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History Recap / AlfredJKwakS2E21EinGoedAlGoed

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Fixed misuse of What An Idiot (see Wick Cleaning Projects) and misspellings, realphabetized, commented out items listed that did not include what trope they are supposed to be. Also corrected Red Link and moved BLAM to YMMV


%% Administrivia/Several of the entries below did not list what trope they were an example of.
%% They have been commented out.
%% Please assign an appropriate trope before removing the coming tags and move to the proper place



%%* For some reason Alfred doesn't float in the spaceship until Henk shakes his head. %% What's this trope entry about?

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%%* %%ZCE/No trope assigned to this entry%%% For some reason Alfred doesn't float in the spaceship until Henk shakes his head. %% What's this trope entry about? %%



* BigLippedAlligatorMoment: Von Paljas randomly winks while asking Alfred to thank Pierrot. His intended message is unclear.
* Von Paljas' talk about science near the episode's end is questionable, because the whole point of science is to examine and explain the unknown and collect new information, and he should know it.
* MissingChild: Every child in the whole Land of Two dissappears overnight, and their parents are distraught. However the only parent who's ''shown'' is Borund who reports the childrens' dissappearance to the king.
* RevengeByProxy: Alfred targets every child in the Land of Two. Not even the children of the people whose fault it is, either. ''Every'' child in the whole country dissappears, presumably including the poor southeners'.
* ProtagonistCenteredMorality: Alfred's actions are presented in a good light and nobody carries a grudge.
* SkewedPriorities: Alfred thinks the violin being stolen would be a bad thing - not because he would be unable to return the children, but because then the king could break his promise again.

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* BigLippedAlligatorMoment: AmbiguousSpecies:
** The female animal the wheelchair lizard holds hands with after they're cured. Is she a lizard? A hippo? She appears to lack ears and no hippo this far has been drawn with hair.
** Is the first child who hears the violin a dog or a rabbit? He had whiskers which dogs in the seroes aren't usually drawn with, but the ears and rest of the head could go either way.
* BalconySpeech: The king holds a speech to a crowd celebrating in front of the palace. It's confusing in first shots where it isn't shown where the king is or who is he talking to.
* BitchInSheepsClothing: The king has Alfred secretly arrested, and then pretends to not know anything and be worried when
Von Paljas randomly winks while asking Alfred to thank Pierrot. His intended message is unclear.
* Von Paljas' talk about science near the episode's end is questionable, because the whole point of science is to examine and explain the unknown and collect new information, and he should know it.
* MissingChild: Every child in the whole Land of Two dissappears overnight, and their parents are distraught. However the only parent who's ''shown'' is Borund who reports the childrens' dissappearance to the king.
* RevengeByProxy: Alfred targets every child in the Land of Two. Not even the children of the people whose fault it is, either. ''Every'' child in the whole country dissappears, presumably including the poor southeners'.
* ProtagonistCenteredMorality: Alfred's actions are presented in a good light and nobody carries a grudge.
* SkewedPriorities: Alfred thinks the violin being stolen would be a bad thing - not because he would be unable to return the children, but because then the king could break his promise again.
asks after him.



* Alfred acts like he thinks that kind of a project can start and be done quickly. At least he relents when the king tells him it's impossible and settles to the king making a public promise so that he can't back down again.
* GivingSomeoneThePointedFinger: Alfred angrily points his finger at the king while they're talking in the prison cell.
* The episode's plot is a clear reference to [[Literature/ThePiedPiperOfHamelin]].

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%%ZCE/No trope assigned to this entry * Alfred acts like he thinks that kind Von Paljas' talk about science near the episode's end is questionable, because the whole point of a project can start science is to examine and be done quickly. At least he relents when explain the king tells him it's impossible unknown and settles to collect new information, and he should know it.
* FurryFemaleMane: The bird nurses have hair, as well as many of
the king making a public promise so that he can't back down again.
nameless patients seen during the violin montage?
* GivingSomeoneThePointedFinger: GivingSomeoneThePointerFinger: Alfred angrily points his finger at the king while they're talking in the prison cell.
* IdenticalStranger: The episode's plot Land of Two's king's driver looks weirdly similar to sir Poen van Kalekoen's driver from the season 2 episode 17. He's even wearing the same clothes.
* IdiotBall: Von Paljas and Henk don't appear to even consider the possibility that the king had something to do with Alfred's disappearance.
* ILied: Once Alfred has cured the people, the king has him arrested by the security police and thrown to jail.
%% What trope
is this entry about? * Alfred somehow doesn't choke when a clear reference soldier carries him in the air by his scarf.
* MissingChild: Every child in the whole Land of Two disappears overnight, and their parents are distraught. However the only parent who's ''shown'' is Borund who reports the children's' disappearance
to [[Literature/ThePiedPiperOfHamelin]].the king.



