You forgot to use the word “horcrux”.
To be more precise, they changed having Superboy be perpetually set in the 1930s to Now minus 20 years. IIRC, they spent a year or so of issues gradually moving Superboy forward through history until he was caught up. And then of course the Infinity Crisis and the franchise reboot made it moot.
Betty Smith’s ]A Tree Grows in Brooklyn has Sargeant McShane weaving in and out of the story and coming in to marry Katie and make everything perfect at the end.
In the Legion of Super-Heroes epic battle with The Time Trapper, the appearance of Rond Vidar as a Green Lantern.
At the end of the Matrix trilogy (I know, I know!), the nanobot face thingie is named Deus Ex Machina in the credits. Which I found more than fitting.
Wow. A rare example where it’s GOOD writing–the deus is machina’ed perfectly.
Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story
After Vince Vaughn wins the big game, it’s discovered that the payoff he took to sell his gym, he then funnelled into a bet made at the casino on his team to win the Dodgeball game. The casino then paid him his winnings in a huge treasure chest with “Deus ex Machina” imprinted on the front.
Yeah, I considered the charred crate before I posted. But divine intervention (or force majeur) is still pretty much the very definition. Besides, the scene was way too cool for someone NOT to bring up.
Brian’s UFO
I’ve noticed my favorite type of deus ex “the Watershipdown ending”, in which a baddy is introduced earlier in the story and later used to help defeat the big baddy, is being used quite a bit lately. Examples include Fantastic Mr Fox, Serenity and Galaxy Quest.
Spoilers don’t really help anyone if you don’t tell us what you’re going to spoil.
The most common use of Deus Ex Machina nowadays is the contrived explanations comic book and sci fi films use to bring back popular characters from the dead.
Spock was never shown to be able to completely transfer his consciousness into a human mind (at least, I don’t think it was ever established). Spocks death at the end of The Wrath of Khan was a great way to end that film, reflecting the entire theme of the movie: “The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the one”. The short shot of him transferring his mind to McCoy was the Deus Ex Machina by which they could bring him back later on. This highlights why the Deus Ex Machina is such a poor choice, because Star Trek could never get an emotional response from the audience again to the death of a character since the audience now assumes there will always be a magical solution.
I believe it’s because they are quite accustomed to fighting creatures the general size of an AT-ST.
I got this from the cartoons, I swear. “Caravan of Courage?” I have no idea what you mean…
whoops, sorry about that
Don’t worry about it. I have on multiple occasions posted my rant about how the land battle on Endor is grossly misinterpeted as the EWOKS kicking the Empire’s best legion’s asses. In reality, you get nothing but dead ewoks for the majority of the battle until Chewie commandeers at the AT-ST and turns the tide of the battle.
You know, it sounds like you’re saying that dead ewoks aren’t good and worthy things for a battle to produce. It’s certainly regrettable that the Empire didn’t wipe them all out, but let’s not downplay the skill and selflessness of our Imperial troops - they gave a damn good start.
The appearance of the T-Rex at the end of Jurassic Park, staving off the inevitable death at the hands of the raptors. The T-Rex apparently had tip-toed in through a back door and was hiding in a corner before leaping out just in the nick of time.
In Adaptation where
The alligator shows up to munch on the bad guy. Made perfect sense because we were in the bad writing twin’s plot at this point. I especially liked it since I had figured out what was going on by this point and called it.
I also disagree about it being an actual Deus Ex Machina. In addition to charring the crate, the power of the Ark was discussed several times in the movie so it’s not like the finale` came out of nowhere.
Also the way that the “Genesis Effect” artificially aged him rapidly up to, but not greater than, the age he needs to be to rejoin the rest of the cast.
Donnie Darko is my favorite.
The main character actually yells Deus ex Machina just before it hits.