, orphaned linguist, has uncovered evidence of the existence of a great civilization in the past, Atlantis, which was previously thought to be just a myth. Despite his breakthroughs in deciphering clues hidden in the writings and legends of many disparate cultures, his ideas and his proposed expedition—to find "the Shepherd's Journal" and follow its instructions to the lost city itself—is rejected outright by his peers. However, a mysterious woman steps in and offers him a chance to prove his theory, backed by the mysterious billionaire Mr. Whitmore, who knew Milo's grandfather and had agreed years earlier to help finance Milo's expedition.

Once Milo meets Whitmore and convinces him of his own personal determination and commitment, he is invited to join an expedition that is setting out to make the unprecedented trip to Atlantis itself. The rag-tag team is led by Commander Rourke, a straight, no-nonsense military man, who also knew Milo's grandfather and worked with him on the previous expedition where they found the Shepherd's Journal. Once they arrive at the destination from which they might never return, they discover an underdeveloped, dying society that has abandoned and forgotten their written language — and Milo becomes a translator between the two cultures. However, it is revealed that there is an ulterior purpose to the expedition that Milo is unaware of, and his compatriots are not all that they seem.

While a sequel named Shards of Chaos as well as an animated TV series named Team Atlantis was under development, the film's somewhat disappointing performance at the box-office led Disney to cancel both the sequel and the series, the latter of which was a bit into its production. Instead, the completed material for the series was reworked into a Direct-to-Video sequel film named Atlantis: Milo's Return.

The film was accompanied by three tie-in video games. Atlantis is also the third Disney Animated Canon film to be rated PG in America, with the first being 1985's The Black Cauldron and the second being Dinosaur in 2000 (Dinosaur, however, was only added to the Canon in 2008).

The first draft of the movie script, which features the mystic character Zoltan cut from the final version and a number of other differences, is available here.


This film provides examples of:

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  • Abandon Ship: Commander Rourke gives this order when their submarine the Ulysses is attacked and destroyed by a mechanical leviathan guarding the entrance to Atlantis. Several of the ejected escape pods are destroyed by the leviathan, leaving only a handful of survivors.
  • Acoustic License: During the opening sequence, one of the Atlantean pilots angrily shouts from his Hammerhead craft to another that "You fool! You've destroyed us all!" Never mind how loud the flying craft are, how fast they're moving, and how many of them they are all around the pilots, considering how close they were to the explosion, they should all have instantly had their eardrums ruptured, if not killed outright.
  • Action Girl: It would be easier to just say "all of them," but it's a lot more fun to name them specifically:
    • Audrey is a teenage mechanic who's surprisingly proactive, given her age. Apparently she also has a sister who is poised to become a boxing champion.
    • Helga's not just a Femme Fatale - she can kick some serious ass too.
    • Even Ms. Packard gets in on this during the climax.
    • Kida herself is one, being able to hold her own against trained soldiers (and, according to her father, she was quite ruthless in the past).
  • Actor Allusion:
    • When Milo first meets Commander Rourke, the latter comments that he "prefers a good western." This could be seen as a reference to James Garner's earlier television series Maverick, where he played a gambler in The Wild West.
    • Two for Michael J. Fox and Back to the Future 1. In his first scene, Marty/Milo is rehearsing something, only to realize he's late. Later, when Milo realizes King Kashekim Nedakh is dying, he says "What a nightmare", which was what Marty says when he wakes up in the "improved" 1985 in the end.
    • Corey Burton voices a mole-like geologist in this movie. Burton previously voiced an actual mole in Chip 'n Dale: Rescue Rangers.
  • Advanced Ancient Acropolis: Although by the time Milo and the crew gets there, the natives have forgotten how everything works since everything was lost in the flood shown in the beginning of the film.
  • Adventurer Archaeologist: Though no individual characters themselves fit the trope, the movie as a whole fit the genre perfectly.
  • Affectionate Gesture to the Head: At the end of the movie, Milo is saying goodbye to all his friends. When he comes to Mole, who offers a big hug, he hesitates before patting his head instead.
  • Alliterative Name: Thaddeus Thatch, Milo's deceased grandfather.
  • Alternate Techline: There are submarines and aircraft in its version of 1914 that were not developed until decades later in reality as part of its Steampunk/Dieselpunk setting.
  • Alternative Foreign Theme Song:
    • The film has a different theme song for the Japanese version, called "Crystal Vine", written by Dreams Come True.
    • In Korea, Kangta sang two songs for "Atlantis". The first was "Dream", which was made exclusively for the Korean release. The second one, he sang the dubbed version of "Where the Dream Takes You" (with the instrumental track being based on the Spanish and Italian versions).
    • Germany has local girlband No Angels re-perform the song "Atlantis" by and with Scottish singer and songwriter Donovan.
    • Also an alternative song in the Latin American version, to the point where the North American DVD has an entire hidden section you cannot access if you select to see the movie in anything but Spanish when you have the chance at the loading screen.
  • All There in the Manual: Much of the backstory for the Shepherd's Journal and more detail on Atlantis's workings can be found in tie-in books, most prominently in "Atlantis: Subterranean Tours", an in-universe travel guide Whitmore produced for secretive later expeditions for dignitaries, celebrities and Whitmore employees.
  • Anachronism Stew: The movie makes an effort to avoid this, minus Atlantis itself and some of the Steampunk / Dieselpunk tech used by the expedition.
    • Though Mole does use a real Soviet PPSh-41 submachine gun, steel helmets and gas masks would not be commonplace until 1915-16.
    • The expedition uses deep diving Submarines (at this time they were incapable of going deep or remaining under for long), acoustic torpedoes (which wouldn't be invented for decades), and fighter airplanes with synchronizing gear (wouldn't be developed until well into WWI). These are handwaved as being due to Whitmore investing a lot of resources into what amounts to experimental hardware.
    • Coelacanths, like the ones in Whitmore's aquarium, were still thought to have been extinct in 1914, and remained so until their rediscovery in 1938. Justified as this is mainly meant to illustrate his character as a Collector of the Strange and an adventurer. Who else would fund a trip to Atlantis but a man who owns fish decades before their actual (re)discovery?
  • Animation Bump:
    • A rather odd example—while it wasn't uncommon for films like this to assign an animator to each main character, Helga's animation is considerably more fluid than the rest of the cast. This may be due to her supervising animator being from France.
    • Milo himself is sometimes subject to these, during which he truly comes across as an animated Michael J. Fox.
  • Are You Sure You Can Drive This Thing?: Milo is asked if he knows how to drive a truck. "Sure I can drive a truck. You have the brake and the clutch and this lever... thing... All right, it was the bumper cars at Coney Island, but it's the same basic principle." Turns out it's not, and he has to be towed behind the rest of the way.
  • Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking: "We've done a lot of things we're not proud of: robbing graves, eh, plundering tombs, double-parking..." In the Latin American dub, he ends the list with "kicked a dog".
  • Artistic License – Geology: The volcano. Unless it were already erupting, the crash of a hot air balloon wouldn't even dent a lava dome. Further, it erupts in a "Strombolian" fashion (creating lava bombs, splatter, and explosively fast lava flows) but produces lava in a volume only seen in Hawai'ian eruption. They'd probably have something on the order of several hours to construct the shield in a Hawai'ian eruption, but Rule of Drama! Presumably a true "Plinian" eruption (explosive, the type that the Mount St. Helens eruption followed) would have been too hard to animate. The danger from them are not lava, but pyroclastic clouds of red-hot gasses and tiny bits of magma that travel several hundred miles per hour.
  • Artistic License – Linguistics: Played with.
    • In most languages, the translation in the beginning would not work, but the Norse words for Ireland and Iceland really are one rune (letter) apart, so it makes perfect sense for the two words to be accidentally switched. However, later on the Atlanteans can magically speak not just English but every language descended from their own, even though that is not how languages evolve. Additionally, many of the languages spoken are from completely different language families (meaning that they are not descended from the same language, Atlantean or otherwise).
    • Milo can speak Atlantean through slowly translating their written language. Unless a Romanization or Anglicization of the alphabet exists (which is doubtful), this is impossible, as you can't tell what a letter is supposed to sound like solely through what it looks like. On the other hand, his pronunciation is nowhere near perfect; Kida comments that his accent is "boorish, provincial, and you speak it through your nose."
    • It is possible for a civilization to lose the knowledge needed to read their own written language (Hieroglyphics were a complete mystery to modern Egyptians until the discovery of the Rosetta Stone, and while it's still more or less possible to read the words of Latin or Old English it's next to impossible to extract much meaning without specific knowledge of those languages). However, the people of Atlantis are extremely long-lived, Kida was slightly older than a toddler at the time of the Great Flood and is now a young woman nearly 9000 years later. This means most Atlanteans alive at the time of the story were alive at the height of their civilization. It seems very far-fetched that a people would lose the ability to read their own written language within one generation, especially when those same people are apparently able to pick up spoken languages they've never heard before in a matter of seconds.
  • Artistic License – Physics:
    • When Milo lies down on the chalkboard and gets it on his shirt, it somehow ends up not as a mirrored image, but so he can fill in the chalk drawing by standing in front of it – that is, the chalk that should have been on his right ended up flipped on his left, and vice versa.
    • The Atlantean tech gets a pass due to the 'sufficiently advanced technology', but there are a couple of instances. For instance, the Ulysses explodes after the crew escapes, when at thalassic depths it should have been crumpling in on itself as the boiler explosion within compromised its structure.
    • Tunnel boring machines don't actually look like the one Mole uses. Instead they have a mostly flat drilling mechanism. Though this was likely done so the audience would recognize the machine.
    • Packard is somehow able to carry on a telephone conversation with her friend Marge on a submarine, several miles under the ocean, in the 1910s. (That is, of course, unless Marge is also somewhere aboard the Ulysses.)
  • Artistic License – Ships: The movie features the Ulysses, a Steampunk submarine the size of two aircraft carriers that can dive as deep as the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. In real life, submarines of that size cannot dive that deep because the high pressure underwater would cause their hulls to implode-the bigger the ship, the more pressure it has to deal with. The Ulysses would have trouble getting even that far because its steampunk engine would consume all interior oxygen if it dove underwater, and as a result the crew would all die of asphyxiation. Real-life diesel submarines exist, but ordinarily they can only use their diesel engines at or near the surface where they use a snorkel to draw in air. For completely submerged operation, most use electric engines powered by batteries, but this greatly limits their submerged range. Attempts to carry oxygen on board for a combustion engine were never really successful, until Kockums developed AIP stirling engines.
  • Attack of the 50-Foot Whatever: One of the most memorable and terrifying in film history is an attack by a 2-mile long robot lobster kaiju. Its mandibles are larger than the entire Ulysses.
  • Atlantis: The city is powered by a crystal called the Heart of Atlantis, which is what sunk it in the first place. Princess Kida was a child at the time of the sinking but is still young and spry hundreds of years later in 1914. The goal for the protagonist during the events of the movie is to reach and explore Atlantis.
  • Award-Bait Song: Oh, it may not be a musical, but it is still a Disney animated film. Thus, "Where the Dream Takes You". Sadly, it is not in Atlantean.
  • Awesome Moment of Crowning: Kida was the first Disney Princess to become a queen in her opening film. This wouldn't happen again until Frozen twelve years later.
  • Backstab Backfire: At the end of the movie, Rourke throws Helga off the blimp hoping to take all the money the Heart of Atlantis is worth for himself, despite promising her a percentage. Using the last of her strength, she shoots the blimp down, foiling Rourke's plan.
  • Bait-and-Switch: Discussed by Milo and Audrey; She says her father wanted two sons to inherit his repair business and be a professional boxer, then implies the ambitions went unfulfilled because he got her and her sister instead. Milo asks about her sister, Audrey says she's a middleweight boxer on her way to the championship.