* BalconySpeech: The king holds a speech to a crowd celebrating in front of the palace. It's confusing in first shots where it isn't shown where the king is or who is he talking to.
* The king has Alfred secretly arrested, and then pretends to not know anything and be worried when Von Paljas asks after him.
* WhatAnIdiot: Von Paljas and Henk don't appear to even consider the possibility that the king had something to do with Alfred's dissappearance.
* Alfred somehow doesn't choke when a solider carries him in the air by his scarf.
* ILied: Once Alfred has cured the people, the king has him arrested by the security police and thrown to jail.
* AmbiguousSpecies:
** The female animal the wheelchair lizard holds hands with after they're cured. Is she a lizard? A hippo? She appears to lack ears and no hippo this far has been drawn with hair.
** Is the first child who hears the violin a dog or a rabbit? He had whiskers which dogs in the seroes aren't usually drawn with, but the ears and rest of the head could go either way.
* FurryFemaleMane: The bird nurses have hair, as well as many of the nameless patoents seen during the violin montage?
* StateSec / SecretPolice: The Land of Two has something like this, and the king orders it to arrest Alfred after the magic tune has destroyed the Mozons virus everywhere.
* StageFright: Alfred when he's supposed to play the magic violin on the radio.
* SurpriseJump:
** Henk's hat and sunglasses, and Von Paljas and the cats when Alfred suddendly gets stage fright.
** Later the king's hat is sent flying when he realzes the mass dissappearance of children is Alfred's doing.
* IdenticalStranger: The Land of Two's king's driver looks weirdly similiar to sir Poen van Kalekoen's driver from the season 2 episode 17. He's even wearing the same clothes.
* SchmuckBait: For some reason, Alfred keeps the magic violin when he's thrown in prison. Nturally, he uses it quickly.
* The cat who turns the tape machine on and off has a weirdly long and coiled tail.
* SpoilerTitle: "All's well that ends well" indicates that everything will be somehow resolved by the end of the episode.
* Nobody was ever shown testing whether or not the violin's magic actually works over the radio, and it doesn't really seem like it was considered that it's possible the music won't reach ''everybody'' in the poor south (how many people tyere have radios?), let alone whatever origin source from which the Mozons virus originally jumped to people.



* ProtagonistCenteredMorality: Aside from threatening to return the violin to the moon without curing anybody and later abducting every child in the whole country - including those of random innocent people and possibly also those of the southeners - Alfred also demands that the king sends half of ''everything'' in the north to the south ''immediately''. Doing something on that scale would be impossible even if the king wanted to do it, and Alfred doesn't stop to consider how '''half of everything''' being taken away from the north will impact the common people, because not even in the north is everybody rich.

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* ProtagonistCenteredMorality: Aside from threatening to return the violin to the moon without curing anybody and later abducting every child in the whole country - including those of random innocent people and possibly also those of the southeners southerners - Alfred also demands that the king sends half of ''everything'' in the north to the south ''immediately''. Doing something on that scale would be impossible even if the king wanted to do it, and Alfred doesn't stop to consider how '''half of everything''' being taken away from the north will impact the common people, because not even in the north is everybody rich. But his actions are presented in a good light and nobody carries a grudge.
* RevengeByProxy: Alfred targets every child in the Land of Two. Not even the children of the people whose fault it is, either. ''Every'' child in the whole country disappears, presumably including the poor southerners'.

* SchmuckBait: For some reason, Alfred keeps the magic violin when he's thrown in prison. Naturally, he uses it quickly.
* ShoutOut: The episode's plot is a clear reference to [[Literature/ThePiedPiperOfHamelin]].
* SkewedPriorities:
** Alfred thinks the violin being stolen would be a bad thing - not because he would be unable to return the children, but because then the king could break his promise again.
** Alfred acts like he thinks that kind of a project can start and be done quickly. At least he relents when the king tells him it's impossible and settles to the king making a public promise so that he can't back down again.
* SpoilerTitle: "All's well that ends well" indicates that everything will be somehow resolved by the end of the episode.
* StateSec / SecretPolice: The Land of Two has something like this, and the king orders it to arrest Alfred after the magic tune has destroyed the Mozons virus everywhere.
* StageFright: Alfred when he's supposed to play the magic violin on the radio.
* SurpriseJump:
** Henk's hat and sunglasses, and Von Paljas and the cats when Alfred suddenly gets stage fright.
** Later the king's hat is sent flying when he realizes the mass disappearance of children is Alfred's doing.

%%This entry needs a trope. ** The cat who turns the tape machine on and off has a weirdly long and coiled tail.

%% What trope is this entry about? ** Nobody was ever shown testing whether or not the violin's magic actually works over the radio, and it doesn't really seem like it was considered that it's possible the music won't reach ''everybody'' in the poor south (how many people there have radios?), let alone whatever origin source from which the Mozons virus originally jumped to people.

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None


* WhatTheHellHero
* DisproportionateRetribution
* InvasionOfTheBabySnatchers
* MagicMusic
* VillainHasAPoint:
* SinsOfOurFathers
* For some reason Alfred doesn't float in the spaceship until Henk shakes his head.

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* %%* WhatTheHellHero
* %%* DisproportionateRetribution
* %%* InvasionOfTheBabySnatchers
* %%* MagicMusic
* %%* VillainHasAPoint:
* %%* SinsOfOurFathers
* %%* For some reason Alfred doesn't float in the spaceship until Henk shakes his head.head. %% What's this trope entry about?



* MissingChild: Every child in the whole Land of Two dissappears overnight, and their parents are distraught. However the only parent who's ''shown'' is Borund who reports the childrens' dissappearance to the king.



* AdultFear: Every child in the whole Land of Two dissappears overnight, and their parents are distraught. However the only parent who's ''shown'' is Borund who reports the childrens' dissappearance to the king.

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Replacing giant summaries with synopsis from the main Recap page.


In Spiegelstadt, the capital of the Land of Two, the monkey minister is walking Von Paljas and Henk through the palace and asks Von Paljas if it's completely certain that Alfred will be able to exterminate the Mozons virus. Von Paljas assures him that it's possible and says that actually, Alfred is the only one who can do so. The monkey says they will see about that.

In the throne room Alfred tells the king to listen to him, and says he would like to use the magic violin to save everybody who's infected with the Mozons, and as soon as possible. The ministers stare at Alfred while he tells the king that as a reward he asks the king to arrange equally good living conditions to every citizen of the Land of Two, so that everybody will be equal. He tells the king to give some of the south's riches to the poor northeners. The bullterrier minister interrupts him, and haughtily tells the king that he doesn't need to listen an audacious peasant. The king turns to her and stammers that the Mozons has spread to the whole kingdom, but she tells him their doctors will certainly find a cure. Alfred looks on anxiously as the king tells her their time is running out, but she objects to Alfred's demand that they give some of their riches to the poor southeners and tells the king they can't do that. The king says that they still need to save the infected, and Alfred says that he's talking wisely now. The hippo minister asks if the Mozons can really be cured, and who's supposedly going to do it. Von Paljas suddendly appears, causing all eyes to turn to him by saying that it ''can'' indeed be cured. He tells them Alfred is the only person who can save their country. The monkey introduces Von Paljas to the king and other ministers and Von Paljas, and he takes off his hat while Alfred turns to the king. The king asks if ''he'''s Von Paljas and Von Paljas bows, apologises for speaking directly and tells the king to just trust Alfred because he has witnessed with his own eyes that the magic violin makes he Mozons viruses dissappear. The king says fine and tells Alfred he trusts him and promises to reward him by "thinking of ways" to solve the inequality between the north and the south. Alfred tells him he should get started right now but the king tells him it's impossible. Alfred tells him it's not and that he will do something right now or he will return the magic violin to the moon. King is shocked and asks where, but Alfred angrily yells that then the Mozons will spread everywhere and more and more people will get infected. The king waves his hands and relents, saying that he will hand over some of the north's riches to the poor southeners and build schools and hospitals in the south. Von Paljas smiles and nods and Alfred bows to the king, thanking him and saying that he can now help the king and destroy the Mozons virus with the violin. Alfred then says he has one more wish and the king angrily ask what he means, and Alfred explains that he would like to play on the radio. Then as many infected people as possible would hear the music, and he wouldn't need to visit every hospital. The king smiles and calls it a good idea.

Later Alfred, Henk, and Von Paljas are in the king's car, with a chauffeur who's driving them to the radio station. Von Paljas tells Alfred that he has to play for at least five hours without pause, and Alfred stares at him in shock. Von Paljas explains that then all the infected people through the country will for sure hear his playing. Alfred asks what if somebody just happens to not hear him, and Von Paljas tells him he will then need to play again.