  • "Blackmail" Is Such an Ugly Word: Milo accuses Rourke and the crew of being mercenaries.
    Rourke: Mercenary? I prefer the term "adventure capitalist." note 
  • The Bet: Whitmore reveals that, years ago, he and Milo's grandfather had made a bet: if Thaddeus Thatch ever actually found the Shepherd's Journal, Whitmore would not only personally fund the mission to find the city, he would kiss Thatch right on the mouth.
    Whitmore: Imagine my embarrassment when he found the darn thing.
  • Bittersweet Ending: Downplayed. Although everyone has earned their happy ending and Atlantis is now thriving once more, Milo and Kida's story ends with them holding an Atlantean funeral for her father.
  • Blasting It Out of Their Hands:
    • When the expedition turns out to be a group of mercenaries, Rourke shoots Kida's knife out of her hand when she fights his Mooks.
    • Vinnie shoots Rourke's Lewis gun out of his hand during the climax.
  • Blatant Lies: Used for humor and as the official story in the end. The crew that made it back home are talking about how it was all a dead end and how everyone died... while they're wearing their crystals and new, expensive clothes, with Whitmore looking at the photographs of Atlantis.
  • Bloodless Carnage: Justified in the case of the King's death, which is the result of internal bleeding.
  • Bookends: The film begins with the Kida's mother being chosen by the Heart of Atlantis, taking Kida's bangle with her as she floats into the air to merge with it, and ends with Kida un-merging from the crystal, holding the bangle, and even becoming the next Queen herself.
  • Book Snap: Milo has just been handed the Shepherd's Journal, a supposed first-person account of the lost city of Atlantis, by Mr. Whitmore. As he peruses it, Whitmore comments that it's probably fake. Milo quickly shuts the journal and tells him that he his certain of the existence of Atlantis and is willing to do anything to prove it...which is exactly what Whitmore wanted to hear.
  • Body to Jewel: Kida merges with the Heart of Atlantis. Later on Rourke is turned into a crystal monster after making contact with a crystallized shard of glass.
  • Boring Return Journey: At the end of the movie, after saving Atlantis, the crystal, and Kida from total annihilation, the explorers are already about to leave Atlantis and head back home, while Milo chooses to stay behind in Atlantis with the soon-to-be Queen Kida instead, and given the fact that the only bridge in and out of Atlantis has already been destroyed by Rourke, the only way for the explorers to leave would be to have them board a large Atlantean aircraft. The heroes then all get their picture taken one last time... and then the scene Match Cuts back to Whitmore's mansion, with Mole, Audrey, Sweet, Packard, Cookie, and Vinny now all dressed in fancy clothing with elements of their newly-obtained crystals incorporated into their fashion, and Milo nowhere to be seen. Given the fact that the caves leading to Atlantis are just way too dangerous, and obviously the Leviathan still wandering about on the other side, the only logical way for them to return to the surface is through the volcano shaft Rourke and Helga made to initiate the final battle while trying to escape in their hot air balloon.
  • Brick Joke: Sweet says that his surgical saw can supposedly cut through a femur in twenty-eight seconds, and bets that he can cut that time in half. Later during the race to save Kida...
    Audrey: I thought you said this thing could cut through a femur in twenty-eight seconds!
    Sweet: Less talk, more saw!
  • Bridge Logic: Vinny:
    Milo: Will you look at the size of this? It's gotta be half a mile high, at least. It must have taken hundred — no, thousands of years to carve this thing.
    [Vinny blows it up so it falls down over a chasm]
    Vinny: Hey, look, I made a bridge. It only took me, like, what? 10 seconds? 11, tops.
  • Broken Pedestal: Commander Lyle Tiberius Rourke initially starts off as the leader of the expedition to Atlantis, but is ultimately later revealed to be a treacherous and genocidal mercenary who plots to steal the Heart of Atlantis crystal, fully aware that this will result in the complete extinction of the Atlantean race.
  • Bubblegum Popping: Audrey Ramirez do this in front of Milo when first introduced to him when he's making a presentation about Atlantis [1].
  • Bunny-Ears Lawyer: Most of Rourke's team are highly competent in their respective fields but are very odd individuals otherwise.
  • Campfire Character Exploration: Milo first bonds with the other members of the expedition as they share their life stories while they set up camp for the night.
  • Caper Crew: As this is not strictly a "caper" as much as it is the world's most expensive and dangerous excavation, some roles may be disputed, but for the most part it would follow for each character as:
    • Commander Lyle Tiberius Rourke: The Mastermind, leader of his own private military group
    • Lieutenant Helga Katrina Sinclair: The Partner in Crime, and second-in-command of said military group
    • Preston B. Whitmore: The Backer
    • Milo Thatch: The Hacker (figuratively) and/or The New Kid
    • Vincenzo "Vinny" Santorini: The Gadget Guy, though his gadgets are bombs and other explosive materials
    • Gaétan "Mole" Molière: The other Gadget Guy, specializing in excavating equipment
    • Wilhelmina Bertha Packard: The Coordinator, being their resident radio operator
    • Joshua Strongbear Sweet: The Muscle, physically speaking, but he is actually the crew's medical officer
    • Audrey Rocio Ramirez: The Gadget Girl, the mechanic
    • Jebidiah Allardyce "Cookie" Farnsworth: Simply the cook for the expedition, as his expertise is not specialized specifically for the crew's line of work
  • Capitalism Is Bad: The Big Bad Rourke is a sadistic mercenary who actually describes himself as an "adventure capitalist". Granted, all he is motivated by is money, which is why he leads the expedition. Then, just to get even more money, he steals the only thing that allows the Atlanteans to survive (a giant blue crystal) and tries to bring it to the surface to sell it. Some people see the film as being anti-capitalist because of him.
  • Cast of Snowflakes: Thanks to the combination of Disney and Mike Mignola working together, everyone, including random Atlanteans and Ulysses crewmembers, looks completely unique.
  • Captain Obvious:
    Milo: [exasperated] Well, do you have any advice?!
    Vinny: Yeah - Don't get shot.
  • Casting Gag: Leonard Nimoy, who voices King Kashekim Nedakh, hosted In Search of..., a TV series about different mysteries and phenomena in human history, one of which included the City of Atlantis.
  • Chekhov's Gun:
    • Dr. Sweet's saw. Later used in an attempt to cut down the trapped Kida:
      Audrey: [trying and failing to cut the chain] I thought you said this thing could cut through a femur in 28 seconds!
      Sweet: Less talk, more saw!
    • Helga carries Chekhov's Flare Gun tucked into her trousers.
    • Milo plays with a small part of the submarine model, which turns out to be the large inflatable balloon that Rourke and Helga try to take to the top of the volcanic chimney to escape.
      Sweet: Hold on. Back Up. Are you saying this volcano can blow at anytime?
      Mole: No, no, no, no. That would take an explosive force of great magnitude.note 
    • The Guardians of Atlantis — the shield golems, activated by the Heart of Atlantis, which protect the center of the city from the tsunami at the beginning and from the exploding volcano at the end.
  • Chekhov's Volcano: The main characters and their group of explorers fall through a cave into a dormant volcano. When they assume that it could blow at any minute, the geology expert of the bunch says that it shouldn't be possible without a huge explosive force. However, at the end of the movie it turns out the an exploding hot air balloon will do just fine and the whole thing goes up anyway.
  • Chimney Entry: When Milo comes home to find the mysterious Helga in his living room and questions how she got in, she says...
    Helga: I came down the chimney. Ho, ho, ho.
  • Chunky Updraft: Kida (still in her crystallized form) actually does this during the climax of the film, gathering the stone faces representing the dead kings of Atlantis so she can save her kingdom from an erupting volcano.
  • Cloud-Clearing Burst: The opening shot is of an immense explosion (presumably The Heart of Atlantis) detonating over the ocean with enough force to blast away clouds and create a mega-tsunami.
  • Collective Death Glare: At one point, Milo, acting as The Navigator with the Shepherd's Journal, selects one route...that leads to the lair of a mechanical centipede. He then checks the journal again and sheepishly points the other way while the rest of the team glares at him.
  • Comically Missing the Point: See Nice Job Breaking It, Hero! below. Sweet's response to Milo's rant is to remind him "you did set the camp on fire and drop us down that big hole".
  • Communications Officer: Mrs. Packard, although she spends most of the time chatting up her friend over the phone (which, unless she's also in the submarine, would be quite a feat using 1914 technology).
  • Companion Cube: Milo is polite and apologizes to his audience when he has to climb over them to get to the boiler, despite having made them himself out of broomsticks and buckets.
  • Conlang: The Atlantean language is an actual functional language.
  • Convection, Schmonvection: Milo runs around on a rapidly melting volcano floor in thin shoes with no problem.
  • Conveniently Interrupted Document: The Shepherd's Journal has a missing page, which means that nobody knows exactly what the Atlanteans' power-source is. Rourke had the missing page in his boot the whole time.
  • Conveniently Precise Translation: The runes between the Norse words "Ísland" and "Írland" really are fairly similar, just like the English words "Ireland" and "Iceland". The only difference being a horizontal mirroring and a vertical line.
  • Cool and Unusual Punishment: Sweet threatens the dirt-loving geologist Mole with soap if he doesn't leave Milo alone.
  • Cool Ship: The huge submarine Ulysses is awesome, built like something straight out of Jules Verne's stories (with dimensions unmatched until the Sen Toku-class of submarines had it been a real submarine). Unfortunately, even it is no match for the Leviathan's Wave-Motion Gun.
  • Creator Thumbprint: Mike Mignola was the production designer for the film and boy, does it show. Especially one scene during a travel montage where a shot combines both what Milo sees in the Shepherd's Journal with the route the crew follows, complete with Mike's signature use of black.
  • Crush the Keepsake: Just before the climax, Rourke, after obtaining the Atlantean crystal and having no more need of him, punches Milo in the face. Milo's framed picture of himself as a boy with his grandfather falls out and Rourke stomps on it, smashing the frame. Fortunately, the photo is intact, and what's more, it's this act that causes Audrey, followed by everybody else except Helga, to do a Heel–Face Turn and abandon Rourke.
  • Crystal Spires and Togas: Atlantis combines crystals and stone architecture, though technologically these are remnants of a better time in Atlantean history, and the modern Atlanteans have forgotten how to read their own glyphs.
  • Cue the Flying Pigs: This trope appears in the backstory. Whitmore reveals to Milo that he and Milo's grandfather Thaddeus had had a bet: If Thaddeus ever found the elusive Shepherd's Journal, Whitmore would not only finance the expedition to find Atlantis, but he'd also kiss him full on the mouth. Whitmore then shows Milo a photo of himself and Thaddeus, both looking thoroughly squicked out.
    Whitmore: Imagine my embarrassment when he found the darn thing.
  • Culture Chop Suey: This interpretation of Atlantis resembles an amalgam of African, Indian, Southeast Asian, Caribbean, South American and Pacific Island cultures.
  • Curb-Stomp Battle: For all their torpedoes, the Ulysses and her fleet of subpods never stood a chance against the Leviathan, leaving only a few dozen survivors to carry on to Atlantis.
  • Darker and Edgier: Than the usual Disney fare, by a big degree, and considered to be a reason for its financial failure. It may hold the record for the largest number of people to die onscreen in a Disney movie (not major characters, but still). The Fantastic Nuke is the first thing that happens after the opening credits.
  • Deceased Parents Are the Best: Disney's parent-hatred sets a new record here.
    • Kida loses her mother (well, sort of) a minute and a half into the movie, after Queen Kashem's gotten something like five seconds of screen time.
    • Milo's parents died when he was a small child and aren't ever seen even in photographs, so he was raised by his grandfather… who also has been dead since before the beginning of the story. Milo's other grandfather and grandmothers aren't even mentioned.
  • Death Glare: The explorers give this to Milo after Milo almost led them down the jaws of a creature by accident due to holding the Shepherd's Journal upside down. Milo at the end at everyone else, causing them to Heel–Face Turn and also glare at those that don't.
  • Deflector Shields: The title city has guardian golems which project an impenetrable protective shield over the city. This is why it sank mostly-intact into an air pocket rather than being trashed completely (though the outermost areas were out of luck, having been established after the shield system and were thus beyond its border). It was also called into service to protect the city from a volcanic eruption, and showed the ability to harden and crumble the magma that covered it.
  • Derelict Graveyard: The first sign of trouble for the expedition is when they find a stretch of the sea floor carpeted with the wrecked remnants of ships from all over history — they were sunk by the Leviathan.
  • Disc-One Final Boss: Rourke becomes this due to the destruction of his blimp following his defeat due to him betraying Helga causing the volcano where the battle between Milo, his friends, and the Atlanteans and Rourke, Helga, and their mercenaries took place in to erupt and destroy Atlantis, causing the heroes to try to return the still-crystallized Kida back to the city before it is completely destroyed.
  • Distant Prologue: The film opens with the destruction of Atlantis several thousand years ago as it is submerged beneath the ocean. Originally there was a different Distant Prologue intended for the opening, focusing on a viking ship that was trying to find the city, but the producers decided for a more action-packed opening. The alternate opening was instead put into the PC game.
  • Distracted by the Sexy: "You do swim, do you not?", "Oh, I swim pretty girl— pr-pretty good! Good, I swim pretty good."
  • Dramatic Irony: While partially Played for Laughs Milo's friends are rewarded with an obscene amount of gold. The very sort of treasure that Rourke and Helga had been looking for, and might have gotten had they reined in their greed.
  • Dread Zeppelin: The Gyro-Evac, the airship Rourke plans to use to carry the crystal to the surface, is essentially a cross between an Escape Pod and a hot-air balloon — shaped like a rocket and designed to go straight up very quickly, armed with gravity bombs and hidden in a tanker truck until the true villains of the movie reveal themselves and their plot to abscond back to the surface with the lost treasures of Atlantis.
  • Dwindling Party: The encounter with the Leviathan kills most of the crew of the Ulysses; each step of their journey to Atlantis further thins their party until few more than the main characters are left.
  • Eldritch Abomination: The sequel gives us the Kraken, a giant squid-like beastie with a fish-like face and the ability to offer immortality to anyone who makes a deal with it and hypnotize people as well. The Leviathan is a mechanical version.
  • Embarrassing Slide: Milo intends to start his lecture by showing a slide of the Leviathan, "a creature so terrifying that sailors were said to be driven mad by the mere sight of it." Cut to a slide of him popping up, wearing a onesie bathing suit, duckie inner tube, and arm floaties.
  • Emergency Cargo Dump: After one of the balloons is punctured, Rourke tells Helga to lighten the load. She throws every loose item on the balloon overboard. When she runs out of things to toss overboard, Rourke pushes her off.
  • Empathy Doll Shot: Kida drops her doll during the destruction of Atlantis. Her mother stops to tell her to leave it, even though they're no more than three steps away from it.
  • Establishing Character Moment: Every main character gets one of these. For Milo himself, we're introduced to him giving a passionate speech about Atlantis to an audience of teddy bears in top hats in preparation for a meeting with the board of the museum he works in. He is then immediately screwed over by said board.
  • Establishing Series Moment: Within seconds of the opening logos, we get a Fantastic Nuke explosion and the very first line of dialogue is (in Atlantean) "You fool! You've destroyed us all!" Not exactly your traditional Disney fare, for sure.
  • Even Evil Has Standards: Robbing graves? Fine. Plundering tombs? Fine. Double-parking? Fine. Stealing the only thing keeping the last remnants of Atlantean civilization alive AND hurting someone they know, on top of that? Prompts a group Heel–Face Turn.
  • Everything Makes a Mushroom: Cookie's cooking does this when disposed of in a fire. The very first shot of the movie is a Fantastic Nuke that looks exactly like the searing white fireball of a modern thermonuclear explosion.
  • Evil Plan: From the very beginning Rourke has been planning to steal the Heart of Atlantis, and is willing to kill anyone who gets in his way.
  • Explain, Explain... Oh, Crap!: Earlier in the film, Milo comments how the Shepherd's Journal mentions something called "The Heart of Atlantis", but it abruptly cuts off. He muses that it's "almost like there's a missing page". Then, after Milo and Kida discover the truth about the Heart of Atlantis...
    Kida: Then, where is it now?
    Milo: I don't know. I don't—you think something this important would've been in the Journal, but—! Unless... the missing page.
  • Faceless Mooks=/=Gasmask Mooks: The expedition has mercenary soldiers (most prominently featured at the end) with Marvelously Mike Mignol-esque Masked Mugs. They never utter a single word onscreen and serve no other part in the story than provide cannon fodder at the end.
  • Family Business: Both Audrey and Vinny are part of one, and it's part of their backstory. Audrey aims to open a second garage with her father (who was part of the first expedition) and is generally marching in his footsteps, while Vinnie's family owned a flower shop – a career that he completely left behind him when he discovered his love of explosive devices.
  • Fan Disservice: In-universe. Mrs. Packard says she sleeps in the nude, and Sweet throws Milo a sleep mask, explaining that she sleepwalks.
  • Fantastic Light Source:
    • The Atlanteans wear small glowing crystals as necklaces that can provide some light if there isn't anything else available. When Milo and Kida go exploring some underwater murals, they use Kida's crystal as a reading light.
    • The Heart of Atlantis is a power source, referred to as a "crystal", that generates a lot of light, illuminating the underground chamber where its hidden and negating the need for flashlights.
  • Fantastic Underworld: To reach the lost city of Atlantis, the expedition passes through an underwater cave to emerge in a network of caves somewhere beneath the Atlantic Ocean. After a difficult journey through caverns filled with ancient ruins, deep ravines, and monstrous arthropods, they eventually reach the cavern where the ancient city itself persists alongside ancient animals long extinct on the surface.
  • Fauxshadowing: After Mole comments on how the dormant volcano will only erupt in reaction to an explosion of great magnitude, everyone stares at Vinny, who is tinkering with a time bomb. When the volcano does erupt, however, Vinny has nothing to do with it; in fact, he lampshades this.
  • Firefly Scene: Zig-zagged. The first time Atlantean fireflies appear, they set the team's camp on fire. However, the next time they appear is during a romantic moment between Milo and Kida, where the latter reveals that she believes Milo can help save the Atlanteans' way of life.
  • Firing One-Handed: During the climax, Rourke fires a Lewis gun one-handed until Vinny shoots it out of his hand.
  • Five-Second Foreshadowing: When Milo convinces Vinny, Audrey, Cookie, Mrs. Packard, and Mole to come to their senses just as Rourke and Helga are about to leave with the crystallized Kida, and thus allowing them to turn against Rourke and Helga and side with Milo instead, while Rourke and Helga responding by stranding them and destroying the only bridge in and out of Atlantis, Dr. Sweet isn't there, only showing up to warn Milo that the King is now on his last legs before dying. This is because Sweet turned against Rourke and Helga before Kida gets crystallized, having witnessed Rourke fatally injure the King.
  • Fleeing for the Fallout Shelter: The movie opens with Atlanteans trying to get to the central city before a shield seals off the city against a massive tidal wave that washes Atlantis into the sea. We see some Atlanteans futilely pounding on the shield as they're closed off and others embracing their loved ones before the wave arrives.
  • Flight Is the Final Power: The unique energy emitted by the Atlantean crystals is shown to have many applications throughout the film, such as creating unusual lifeforms, illuminating dark places and granting its bearers longevity. Milo enthusiastically attempts to use them as fuel for an ancient flying vehicle so he can explore the city from above, but reconsiders when he accidentally causes the machine to crash. Later on, the heroes collectively decide to try again and take flight to pursue the Big Bad, setting the stage for the final battle.
  • Floating Mask:
    • The masks representing the ancestral kings of Atlantis float and spin around the crystal that gives Atlantis its life.
    • At the end of the film, a new mask, representing the now deceased King Kashekim Nedakh is actually constructed by his daughter and son-in-law upon becoming the new rulers of Atlantis, which then floats away into the sky to join the other masks representing the dead kings of Atlantis.
  • Fly-at-the-Camera Ending: The ending, which happens right after Kida's coronation as the new Queen and the subsequent Flyaway Shot showing the resurrected Atlantis, with an Atlantean flying machine obscuring the camera.
  • Flying Seafood Special: The ancient Atlanteans got around on flying vehicles shaped like fish and hammerhead sharks. The Leviathans likewise flew, as seen in the prologue. After Atlantis is destroyed, the remaining one moves underwater instead.
  • The Fog of Ages: The Atlanteans have lost much of their culture over the centuries; none of the modern-day Atlanteans can even read their own writing. Kida even observes this and requests Milo's help in teaching them their old ways.
  • Foreshadowing:
    • It moves so fast it's hard to tell, but in the cataclysm that opens the film, the Leviathan is the leading Atlantean vehicle in the convoy, and in fact flies directly into the camera, long before it gets any plot relevance.
    • When Whitmore shows off the scale models of the vehicles to be used in the expedition, Milo is seen fiddling with the hot air balloon model. Milo later has his climactic battle with Rourke on the real thing.
    • There is quite a bit of it towards Rourke's true nature.
      • As mentioned in the DVD commentary, when Whitmore shows the files of the crew, Rourke's photo is partially covered-up. All the good guys' photos are fully uncovered.
      • When the characters are getting on the boat, Rourke says the trip "will be enriching for all of us". Pillaging Atlantis for dollars was his motive for joining the expedition all along.
      • When the crew is allowed to enter the city, Rourke orders his soldiers to stay behind at the volcano base and "salvage what [they] can", hinting he's covering up a secret agenda of his own.
      • When Helga comments to Rourke that there being people alive in Atlantis "changes everything", he replies, "This changes nothing". For first-time viewers, this lack of concern about the Atlanteans could be attributed to him being in grief over the death of the crew and him, somewhat rightfully, considering them responsible for it. After you know how greedy and ruthless he is, though...
      • When meeting Milo for the first time, Rourke remarks, "See you've got the journal there. Nice pictures." He not only read the journal, but saw that missing page, possibly having kept it since Iceland.
      • As the Ulysses is lowered for launch, Whitmore is last seen crossing his fingers, despite his earlier display of confidence. Hoping perhaps that something doesn't go wrong or more likely hoping that Rourke doesn't try to exploit the expedition for his own ends, which ultimately does happen.
    • Kida's true age is foreshadowed once by the King ("A thousand years ago you would have struck them down.").
    • After Rourke shows his true colors and starts interrogating the King, the latter feebly warns him that he'll destroy himself. Later in the Crystal Chamber, the Heart senses Rourke's presence and seemingly glows red with rage. Then when Kida becomes the Crystal's host, Milo warns not to touch her. Of course, Rourke fails to heed any of these warnings and pays for his greed in nightmarish fashion.
  • Fourth-Date Marriage: At the end of the movie, Milo decides to stay in Atlantis with Kida after knowing her for a couple of days. Although we never find out how much time has passed before they finally get married and become the respective new king and queen, one might've assumed that this happened sometime after Milo's teammates finally return to the surface and meet up with Whitmore again.
  • Freeze-Frame Bonus:
  • Freudian Slip: "I know how to swim pretty girl — good! Pretty good, I swim pretty good."
  • Frothy Mugs of Water: Averted, as Cookie includes whiskey in his personal list of the four basic food groups.
  • Gas Mask Mooks: The soldiers that come along on the expedition. A prudent measure, given it is an underground expedition with a real risk of gas pockets and the climax takes place inside a magma chamber of a volcano about to erupt.
  • Gassy Gastronomy: Implied in one of the P.A. announcements on the ship, as read by Mrs. Packard.