The king paces in the palace, the end of his beard tied into a knot. His ministers stand and watch while he tosses his beard around, until the bullterrier interrupts the pacing with an apology and asks if the king will really keep his promise. The king tosses his beard again and whips around angrily, and the bullterrier asks him if he thinks it's right that a part of their riches will be "stolen" from them northeners, and ''just handed over'' to help the poor southeners. The monkey minister objects to her that Alfred is the only person who can help them in their emergency. She asks so what, even if he did heal the sick would they need to "give up their wellbeing". The king growls and asks who said they have to, surprising the ministers. He ask them if he has promised something, has he put his name on a contract? He chuckles and smirks while the ministers look on.

At the radio station, Henk is standing on a table with a fruit bowl, drinks, and a sandwich and peels an apple with a knife taller than him. Alfred tells him it's enough and he's full and can't eat any more, holding another sandwich in his wing and looking tired. Henk finishes peeling the apple and tells Alfred he must eat a lot because he needs to have the strenght to play for five hours. He cuts the apple in half while a cat who uses the machines behind the glass tells them there's one minute to the start of the transmission, while Von Paljas and four other cats working at the station stand around him. Alfred looks at the violin and the cat says the transmission will cover the whole country and all the radio broadcasts will send Alfred's playing on live. Alfred groans and waves at the animals behind the glass.

At a hospital, an old monkey and an old crocodile in wheelchairs are pushed by nurses when a voice at the intercom announces that Alfred will soon start playing a magic violin for them. In another hospital hallway, oldened patients who can still walk move on their own.

In an alley somewhere in Spiegelstadt, a young yellow rabbit runs past a crowd and a lone dog lying on the street, while the continuing voiceover asks everybody infected with the Mozons to immediately seek out radios. The rabbit goes into a house without a door and grabs the radio on the table, listening while the voice says the transmission will go on for about five hours. He then runs into another room with a curtain in the doorway where his grey, Mozons-infected father is in bed. He tugs at his father and tells him to wake up, holding up the radio and telling him to listen to it. The radio voice says Alfred wants to say a few words to the listeners, and Alfred's voice starts explaining that he will play the tune for everybody infected with the Mozons.

Back at the radio station, Alfred explains to the microphone that the clown on the moon borrowed the violin to him, and that the viruses will dissappear right away once they hear the magic violin and. He adds that this has been scientifically proven, and he wishes the audience to trust him and to calmly listen to his performance. One of the cats Alfred then starts playing and the cats turns on the tape machine and Alfredd gets ready, but his face starts twitching. Henk, Von Paljas, and the cats jump in surprise and the cat turns off the tape machine, but the tape is spilling out.

In the previous hospital, the patients and nurses are standing expectantly.

At the radio station Alfred's expression twitches and he turnsto Henk behind him, making anxious noises. Henk crosses his arms with a worried expression and taps his foot, and Alfred turns back to the microphone. He rubs the bow on his beak and starts to play the violin, and Henk smiles. Von Paljas and the cats also smile behind the glass.

The nurses at the hospital's reception look up hopefully. The intercoms are broadcasting the music in the bedridden patients' rooms, one intercom above every bed while the nurse there also looks up, and the patients and nurses who came to the hallway are still standing around with nothing happening. In another alley where a platypus, a dog, and a rooster sitting around, a large dog man runs through carrying a grey-haired dog woman with a determined look on his face. Inside a building with a radio many animals, mostly dogs but also two birds inside and other animals outside and one dog lying in bed, are listening to one radio. A dog leaning on the cupboard[?] the radio is placed on turn to look when the large dog walks in and puts the woman on a vacant seat. He tells her to sit for a while and listen to the music. She whines wordlessly and he looks forwards desperately. At the rabbits' house the young rabbit is still holding up the radio for his father, and leans down to look at him. The room dr. Parses showed to Alfred and Von Paljas is still full and everybody is confined to their beds, and the hallway is also filled with sitting and standing animals with the Mozons. Patients are also crowding outside in hundreds and looking up at large loudspeakers broadcasting the music. The ones that can't stand are sitting on the ground or lying on blankets, all exhausted and depressed.

At his palace, the king dances to the music and hums aloud, and the crocodile guard and the boar guard are also swaying side to side outside the palace's entrance.

At the rabbits' house the father's almost white fur starts to darken to it's normal brownish color and he opens his eyes and turns to look at his son, who's amazed. At the dog building, the Mozons patients' colors also start to darken from white to to their normal hues, and the large dog exclaims happily when the woman he carried there raises her head. In the alley the platypus, the dog, and the rooster have also returned to normal colors and are looking up. The rooster can stand up on his own and smiles. In the rabbits' house the father manages to sit up in the bed, and his son is overjoyed. In his hospital dr. Parses proclaims that this is unbelievable, while Biljel tells him he already believed it when the clown on the moon appeared to him in a dream three times and talked about a magic violin. They walk to the same room they had showed to Von Paljas and Alfred, and see the patients with their colors returned sitting on their beds, one even standing. Parses walks up to a puma who sits in his bed and asks how is he feeling, and he says he's feeling great. Parses nods and looks around the room, while a crocodile patient rises from bed and stretches. Biljel smiles at the doorway.