    Mrs. Packard: [reading] "Attention: Tonight's supper will be baked beans, musical program to follow." [Beat] Who wrote this?
  • Gem Tissue: Contact with a Power Crystal changes Commander Rourke's flesh to the same glowing blue crystal. This doesn't seem to interfere with his bodily functions, as he shows no signs of ill health until Milo hoists him up to the blimp propellers, shattering Rourke to a million pieces.
  • Giant Eye of Doom: The crew's first close-up view of the Leviathan is an extreme close-up of a mechanical iris and a fiery pupil. "Jiminy Christmas! It's a machine!"
  • Gibberish of Love: Kida takes off her sarong before getting in the water, rendering Milo a babbling mess when she asks him if he can swim:
    "I know how to swim pretty girl — good! Pretty good, I swim pretty good."
  • Gilligan Cut: Milo is so excited he can't hold it in. Cue Vomit Discretion Shot.
  • Glasses Curiosity: Kida takes and wears Milo's glasses while showing him around Atlantis for the first time due to never having seen the object until now.
  • Going Native: Milo at the end of the film.
  • Golem: The Guardians of Atlantis; unlike the Leviathan, they serve a defensive purpose, generating a deflector shield to protect the center of Atlantis, both from the cataclysm at the beginning and the exploding volcano at the end.
  • Good Archaeology, Bad Archaeology: Zig-zagged. When Whitmore assembled the Atlantean expedition, he did so because they were all genuinely good at their archaeological jobs, especially Milo Thatch since he's one of the only people who can understand Atlantean. However, Commander Rourke is later revealed to only care about plundering Atlantis of its valuables and has brought a hoard of military equipment to make it happen. He even pulls the old "ambush the hero" strategy after Milo learns about the Heart of Atlantis, though he already knew about it from the missing page he ripped out of the Shepherd's Journal.
  • Grave Robbing: Vinny's list of the things the group isn't proud of includes grave-robbing, plundering tombs -and double parking.
  • The Great Depression: It's revealed in passing during the direct-to-video "sequel" that its events take place shortly after the Stock Market Crash, well over 15 years after the movie… with no one changing or aging at all in the intervening time, thanks to the longevity crystals they brought back from Atlantis.
  • Hand Gagging: "I have some questions for you and you are not leaving this city until they are answered."
  • Hats Off to the Dead: The team hold a brief memorial service for the lives lost to the Leviathan, during which Commander Rourke takes off his hat. Subverted when it turns out that he cares nothing about lives lost beyond his own.
  • Heart of the Matter: The Heart of Atlantis is mentioned in the Shepherd's Journal, and is speculated to be some sort of power source. It turns out to be a living crystal that is keeping the entire city and its inhabitants alive after millennia beneath the bottom of the ocean. Rourke plans to take it and sell it above ground, not only dooming the Atlanteans but also risking it falling into the wrong hands and causing mass devastation; it was the King trying to harness it as a weapon that caused Atlantis to sink in the first place.
  • Heel–Face Door-Slam: Helga shows some remorse when she discovers that they will be stealing from living people and not a long-dead civilization, but she goes along with Rourke's plan...at least until he turns on her. It's not clear if this would have been enough to make her side with Milo, though, since she doesn't survive the final battle.
  • Heel–Face Turn:
    • Vinny, Audrey, Sweet, Mole, Cookie, and Mrs. Packard may have been Only in It for the Money, but unlike Rourke they're not willing to resort to murder.
    • Sweet's moment comes earlier than the rest. Note that he's not with the rest of the party as they're preparing to leave with the crystal—he's already staying behind to take care of the dying king.
  • Hell Is That Noise: The incredibly ominous metallic moans and roars that the Leviathan makes while hunting the Ulysses through the undersea trench. When Packard puts it on over the intercom, the entire crew is shown to be freaked out and unsettled by the sound of it.
  • High-Heel–Face Turn: Double Subverted. Although Helga's not the only woman in the crew, she's the most conventionally feminine and as the Big Bad's right-hand woman, she fits the traditional model for this trope more than anyone else. Which makes it all the more surprising when she's the only one of the named crew not to desert Rourke out of disgust. At least until Rourke chucks her off the zeppelin. Hey, wait a second...doesn't she still have that flare gun?
  • The High Queen: Kida's mother. And Kida herself at the end.
  • Hindenburg Incendiary Principle: Helga brings down Rourke's airship with a flare gun. A fictional 1914-era balloon could very reasonably use hydrogen for buoyancy, although a flare gun having enough penetration to pierce the balloon is more questionable.
  • Hiss Before Fleeing: Played for Laughs where Mole the eccentric geologist hisses and flees at the sight of soap.
  • Holding Hands: ida and Milo do this near the end of the movie, indicating their Relationship Upgrade to the audience.
  • Honor Before Reason: Milo's decision to stop the older and very-experienced-in-warfare Rourke from taking Kida and the source of Atlantis's power. He even says so himself.
    Milo: I didn't say it was the smart thing, but it is the right thing.
  • How Did That Get in There?: While Milo is using an old-fashioned slide projector to demonstrate how the team will gain access to Atlantis, he accidentally inserts a slide of himself at the beach, wearing an embarrassing floaty. It didn't help that he was describing the Leviathan, "a creature so frightening, sailors were driven mad by the mere sight of it," beforehand.
    Milo: (leafing through his slides, trying to find the right one) Uh, I'm sorry, that's... wrong.
    Audrey: I used to take lunch money from guys like this...
    Packard: Hubba hubba.
  • I Choose to Stay: Milo chooses to stay in Atlantis while his friends decide to leave with the gold.
  • I Drank WHAT?!: Done with a canteen of what Vinny claims to be nitroglycerin as a joke.
  • I Did What I Had to Do: When the Ulysses engineering compartments start to flood, Audrey prevents the leakage from getting out of hand and drowning more people by sealing off the damaged section, with at least one engineer still inside.
  • Ignored Raised Hand: The crew needs someone to begin making relations with the Atlantean people, starting with Kida. Obviously, they're looking to make Milo their diplomat, although that doesn't stop Mole from trying to volunteer.
    Helga: Someone needs to talk to that girl.
    Mole: I will go!
    Vinny: Someone with good people skills.
    Mole: I will do it!
    Dr. Sweet: Someone who won't scare her away.
    Mole: I volunteer!
    Mrs. Packard: Someone who can speak the language.
    Mole: For the good of the mission, I will go!
    Rourke: (to Milo, who hasn't been paying attention) Good man, Thatch. Thanks for volunteering.
    Mole: [breaks down sobbing]
  • Immortality Field: The lives of the citizens of Atlantis are prolonged by a piece of a comet which they call the "Heart of Atlantis."
  • I Never Said It Was Poison: When looking for a stolen clay vase, Milo mentions they are looking for a crate and the villain claims he hasn't seen any pottery in a crate. When Milo gets outside, he points out he specifically didn't say there was pottery in the missing crate.
  • Inexplicable Language Fluency: The Atlanteans are able to fluently communicate with the explorers from the surface in English and French. This is handwaved as their own language being a precursor to all other languages.
  • Informed Ability: Audrey is said to be a brilliant mechanic, but we never actually see her fix anything throughout the film. She even gets upstaged by Milo at one point for fixing the digger's boiler, because the boiler in his office is similar.
  • Insistent Terminology: Quoth Rourke: "Mercenary? I prefer the term adventure capitalist."
  • Instant Runes: Any and every Atlantean machine lights up with a luminous pattern of runes (and Tron Lines) when it's activated.
  • Ironic Echo:
    • When the crew sets up camp for the night and talking about their lives, all of them except Milo say that they're here because they're getting paid. Later, when they're loading the Crystal-possessed Kida up for the trip back to the volcano, Milo reminds them of their plans and how easy they'll be now, but they have wiped out the Atlanteans in the process, ending with-
      Milo: But that's what it's all about, right? Money.
    • As Rourke and Helga attempt to escape with the crystallized Kida, Rourke betrays Helga and throws her off the zeppelin, after which Rourke yells to her, "Nothing Personal!" Much later, as Helga lies on the ground, dying from her wounds, she gets revenge by pulling out her flare gun to shoot down the zeppelin, though not before throwing Rourke's words right back.
  • Irony: Disney was expecting this film to be their big 2D hit for 2001, but the film performed under expectations, causing Disney's smaller 2D movie of the year, Recess: School's Out, to be a bigger successnote . In Finland, the VHS and DVD of Atlantis contained the Recess premiere episode ("The Break In/The New Kid") as a bonus.
  • It's Personal: After Rourke tosses Helga off the escape balloon to her death in an effort to lighten the load, he cheerfully yells out "Nothing personal!". Unfortunately for him, Helga survives the fall long enough to shoot a flare into the balloon, repeating Rourke's own words to point how how it has become very much personal.
  • It's Probably Nothing: When the Ulysses picks up the Leviathan on sonar, Commander Rourke wonders if it could be a pod of whales, but it soon stops, leading Helga to say it's gone now. Seconds later the Leviathan attacks.
  • Jerkass: The Museum Board of directors. They are nothing but rude to Milo and mistreat him over his belief in Atlantis. They moved his presentation to request funding for an expedition to a time that had already passed just to reject him and claim he has potential and they need him but keep him in the basement just to take care of the heater.
  • Jerkass Gods: Kida states that the Atlanteans were banished underwater because their gods grew jealous of Atlantis' wealth and power. The real reason the city sank, however, is because Kida's father attempted to use the Heart of Atlantis as a weapon against enemy nations. The Heart, being sentient, did NOT take it well.
  • Jerkass Has a Point:
    • Mr Hacourt despite being mean towards Milo wasn't exactly wrong to tell Milo that he could be wasting his time looking for a place that may or not exist.
    • While not exactly cruel, Sweet did admit him & his friends were a bit hard on Milo & decide to befriend him.
    • Rourke was right to admit that Milo did lead the team to Atlantis. If Milo hadn't, the gang wouldn't had obtained the crystal.
  • Jump Scare:
    • Rourke is petrified! Hooray, the villain has been killed in a relatively family-friendly oh god it lives!
    • "Helmsman! Bring us about! Tighten our search pattern and-" [entire ship shakes as the Leviathan hits it]
  • Kaiju: The Leviathan, the Kraken, Ymir and Sutr all count, though the Leviathan is really a Giant Mecha.
  • Karma Houdini:
    • All the specialists who took part in Rourke's plan that ends with the King of Atlantis dead, all so they can steal the Heart of Atlantis, get away (and very richly rewarded) for having a last minute twinge of conscience. Granted, they initially thought they were just going to be doing some elaborate grave-robbing from a long-dead civilization. Murder wasn't on their to-do list.
    • The Leviathan is a non-human example, having massacred nearly all of the 200-man crew aboard the Ulysses, and for all we know, it's still out there preying on unsuspecting trespassers.
  • Keep It Foreign: In the French version, during the scene when Milo dialogues with Kida in different languages, they are inverted: Milo and Kida speak English when they spoke French in the original version. At this moment, Gaetan, excited, exclaims: "I speak English too! French accent romantic!" . He then whisper to Kida : "I want your sex!" and the latter punches him.
  • Kick the Dog: When Rourke has gotten the crystal, removed Atlantean opposition and is ready to leave the city he turns and knocks Milo down just for the hell of it. And he crushes Milo's picture of Thaddeus under his heel.
  • Kinda Busy Here: This exchange which happens after the Ulysses is damaged and starts taking on water and Rourke gives the order to Abandon Ship:
    Helga: Packard, sound the alarm!
    Packard: [on the phone] And he took his suitcase? Marge, honey, I don't think he's coming back!
    Helga: PACKARD!
    Packard: Gonna have to call you back. [slight pause] No, no, I'll call you.
  • Kindhearted Cat Lover: Milo has a white cat named Fluffy. Audrey seems to have adopted her in the end.
  • Kirby Dots: The Leviathan's energy weapon. Discussed by the director on the commentary track.
  • Knight of Cerebus: For about the first half hour or so, the film is a fun, mostly harmless pulp adventure story. Then the Leviathan shows up and promptly destroys the Ulysses and kills 90% of the crew in 5 minutes flat.
  • The Lad-ette: Audrey and implied with her sister, because their father wanted boys. Helga, while she is introduced as The Vamp, is a competent quasi-military leader and fighter.
  • Lamenting Wasted Potential: After his proposal is dismissed by his superiors, Milo confronts one of them, Mr. Harcourt, and threatens to resign if they don't fund an expedition to find the Shepherd's Journal, which supposedly holds the key to finding Atlantis. Harcourt tells him that he has potential, but that he's squandering it searching for a myth, just like his grandfather did.
  • Last Breath Bullet: In the climax, Big Bad Rourke betrays his right hand, Helga, and knocks her off his hot air getaway balloon. Right before she dies, she fires a Flare Gun at the balloon in revenge, igniting it and causing it to fall back to the ground, presumably crushing Helga in the process..
  • Last-Second Photo Failure: In a Deleted Scene, a photographer is taking pictures of the crew inside the cave that leads to Atlantis when they are attacked by bat-like creatures, the photos showing the ensuing chaos.
  • Last-Second Villain Recovery: When Rourke threatens to kill Milo with a fire axe, after he accidentally smashes the still-crystallized Kida's container, this causes Milo to cut Rourke's arm using one of the crystallized glass shards to turn him into a crystal monster. At first, Rourke becomes immobile, but then he lunges at Milo, who immediately gets out of the way, resulting in Rourke being hoisted up and being shredded alive by his blimp's propellers.
  • Layman's Terms:
    • Milo, to Rourke:
      Milo: I don't know how to explain it! It's their deity, their power source!
      Rourke: Speak English, professor!
    • Also:
      Mole: The fissure! It is about to eject its pyroclastic fury!
      Sweet: Milo! Mole says the volcano's about to blow!
  • Lethal Chef: Cookie, who puts sickening amounts of lard in his food. When the team dumps his food into the campfire, it creates a miniature mushroom cloud.
    Cookie: [holding a head of lettuce] What is this?
    Helga: That would be lettuce.
    Cookie: Lettuce!? LETTUCE!?
    Helga: It's a vegetable. The men need their four basic food groups.
    Cookie: [holding up three fingers] I got yer four basic food groups: beans, bacon, whiskey, an' lard!
  • Leave the Two Lovebirds Alone: Inverted at the end where Milo and Kida both run off from their subjects and climb up a large rock structure as the stone face representing Kida's dead father flies away into the sky.
  • Lecture as Exposition: Milo gives two lectures on Atlantis. The first one is actually his rehearsal for a proposal to his superiors, which he never gets to give due to them suddenly changing the time that makes it impossible for him to make the meeting. He later attempts to give a lecture to the Ragtag Bunch of Misfits with a slideshow and some plumbing metaphors, only for some of his vacation photos to get mixed in by mistake. "Hubba-hubba!"
  • Lighting Bug: The Atlanteans use round, hollow orbs hung from poles and filled with glowing insects for illumination. Notably, the insects they use for this role are the same kind that earlier destroyed the expedition's campsite, as they burst into blazing flames when crushed.
  • Living Prop: The Gas mask-wearing soldiers appear suddenly after the explosion of the Ulysses. They don't really interact with any of the main characters and are all promptly killed off at the end. In an earlier version of the script, the Ulysses did make it past the Leviathan and boarded safely in a cavern. The expedition's considerable military equipment and personnel, including said mooks, was then debarked, prompting Milo to ask why an archeological expedition needed that much firepower.
  • Living Out a Childhood Dream: Linguist Milo Thatch has dreamed of finishing the quest for Atlantis that his grandfather started since he was young, but is still stuck in the boiler room of the Smithsonian, where he works as an janitor. It takes an old friend of his grandfather's funding an expedition for Milo to live out his dream.
  • Living Statue: The stone guardians, which come to life to protect the city from flowing lava.
  • The Load: Milo is seen this way by many of the expedition members - and he certainly causes enough problems to justify the view. Once his skill set comes into play, the trope is defied.
  • Love Interest Apotheosis: King Kashekim's wife, the queen of Atlantis, merged with the crystal known as the Heart of Atlantis. transforming into a protective dome over the city as it was sunk by the megatsunami. Thousands of years later, in 1914, her daughter Kida would undergo the same transformation when Rourke and his mercenaries attacked the kingdom, abandoning Milo Thatch, who had grown close to Kida during the expedition, however, Kida would eventually revert back to her human form after saving the city.
  • Lost World: Duh.
  • Lovecraft Country: The small fishing village in the second movie.

    M-Z 
  • Magical Negro: Joshua Sweet could be considered a mild example of this, he's the most outwardly nice to Milo out of the whole crew, the first to turn on Rourke, and the first to definitively throw his lot in with Milo in the climax.
  • Magitek: A lot of the magic in the movie works by application of their Power Crystals. Lamps are lit by touching the crystal to it something like a match and the stone fish-shaped vehicles have a mystical activation process of sticking the crystal in a hole, turning it halfway around, and then a quarter turn back, which is basically the motion of turning a key in a car's ignition. However, you've got to keep your hand on the inscription pad while doing it. This is written on the vehicle, but when your people were stuck in flood-survival bunkers long enough to forget how to read their own writings...
  • Mayincatec: The Atlantean ruins (and runes) draw many parallels with Maya architecture, especially when their Tron Lines become visible. This is a deliberate invocation of the trope, since Atlantis is supposed to have been the inspiration for those later cultures.
  • May–December Romance: It's hard to tell, considering everyone in Atlantis has white hair, but the King looks substantially older than his wife in the prologue.
  • Mayfly–December Romance: Milo and Really 700 Years Old Kida. Although, if the Atlantean's crystal power source is what makes them live so long, you never know...
  • Mechanical Monster: The Leviathan is a Magitek version of this, somewhere in the vicinity of a couple miles long, capable of staying intact without recharging for thousands of years, immune to direct torpedo hits and equipped with shearing claws and a particle beam-like Breath Weapon. Only one of them still functions by the time the heroes arrive at the gateway to Atlantis — there used to be an entire fleet of them back in Atlantis' heyday that had the ability to fly as well— but it's more than enough to trash their sub and kill over a hundred people.
  • Megaphone Gag: There are a few courtesy of Ms. Packard.
    "Attention, tonight's supper will be baked beans, musical program to follow. Who wrote this?"
    "To the person who stole the L from the Motor Pool sign, ha ha, we are all very amused."
  • Men Are the Expendable Gender: Averted to an almost ahistorical extent. The crew of the Ulysses clearly has a good number of women among its crew, note  and very few, if any, are seen to have escaped its destruction. Rourke's eulogy specifically mentions that the crew had "some of the finest men and women I've ever known." Rourke's Gas Mask Mooks in the climax are assumed to be all male, but they wear heavy, full-body coats and don't speak, so we can't say that for certain.
  • Mighty Whitey: Downplayed. The Atlanteans' technology is far more sophisticated than the surface-dwellers', but few of them actually remember how to make it work, and it takes the intervention of a white researcher to bring this knowledge back.
  • Milking the Giant Cow: Vinny, being Italian, gestures with his hands whenever he speaks.
  • Mind Hive: A downplayed and benign example appears with the Heart of Atlantis, which thrives on the collective emotions of all Atlanteans that pass on, providing its people with power, longevity and protection in return. However, as the crystal grew, it eventually began to develop its own consciousness, so when King Kashekim Nedakh attempted to use it as a weapon of war, its power ended up overwhelming Atlantis and leading to its destruction.
  • Mineral MacGuffin: The Heart of Atlantis, seeing as it's the fabled power source that the expedition has searching for all along.
  • A Minor Kidroduction: The film opens on the destruction of Atlantis, which took place when Kida was still a child.
  • Missing Mom: Follow the Disney rule of having the princess raised by only one parent: the film begins with Kida's mom being taken from her and her father.
  • Mistreatment-Induced Betrayal: Helga, as a result of Rourke throwing her off a blimp at a very great height, nearly killing her in the process. Her response?
    Helga: Nothing personal. [fires her gun]
  • Mole Men: Moliere, nicknamed "Mole". Probably a human rather than a mole, but according to the sequel Atlantis: Milo's Return, he was raised by naked mole rats. Unsurprisingly, he drives a Drill Tank for digging.
  • Motor Mouth:
    • Sweet talks faster than the other characters. In fact, his actor's rapid-fire delivery of lines made animating him somewhat difficult.
    • Milo speaks so fast he's almost unintelligible in one or two scenes.
  • Multinational Team: The crew for the expedition is multiethnic in 1914, no less. Audrey's inclusion made this the only film in Disney's canon to have a Hispanic human character voiced by a Hispanic actor (or in this case, actress) until Big Hero 6, which had Honey Lemon, another Hispanic girl, in its main cast.
  • Music Box Intervals: The movie uses a gamelan during the Crystal Chamber sequence.
  • Mystical White Hair: Almost all of the Atlanteans have naturally white hair regardless of age.
  • Near-Villain Victory: Rourke initiates a nefarious plot to nab a giant powerful crystal known as the Heart of Atlantis and bring it back to the surface in hopes of selling it for a vast fortune, not caring that doing so will condemn the Atlantean people to extinction. He forces Milo into giving out the location of the crystal hidden beneath the Atlantean King's throne chamber, but not before fatally punching the King when the latter refused to help him. And after having the Heart contained a metal box by using the King's daughter Princess Kida as a host, Rourke punches Milo in the face out of spite, which drove several of the team members to side with Milo and the Atlanteans. Unperturbed, Rourke leaves them to die; even blowing up the only bridge connected to the city to prevent them from ever pursuing him or escaping. Of course, if Milo hadn't figured out how to power the ancient Atlantean fish machines, then Rourke would've have won.
  • Never Say "Die":
    • Pretty cleverly worked around in the scene where Rourke is interrogating the King of Atlantis. At one point, he punches the King in the gut for not cooperating, and an enraged Kida (who is being held captive by Rourke's men) starts threatening him in Atlantean. The official comic book adaption translates her words to 'I will kill you for that.'
    • Elsewhere, death and references to it are pretty straightforward.
      Rourke: All right, who's not dead? Sound off!
  • Nice Job Breaking It, Hero!: Milo realizes towards the end of the film that a lot of the problems, maybe even all the problems, are at least tangentially his fault.
    Milo: Oh, my decision? Well, I think we've seen how effective my decisions have been. Let's recap. I led a band of plundering vandals to the greatest archeological find in recorded history, thus enabling the kidnap and/or murder of the royal family! Not to mention personally delivering the most powerful force known to man to the hands of a mercenary NUTCASE, who's probably gonna sell it to the KAISER! HAVE I LEFT ANYTHING OUT?!
    Sweet: Well, you did set the camp on fire and drop us down that big hole.
  • Nice Job Fixing It, Villain!: Rourke is hit by this big time when he hurls Helga off the balloon simply for the short-term gain of reducing the weight to ensure his own escape (and to give himself a bigger share of the fortune); instead, she survives just long enough to fire her flare gun and send the balloon and his prize crashing back down in flames.
  • Nobody Poops: Averted. Milo accidentally awakens some fireflies while heading out to relieve himself.
  • No Longer with Us: Happens at the end when the other explorers upon returning to the surface from their journey actually tell Whitmore that Milo "went down with the sub" since he chose to stay behind in Atlantis instead of going back with his teammates.
  • No Man Should Have This Power: After the city was sunk due to the misuse of their Crystal, the King believed it was for the best that it be hidden away from everyone... including his own people.
  • Non-Human Sidekick: Averted, but Mole is called an animal and a pet by Kida, to which Milo replies, "Close enough".
  • Non-Lethal Warfare: Averted. The Leviathan kills well over a hundred people during its attack (visibly crushing their mini-subs in its claws) and the final battle features plenty of Mooks being blown up.
  • Nonsense Classification: Cookie has his own take on the four basic food groups: beans, bacon, whiskey and lard. A deleted scene has him name the only three spices he uses: salt, salt, and sodium chloride.
  • Noodle Incident: Mole's background. Sweet is sorry he ever heard it from Audrey, and forbids her to tell Milo. According to some of the promotional material released before the film, it involves literally living in the Paris catacombs/sewers where he was raised by naked mole rats. The sequel has this line in reference to Mole: "What else can you expect from a guy who grew up with naked mole rats?"
  • Nothing Is Scarier: Used when the Leviathan is stalking the Ulysses through the underwater caves. The audience sees it clearly, but the characters don't, cranking up the suspense until the inevitable happens.
    Helga: Well, whatever it was, it's gone now.
    Rourke: Helmsman! Bring us about! Tighten our search pattern and- BOOM
  • Nothing Personal: Used twice as a Pre-Mortem One-Liner, after Rourke kicks Helga off his zeppelin and then repeated when Helga fires the Flare Gun at the zeppelin. In her case, it's probably Blatant Lies.
  • Not That Kind of Doctor: Kida had some trouble grasping the notion that not all doctors are medics.
  • Not What I Signed on For: The specialist team may be mercenaries Only in It for the Money, but they do have some standards. When Rourke takes the Heart of Atlantis, effectively condemning the entire city to death, the whole lot of them defect.
    Vinny: We done a lot of things we're not proud of. Robbing graves, plundering tombs, double parking, but hey, nobody got hurt. Well, maybe someone got hurt, but nobody we knew.
  • Nubile Savage: Convenient, that Kida fits Western beauty standards despite belonging to a culture isolated for millennia. The "savage" part however, only applies in that their culture is pre-historical in age.
  • Nuclear Candle: Averted. Rourke lights a match in a dark chasm and it's only bright enough to light his face. Nothing else can be seen until everyone turns their vehicles' headlights on.
  • Ocean of Adventure: The first part of the movie follows a team of explorers trying to find and prove the existence of the sunken city of Atlantis; they begin by traveling to the bottom of the ocean in a submarine, traversing a graveyard of ships and being pursued by a Leviathan that guards the entrance to Atlantis (which can be reached via a long series of underground tunnels and caverns accessible only underwater).
  • Oh, Crap!:
    • The entire crew of the Ulysses shits themselves simultaneously when Packard puts the Leviathan's call on over the radio.
    • There's such a moment for Milo, Audrey, Sweet and Vinnie when they realize the final battle has brought on a volcanic eruption.
    • Most of the main team members when they realize their leader plans to commit genocide.
  • Omniglot: The Atlanteans are implied to be fluent in every single language spoken in the world in addition to their own language. When the expedition first enters Atlantis, Milo and Kida converse in several different languages (including the Atlantean, Latin, Hebrew and French) before settling on English for the rest of the film.
  • Once More, with Clarity: During the king and Milo's discussion on his deathbed, we flash back to the opening scene of the film, as the king explains what happened.
  • One, Two, Skip a Few: Rourke threatens to shoot the Atlantean King on the count of ten if he doesn't reveal the location of the Heart of Atlantis, skipping to nine right after two. Right as he reaches ten, he realizes that the rock symbol in the pond in the front of the throne is the entrance to the Heart, and puts the gun down.
  • Only in It for the Money: Milo aside, everyone on the expedition is this, especially Rourke.
    Milo: You don't know what you're tampering with!
    Rourke: What's to know? It's big, it's shiny, it's gonna make us all rich.
  • Only the Chosen May Wield: Only people born with Royal Blood, such as Kida's late mother the former Queen in the prologue and later Kida herself are capable of bonding with the Heart of Atlantis crystal. During the final battle, Rourke finds out the hard way what would probably happen if anyone else tried to make contact with the heart crystal.
  • Orange/Blue Contrast:
    • The blue of the ocean contrasts against the orange light from the submarine's windows.
    • Orange fire in torches contrasting against the overall blue of Atlantis.
    • During an underwater chase sequence, the torpedo explosions are rendered in orange to pop against the blue ocean.
  • Outliving One's Offspring: Milo was raised by his grandfather Thaddeus Thatch after his parents died when he was a boy.
  • Outrun the Fireball: A lava flow and pyroclastic cloud, during the climax.
  • The Outsider Befriends the Best: Despite his famous explorer relative, Milo Thatch is a neglected museum worker who is ridiculed by the higher ups for his fancy notions about the legend of Atlantis (which turn out to be true, in-universe). His expertise in reading and translating ancient languages is what gets him recruited by an eccentric millionaire to an expedition to the lost continent. When the crew reaches Atlantis, it is Milo's language skills that allow the group to mingle with the local Atlanteans, and eventually Milo befriends (and falls in love with) Kidagakash (Kida), the long-lived princess of Atlantis.
  • Parental Bonus: Many of the voice actors (especially Don Novello) and references to people like Jefferson Davis and P.T. Barnum.
  • Percussive Maintenance: Milo uses this method, in the form of an elaborate series of blows, to fix both the boiler at the Smithsonian and Mole's digging machine. Lampshaded that Milo states that both boilers were made by the same company so he has some working knowledge in that field to justify it.
  • Perpetual Frowner: Helga is generally scowling.
  • Pet's Homage Name: Milo was originally going to have a pet rat named Plato.
  • Phosphor-Essence: Kida glows blue when she merges with the Heart of Atlantis.
  • Planetary Romance: The movie begins as a Verne-like story of exploration, but its second half leaves the modern world behind focuses on the characters' stay in the isolated cavern-kingdom of Atlantis, among ancient, crumbling and overgrown ruins as they try to study its mysterious Magitek and the remnants of its society. By the end, most of the cast returns to the surface world, but the main protagonist stays behind as the spouse of Atlantis' new queen.
  • Plot Armor: The Leviathan attack sequence noticeably plays out in a way so that only two smaller submarines ultimately survive, one smaller subpod, and one larger subpod, and only one of each contains the main characters (and their equipment, likely contained within the larger subpod). Go on. Guess which of those subpods are the only ones that remain after the Leviathan destroys the rest.
  • Plot-Based Photograph Obfuscation: When Whitmore is showing Milo the files of each of the crew members, Rourke has his face partially obscured while everyone else's is not, hinting that he turns out to be the Big Bad.
  • Plot-Triggering Book: When Whitmore, a friend of Milo's late grandfather hands him the Shepherd's Journal, a book reportedly written by someone who found it in Atlantean language and has information about the legendary lost Atlantis and how to find it, Milo then becomes part of an expedition to Atlantis, interpreting the book's information to lead them to it.
  • Politically Correct History:
    • An ethnically diverse crew of explorers... in 1914! Justified in that the core were mercenaries - which put petty little things like ethnicity aside in the Search for More Money - and the crew was assembled by Whitmore, who was a certifiable awesome nutcase.
    • Audrey's sister competing in boxing, let alone having a genuine title shot (presumably against a man), would have been extremely unusual for the time, yet is barely remarked on.
  • Poverty Food: Jebidiah "Cookie" Farnsworth serves up lumpy ooze to the survivors, who have no alternative except to choke it down. Cookie earlier stated that the four food groups are: "beans, bacon, whiskey and lard", thus dinner looks to be some unholy mixture of those ingredients.
  • Power Crystal: The Atlanteans wear crystal pendants with evident healing powers, and there's a huge one that's under the city that keeps the ecosystem down there going.
  • Primordial Tongue: The Atlantean language is presented as this, and demonstrated when Kida and some other Atlanteans are able to learn several modern languages after just hearing snippets of them.
  • Properly Paranoid: The expedition to Atlantis is rather heavily armed and crewed with a sizable military contingent, both as a precaution on Whitmore's end and part of Rourke's own plans.
  • Pun-Based Creature: There are fireflies that literally burn everything they touch. These insects are the one that cause the fire on the camp where the main characters were sleeping during their expedition's first night.
  • Punch Catch:
    • At the climax, Milo tries to punch Rourke, only for Rourke to catch it and slam Milo's own hand back into his face.
    • Rourke also uses this technique to throw Helga off the balloon, only this time it's more of a Kick Catch.
  • Punk Punk: Steampunk explorers vs. Sandal Punk Atlanteans.
  • Punny Name:
    • Mol-iere is the Tunnel King (see above).
    • A Mol(e) is also a unit of measurement in Chemistry, and Mole is seen speaking in scientific terms for chemistry on several occasions (about dirt, obviously).
    • The communications officer is Ms. Packard. Packard Bell was a radio manufacturer back around the time the movie took place. (In fact, the creators say Ms. Packard actually is the same Packard in Packard Bell!)
    • LT. L(yle) T. Rourke
    • Vinny's last name is Santorini. Santorini is the modern-day name of the island of Thera, which is theorized to have been the inspiration for Atlantis in Plato's dialogues. It was home to the Minoan civilization, which, while not supernaturally so, was advanced for its day until the island was destroyed in a volcanic eruption. This makes his position as the group's explosives expert especially apt.
  • "Reading Is Cool" Aesop: Kida struggles to explain to Milo why their culture is rotting from within. Then it becomes apparent. Their own writing has become lost knowledge.
  • Read the Map Upside Down: During their expedition to find the lost city, the team comes across two paths. Upon examining the journal, Milo points to the left path. However the left path has a monster that the team backs away from immediately. Upon examining the journal again, Milo notices his mistake and points to the right path.
  • Realistic Diction Is Unrealistic: Averted with Milo; who frequently stutters, repeats himself, or stumbles over wordsnote . Justified in-universe, as he's an anxious character adventuring for the first time.
  • Really 700 Years Old: The Atlanteans are positively ancient due to the restorative powers of the Heart of Atlantis. Kida herself is over 8,800 years old and still appears in her early 20's.
  • "The Reason I Suck" Speech: Milo, when Sweet announces he is ready to follow him on his decision.
    Milo: Oh, my decision? I think we've seen how effective my decisions have been. Let's recap: I lead a band of plundering vandals to the greatest archaeological find in recorded history, thus enabling the kidnap and/or murder of the royal family, not to mention personally delivering the most powerful force known to man into the hands of a mercenary nutcase who's probably gonna sell it to the KAISER! HAVE I LEFT ANYTHING OUT?!
    Sweet: Well, you did set the camp on fire and drop us down that big hole.
    Milo: Thank you! Thank you very much.
  • Reclaimed by Nature: Most of the ruins of Atlantis have been abandoned by its shrinking population, and have become a maze of half-sunken jungle islands. Even the inhabited areas have become covered by lush plantlife and are home to the nests of wild animals.
  • Red Eyes, Take Warning: The Leviathan is a giant robotic lobster sporting red eyes who tries to kill anyone trying to get to Atlantis.
  • Red Shirt Army: The submarine crew just keeps dying and dying. Between drowning, blowing up, wildfires, falling down a crevice, getting shot, and molten lava, only the main cast of seven survives the voyage. In total, 193 of the original 200 crew members died on the mission, which is quite a whopping number for a Disney movie.
    Rourke: [talking to only a few dozen people] Seven hours ago we started this expedition with two hundred of the finest men and women I have ever known. We are all that's left.
  • Restricted Rescue Operation: The shield that Kida's mother creates to protect Atlantis is shown to only cover the center of the city, leaving people slamming their fists on the shield wall as the waves crash over.
  • The Reveal: Rourke is a mercenary planning to take the Heart of Atlantis, even at the cost of the Atlantean people's lives. What's more, everyone on the team except Milo has been in on this plan the whole time, which is kind of shocking for a Disney movie. The main cast all do a Heel–Face Turn though.
  • Rewatch Bonus:
    • The cataclysm that opens the movie becomes much more horrifying when you recognize the first Atlantean vehicles in line fleeing from the explosion: a formation of four Leviathans.
    • The crew volunteering Milo to talk to Kida just seems like a humorous moment on first watch until you realise what Rourke's real intentions were, and realise that actually it was probably just a good way of keeping Milo and Kida out of the way while the crew armed themselves.
  • Riddle for the Ages: Just who, or what, were the Atlanteans fighting that the King felt it necessary to try and weaponize the Heart of Atlantis to begin with?
  • Roaring Rampage of Rescue: Milo leads his friends and the Atlanteans on one of these to save Princess Kida during the climax of the movie.
  • Rock of Limitless Water: In a sense. The directors' commentary describes Atlantis' giant volcanic cavern as a closed system: water falls to the magma-heated bottom of the cave, rises as steam, falls as rain onto the city's plateau, and finally flows as waterfalls back to the magma.
  • Rousseau Was Right: While the expedition crew except Milo Thatch were Only in It for the Money during their journey to the Lost City of Atlantis, all of them has since defected from it once they realized the risk factors that come with it, except for Commander Lyle Rourke, who remained firm to the goal and didn't have any sort of genuine redeeming quality.
  • Royals Who Actually Do Something: Kida. She's first seen as a member of the Atlantean scouting group covertly observing the expedition crew, then later enlists Milo into helping her revive Atlantis' culture.
  • Ruling Couple: Milo and Kida become the new King and Queen of Atlantis at the end of the movie after King Kashekim, Kida's father dies from internal bleeding after being fatally injured by Rourke.
  • Sadly Mythtaken:
    • The idea that Atlantis was a culturally-rich society and had advanced technology is a relatively recent addition to the myth. Plato simply described it as an unbeatable naval power.
    • The leviathan here is portrayed as a giant lobster-like creature actually a machine. In the biblical myths that leviathan is from it is described more as a Sea Serpent or dragon of some kind. Interpretations vary somewhat, but it is described as something recognizably reptilian enough that it's often thought of as an exaggeration of a crocodile, certainly not a crustacean.
  • Sand in My Eyes: After Kida takes Milo to a high place to overlook the whole of Atlantis, Milo sheds a few tears of joy and when Kida asked what's wrong, he just said he had something in his eye.
  • Scare Chord: The Ulysses is traveling through an underground cavern, filled with the wreckage of sea ships from every known naval era. We get a noticeable spike in the score when the searchlights of the Ulysses sweep across a part of the sea floor...and it moves.
  • Scene of Wonder: When the expedition team, led by Milo Thatch, finally reach the city of Atlantis they witness it for the first time from a clifftop in the gigantic underground cavern it sits in that overlooks the dwelling. The entire team struck by the sight.
    Cookie: Sweet mother of Jefferson Davis!
    Audrey Ramirez: ...It's beautiful.
    Dr. Sweet: Milo I gotta hand it to you. You really came through.
  • Scooby-Dooby Doors: Happens when the professors at the Smithsonian try to get away from Milo.
  • Screw the Money, I Have Rules!: Milo has this attitude all along - as does Dr. Sweet, as it turns out. The more sympathetic members of the expedition adopt this attitude after Milo sets a moral example.
  • Secret Society Group Picture: The expedition team pose for a photograph in front of their spoils. The next scene reveals that the whole thing will be covered up. There is also an earlier photo of the team that found the Shepherd's Journal.
  • Secret Test of Character: When Mr. Whitmore first gives Milo the Shepherd's Journal, he makes several doubtful comments as to its authenticity and reliability, as well as to the futility of any mission to find Atlantis. When Milo says he would know if it was a fake and declares that he would rent a rowboat himself if that was what it took to get an expedition going, Whitmore explains that that was exactly what he wanted to hear, and offers Milo a place on the multi-million dollar expedition he had already been planning.
  • See Water: Milo can read Atlantean glyphs underwater, while wearing glasses.
  • Serrated Blade of Pain: The team's medic is quite fond of a large medical saw of his. Later said saw is used in the climax.
  • Sexophone: When we first meet Helga in Milo's apartment.
  • She Cleans Up Nicely:
    • Inverted. Milo first meets Helga dolled up in a sexy dress. Later on he does the gasp and double take when he sees her on the expedition dressed casually (though not for the same reasons).
    • A straighter version with the main cast at the end, when they're all dressed in new, expensive clothes after we've only seen them in work/travel clothes for the duration of the film.
  • Sherlock Scan: Moliere discerns everything about Milo simply by examining a piece of dirt under his fingernails. In the sequel, he uses this skill to find secret locations and navigate by matching dirt samples with geographical locales.
  • Shipshape Shipwreck: There's a Greek trireme in perfect condition on the ocean floor.
  • Shout-Out:
    • The Ulysses screams of Jules Verne influence. It's important to note that Atlantis: The Lost Empire was partly inspired by 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea. Speaking of which, the idea of having to go into the Earth itself to find Atlantis came from Journey to the Center of the Earth.note 
    • Milo's explanation of the boiler's finer workings is one to Don Knotts, according to the commentary.
  • Siding with the Suffering: Much of Rourke's crew (save Helga and the Faceless Goons) initially started at his side for the reward of finding Atlantis, until he begins hurting its people and Milo. In addition, Milo guilts them for bringing a lost civilization to extinction for monetary reasons.
  • Signs of Disrepair:
  • Sinister Shiv: Milo's shiv is a glass shard that is empowered by the Heart of Atlantis when Rourke smashes the window at the Crystal's container, which he uses to slash at Rourke's arm to free himself from the latter's grasp and unintentionally turn him into a crystal monster.
  • Sniff Sniff Nom: In Mole's first appearance, he plucks a speck of dirt from beneath Milo's fingernails and, through a combination of microscope analysis and licking it, quickly determines Milo to be a linguist.
  • Something Else Also Rises: When Kida invites Milo to go diving to read a submerged relic, he is very clearly Distracted by the Sexy as she disrobes. When he steps into the water, he immediately gets a giant air bubble in his trunks, which he sheepishly pushes down.
  • Spit Take:
    Sweet: Now I'm gonna need you to fill these [two beakers] up.
    Milo: [spits out his thermometer] With what?!
  • Standard Female Grab Area: Helga holds Kida by the upper arm while she's captive, though Kida only submits due to the threat of being shot if she tries to get loose.
  • Stealth Pun: Before the expedition sets off, Rourke says, "This should be enriching for all of us."
  • Steampunk / Dieselpunk : Thanks to Mike Mignola's involvement. The submarine also bears a passing resemblance to the steampunk Nautilus from Disney's own 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954).
  • Stop Hitting Yourself: In a serious, non-mocking example, Rourke does this to Milo near the end of the movie when the latter tries to fight him.
  • Stuff Blowing Up: Vinny loves explosives… but not to the point of being a Bomb Throwing Anarchist.
  • Suck Out the Poison: Everybody has fallen down a cave shaft into the dark. People start to sound off that they're not dead. Cookie the Chef says that something bit him and someone's gonna have to suck the venom out. By the groans, we get the feeling that nobody's exactly jumping into a line. Given that Cookie's a curmudgeonly old man who serves inedible slop three times a day, and that his exact words were, "Dang lightnin' bugs done bit me on my sit-upon. Somebody's gonna have to suck out this poison."...
  • Sufficiently Advanced Bamboo Technology: Many of the Atlantean technology, such as the fish-shaped aircraft and the Stone Giants, are all based on and powered by crystals.
  • Sunken City: The titular kingdom's capital is protected by a massive air bubble, but the outskirts are exposed to the ocean and in ruins.
  • Survival Mantra: We are briefly given a shot of Milo and Audrey in an escape pod as Milo nervously chants "it's only a grease trap, it's just like a sink, it's only a grease trap, it's just like a sink..."
  • Take a Moment to Catch Your Death: Watch carefully during the destruction of the Ulysses - those two random crewmen who just barely make it through the flooding hallway before Audrey slams the door? They're the pilots of the last submarine that gets destroyed by the Leviathan.
  • Take Our Word for It: Milo and his crew are sharing their personal stories around the campfire. The discussion ends with a cut to Mole excitedly lowering himself into a hole; Milo asks "What's Mole's story?" to which Dr. Sweet replies "Trust me on this one. You don't wanna know. Audrey, don't tell him. You shouldn't have told me, but you did, and now I'm tellin' you— you don't wanna know!" In the sequel, Audrey ultimately tells Milo Mole's story, which can induce a Double Take.
  • Team Mom: Joshua Sweet takes up this role a lot of the time - he's the wisest and most compassionate member of the expedition by far (he is the first of the team to perform a Heel–Face Turn when Rourke harms the King), and can be often found taking care of the rest. His name is very well chosen.
  • Team Pet: Mole, sort of. Even lampshaded by Kida as she tries to make sense of the roles of the explorers:
    Kida: ...and the little digging animal called Mole; he is your pet?
    Milo: Close enough.
  • Tears of Awe: As Kida shows Milo the sights of Atlantis, Milo takes his glasses off to wipe some tears away, claiming he had something in his eye.
  • Technical Euphemism: Milo accuses Rourke's crew of being mercenaries. Rourke says he'd rather call them "adventure capitalists".
  • Tempting Fate:
    • In the deleted prologue, when the viking crew who last had the Shepherd's Journal are being attacked by the Leviathan, the leader of the crew dares it to 'do its worst'. It does.
    • During the slideshow, Milo figures that whatever guards the entrance to the tunnel leading to Atlantis is merely "a sculpture to ward off the superstitious". Minutes later, they are faced with much more than just a sculpture.
    • This exchange during the Leviathan battle:
      Rourke: How much time do we have?
      Audrey: Twenty minutes if the bulkhead holds. [The bulkhead can be heard imploding offscreen] You better make that five.
  • Terminally Dependent Society: The Atlanteans and their city are dependent on the Heart of Atlantis, a crystal that is alive and made up of the spirits of the dead royalty... or maybe all dead Atlanteans. It gives them vitality and a ridiculously long lifespan through the crystal shards around their necks which stop glowing when the power source is taken away, and Milo explicitly tells Rourke that they'll die if he doesn't return it. However, no one but the King seemed to know about the Heart's influence, though whether they all forgot with time or never knew to begin with wasn't revealed.
  • That's an Order!: Near the end of the movie, just right before Audrey, Vinny, Cookie, Mole, and Mrs. Packard (Dr. Sweet is clearly not present during this scene due to him unable to save the King from dying from internal bleeding after Rourke punched him) all turn against Rourke and Helga and help Milo defend Atlantis when Rourke and Helga are about to leave Atlantis with a crystallized Kida with the intent of killing off the Atlanteans this way.
  • The World Is Not Ready: It's heavily implied that both Whitmore and the surviving members of the expedition who make it back to the surface ultimately settle on keeping Atlantis a secret from the outside world. Given what the Crystal is capable of, and how storm clouds are brewing in Europe, that may be for the best.
  • This Way to Certain Death: The explorers come across a field of sunken ships ranging from Greek triremes to more modern iron ships shortly before being attacked by the Leviathan.
  • Threshold Guardians: The Leviathan guards the entrance to Atlantis. It's very good at its job, as there are sunken ships there from "every era."
  • Together in Death: The king and queen of Atlantis, who are both last seen as a recently added giant floating stone head and the Atlantean Crystal, respectively, while their son-in-law and daughter become the next king and queen.
  • Toilet Humor:
    • "To whoever took the 'L' from the 'MOTOR POOL' sign, ha ha, we are very amused." It's even more literally a toilet joke in the german translation: "Whoever took the 1 from room 100, haha, very funny."
    • "Attention. Tonight's supper will be baked beans. Musical program to follow. Who wrote this?"
  • Tomboy Princess: Kida. While still feminine, she's a perfectly capable and ruthless fighter.
  • Took a Level in Badass: Milo went from a coy linguist who got no respect from anyone, to a brave and assertive leader who faces a much larger opponent (with combat training) under a pair of rotating blades.
  • Transformation Sequence: There's a scene where Kidagakash (Kida for short), merges with the Crystal, effectively becoming a physical incarnation of the Atlantean deity.
  • Translation Convention: The Atlanteans, despite having their own Constructed Language, speak English amongst themselves for much of the film.
  • Travel Montage: The scene where the explorers travel on a subterranean highway through several Underwater Ruins via a large convoy of trucks.
  • Tribal Face Paint: The Atlanteans have varying tattoos on their faces.
  • Tron Lines: A common motif in Atlantean art and tech. The glowing etchings on the stones of the Heart of Atlantis are a good example.
  • True Companions: Milo bonds with most of the expedition members, to the point that they switch sides against Rourke's Evil Plan and join Milo to save Atlantis.
  • Try Not to Die: When Milo and the others are flying in to stop Rourke and rescue Kida, it leads to this exchange.
    Milo: Anyone have any ideas?
    Vinny: Yeah, don't get shot.
  • Tunnel King: Moliere loves to dig and is charge of the digging machine.
  • Turbine Blender: Happens to Lyle Tiberius Rourke, though the fact that he had been turned to crystal beforehand prevents it from being as gory as it could be.
  • Twofer Token Minority:
    • Dr. Sweet, African-American and Native American.
    • Audrey, female and Hispanic.
  • Two-Fisted Tales: That's the genre, even though the hero is an inversion of the usual type.
  • Ugly Guy, Hot Wife: Milo and Kida. Well, plenty of people think Milo is cute, but compared to him, Kida is wow.
  • Underground City: Atlantis isn't just underwater, it's under the ocean floor.
  • Underwater Fart Gag: At one point, Milo is embarrassed after falling into a pool and air bubbling out of his pants, making it seem like he farted.
  • Underwater Ruins: Due to Atlantis' force fields only being able to protect the main city from being destroyed by a tidal wave in the prologue, all of the areas of the kingdom outside the city are completely submerged by the tidal wave, resulting in countless Atlantean ruins found both beneath the ocean surrounding the Leviathan's lair (which also includes countless shipwrecks destroyed by the Leviathan) outside the trench containing the entrance into Atlantis and within the caves leading to the main city.
  • The Unpronounceable: Kida's full name, Kidagakash, according to Milo. Which is a bit odd for a trained linguist.
  • Unspecified Apocalypse: Whatever exploded that caused the cataclysm that destroyed (most of) Atlantis and buried the part that was protected by the shield. All that is absolutely sure is that one Atlantean looks at another and yells out "You Fool! You destroyed us all!" before they both perish in the tidal wave that resulted from the explosion, but what did that will be forever unknown. Some dialogue later in the film strongly implies that it was something to do with the mysterious, probably-sentient source of their civilisation's Magitek reacting badly to being used as a weapon of mass destruction, but who the Atlanteans were at war with and why they weren't satisfied with their already-ridiculous technological edge over anyone else on Earth at the time is never explained, and the sequel film and spin-off series that might have gone on to do so never materialized.
  • Unwitting Instigator of Doom: Milo simply pointing his flashlight in the wrong direction for a few seconds attracts the fireflies, which then destroy most of the team's supplies and cause further deaths of the remaining Red Shirt Army.
  • Villain Has a Point: Rourke tells Milo that if you gave back every stolen artifact in a museum you'd be left with an empty building. Of course, he's using this to justify stealing the Heart of Atlantis and leaving the Atlantean people to die.
  • Volcanic Veins: Near the end of the movie, after Rourke is transformed by the crystal's power, there are several bizarre glowing red veins visible all over his crystallized body.
  • Vomit Discretion Shot: Milo is shown ducking below the camera to puke off the side of a ship. Even though about half of the movie takes place in or on water, his sea-sickness is never mentioned again.—>Milo: (in Whitmore's mansion) I'm so excited, I can't even hold it in! (Cut to barfing off the ship) Carrots... why is it always carrots? I didn't even eat carrots.
  • Voodoo Shark: The explanation for the Atlanteans' ability to speak surface languages is that Atlantean is the root of every modern language, which means they can automatically speak English. If you don't know why this is complete bullshit, consider the fact that even Old English is nothing like the modern language and knowing one will not help you understand the other.
  • Walk on Water: When she becomes possessed by the crystal, Kida walks on air — she repels the water as the crosses its surface, so the water recedes from under her feet as she hover-walks to shore.
  • Wanted a Son Instead:
    Audrey: I took this job when my dad retired... but the funny thing was he always wanted sons, right? One to run his machine shop, and the other to be middle-weight boxing champion! But, he got my sister and me instead.
    Milo: What about your sister?
    Audrey: She's 24 and 0 with a shot at the title next month... anyway, I'm saving up so my papa and I can open another shop.
  • Waterfall into the Abyss: The core city is elevated above a volcanic flow, its waters endlessly spilling over into the similarly inexhaustible magma (and creating a huge cloud of steam as a result).
  • Wave-Motion Gun: The Leviathan is armed with one, as the crew of the Ulysses quickly (and tragically) find out. The Atlantean personal flyers have a miniature version of it, which prove quite useful in the final battle with Rourke.
  • Weak Boss, Strong Underlings: Exaggerated. Kashekim Nedakh is a centuries-old Blind Seer and the king of what remains of Atlantis. He's physically frail to the point that a punch turns out to be fatal. As a king, Kashekim commands an army of deadly warriors, including his daughter Kidagakash, who is their general but still has to obey him. A tad Zig-Zagged later on because while Kida becomes a MacGuffin Super-Person by merging with the crystals, her father is dead by that point.
  • Weather Dissonance: During the journey to Atlantis, there is a point where it is snowing and everything is covered in ice... underground.
  • Weird World, Weird Food: Atlantis' native cuisine is mostly centered around assorted marine arthropods, usually alive. Eventually, most of the expedition crew gets used to the food that crawls down their throats.
  • We've Got Company: Happens with Rourke when Milo goes after him after the former took the crystal.
  • What the Hell, Hero?: Milo gives a sarcastic praise version of this towards Audrey, Mole, Vinny, Cookie and Ms. Packard, prompting their Heel–Face Turn. He even gives one to himself a bit later, admitting that he willfully ignored all the signs that proved that everyone on the expedition is ruthless and only in it for profit.
  • Whisper Reaction: After learning that she speaks French, Mole quickly runs up to Kida and whispers in her ear. While she's initially willing to hear him out, she's quickly outraged and punches him down the road. It's Downplayed, however, as the exchange is actually audible and intelligible if you listen carefully and speak French: He's asking her to sleep with him.
  • Whoosh in Front of the Camera: While the explorer make their way through the underground tunnel, some figures run by in the foreground, one stopping to look at the intruders. They are later revealed to be Princess Kida and some Atlantean hunters.
  • Who's on First?: Kida gets a bit confused by some of the team having names that are also English words.
    Kida: Tell me more about your companions. Your physician, he is called Cookie?
    Milo: No, that's Sweet.
    Kida: What is?
    Milo: The doctor. He's Sweet.
    Kida: Oh, he is kindly.
    Milo: No, no, no, that- that's his name.
    Kida: His name is Kindly?
    Milo: No, Sweet. Well, I mean, he's kindly, too.
    Kida: So all of your doctors are sweet and kindly?
    Milo: No. Well, I-I'm sure some are. Ours is, but that's not a requirement. You're missing the point.
    Kida: You are confusing me.
    [later...]
    Kida: Cookies are sweet but yours is not, Sweet is kindly but that is not his name, Audrey is sweet but she is not your doctor... and the little digging animal called Mole...he is your pet?
    Milo: Close enough.
  • Woken Up at an Ungodly Hour: While the expedition camps one night, Milo gets up to relieve himself, unwittingly disturbing the firefly swarm which descends on the camp and starts lighting everything on fire. Milo starts trying to wake everyone up, at which point we see Rourke looking at his alarm clock and grumbling, "I'm gonna kill him." He then pokes his head out to tell Milo to go back to bed, at which point he sees the unfolding crisis.
  • The Worf Effect: A subtle example, when you're watching the movie for a second time. What's the very first vehicle fleeing in panic from the massive explosion that opens the movie? A whole squadron of Leviathans.
  • Worthless Treasure Twist: Zig-Zagged. Most of the exploration crew going to Atlantis expect to find some fabulous treasure there and some are willing to kill the remaining people in Atlantis to get it. Milo, on the other hand, is completely looking forward to the knowledge he'll gain on such an ancient and advanced civilization. Both happen. The main crewmembers do learn the value of Atlantis' culture, but in return for saving the people they are given plenty of actual treasure as a reward too.
  • Wrench Wench: Audrey is chief mechanic of a huge submarine despite being a teenager, and loves machinery in general. Although she's never actually seen repairing anything mechanical on-screen (the most technical work she is shown doing is turning a valve and tightening a nut, tasks anyone with with a pair of functioning hands and a wrench can accomplish, and the one time her set of skills is directly needed, Milo ends up doing the job instead).
  • X-Ray Sparks: Happens to several submarine crew workers during the scene where the Leviathan starts destroying the submarine they are in.
  • You Are Better Than You Think You Are: Milo Thatch gives a Rousing Speech to expedition crew that their greedy intentions with the Heart of Altantis will cost not only the Atlanteans' lives, but also the entire crew's esteem. Most of them have agreed with him, with the only ones left being Commander Lyle Rourke and Helga Sinclair. Although, Helga herself would later turn against Rourke, too, albeit by her own admission.
  • You Can Say That Again: Kida sees something amazing and says the Atlantean equivalent of "wow!" Milo is also amazed, and savvy enough with the language to say "You can say that again!"
  • You Do NOT Want to Know: Sweet says this about Moliere's backstory.
    Sweet: Trust me on this: You don't want to know. Audrey, don't you tell him. You shouldn't have told me, but you did, so now I'm telling [Milo], you don't wanna know.
  • You Go, Girl!: Discussed about Audrey and her sister.
    Audrey: My father always wanted sons, right? One to run his machine shop and the other to be middleweight boxing champion. But he got my sister and me instead.
    Milo: So what happened to your sister?
    Audrey: She's 24 and 0 with a shot at the title next month.
  • You Have GOT to Be Kidding Me!: Rourke's reaction to everyone but Helga betraying him after realizing the consequences of taking the Heart of Atlantis
    Rourke: We're this close to our biggest payday ever, and you pick now, of all times, to grow a conscience?!
  • Your Size May Vary:
    • Only two vehicles, apparently, escape the destruction of the Ulysses, a single sub-pod and one of the larger carrier subs which doesn't look to be much bigger than a house, considering its size next to the two-man sub-pod...yet when the survivors emerge from it, they're barely visible on top, and that single carrier is apparently large enough to carry a sizable armed backup, a full military convoy complete with air support, at least one massive boring machine...oh, and an escape zeppelin.
    • The Leviathan is also slightly inconsistent in regards to how much bigger it is than the Ulysses. In one shot, it swims quietly underneath the Ulysses, and although it's hard to tell from the water depth, the Ulysses appears to be about as long as its head or one of its larger claws. Another shot from the same action sequence shows the Leviathan quite comfortably holding the entire Ulysses like a footlong sub sandwich in its mandibles.
  • Zeppelins from Another World: The movie shows why people riding in hydrogen-filled dirigibles shouldn't back-stab badass subordinates packing flare guns.

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Save Atlantis/Save My Daughter

In his final moments, King Kashekim tells Milo of the true nature of the Heart of Atlantis and how Atlantis met its destruction, with his dying plea that Milo recover the crystal before it was too late.

How well does it match the trope?

4.8 (10 votes)

Example of:

Main / DeathbedConfession

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