At the radio station, Alfred is tiring out and his movements are getting twitchy. Still at the table, Henk puts straws together to form a long one. He pushes one end for Alfred to take in his beak and connects the other end to a straw already in a juice glass. When Alfred empties the glass quickly, Henk detaches the long straw from the straw in the glass, and connects the other glass next to it in the same way. Alfred is sweating, his violin wing has trouble staying still and his bow wing's movements are jerky.

In the palace the king's dancing is interrupted by a knock, and he order the knocker in. The monkey minister enters and bows, and the king asks about the situation. The monkey tells him they've beard that all the patients have recovered very quickly, and the king says that's wonderful while turning away to stroke his beard. The monkey also tells him that the researchers at the medical institute's have also noticed that all the viruses have dissappeared from their blood samples. The king says it really ''is'' a magic violin, and the monkey exclaims it's all thanks to Alfred. The king tells the monkey he wants all the information that they got from the patients checked, and that he wants a detailed report delivered to him later. Monkey bows and leaves while the king walks over to a table radio [?? You know, those things executives in 80s and 90s had in their office and summoned their secretaries with], and tells the person on the other end to get Alfred to the security police's "care".

At the radio station Alfred is extremely tired and stumbles from side to side in front of the microphone, but still continues playing. The cat who's controlling the broadcast starts looking worried, while Henk jumps down from the table via a chair and tries to support Alfred by holding up the violin's scroll. However Alfred starts slumping down heavier and heavier and Henk struggles to hold him up, and Alfred eventually falls on the floor on his toes and chest. Despite this he's still playing and Henk manages to push him back into a standing position. However Alfred starts stumbling backwarsds on one foot and Henk runs to support him. However Alfred suddendly stops and Henk lowers his arms, while Alfred continues playing the violin while standing on one foot and barely conscious. However he suddendly collapses on Henk. Despite this he still doesn't stop playing and Henk, who's under his head, pushes him up into a standing position, and Alfred slowly walks towards the microphone. The cat yells to Alfred that he's doing well and he needs go on just a little while. Alfred stumbles left and right innfront of the microphone, before going on a walking spiral next to it.

In the hospital, a lizard in a wheelchair stands up, to the amazement of himself and the nurse, and holds hands with a hippo woman who has also gotten out of her wheelchair. Around them, the other patients are also standing up, smiling and hugging each other. Outside the patients lying on blankets have regained their colors completely and start sitting and standing up, amazed.

At the radio station Alfred is still playing, leaning his side on the table and Henk moving his violin wing, groaning and sweating. Henk then collapses on the table, accidentally pushing Alfred crashing on the floor. The music stops but the cat stands up behind the controls and yells that they did great and other praises, and the other cats applause. Henk lies on the table's edge and pants, still sweating all over, while on the floor Alfred's leg twitches and his wing are still going through the motions of playing the violin despite the violin and the bow lying on the ground in different sides of his body.

At the hospital room with speakers all the patients are sitting or standing up, stretching and holding each other's hands. In another room the patients are laughing, dancing, and hugging each other while the announcer's voice returns to the intercom. It says that Alfred's performance will be interrupted for the news, the magic violin has proven it's power and it's all thanks to Alfred. The patients outside the hospital are all cheering, and rushing out of the hospital and out of the doors in the Spiegelstad's alley, cheering and dancing outside. In the palace balcony, the king proclaims that the horrible Mozons virus has finally been beaten, and they don't need to die from it. People are celebrating in Spiegelstadt's streets, and when they dance the king says "Long live the Land of Two" and talks about a bright future. The crowd cheers and waves their hands.

At the radio station Henk runs into the broadcast room where Alfred is tiredly sitting in the chair, yelling that he has good news. Henk runs up to the chair and tells Alfred that almost all of the patients have listened to the tune, and those who didn't will hear it from tape later. Alfred's expression doesn't change and Henk tells him Von Paljas has tested everything in institute of medicine. Alfred mumbles that it's nice and says he needs to go meet the king now, and Henk cheerfully tells him the king has sent his car to pick Alfred up. Shortly, the car leaves from front of the station and Henk watches it go.

Shortly, a soldier carries Alfred through a prison hallway, haging him by the scarf. The soldier literally throws Alfred inside a cell, so hard he flies to the other end of the room with a whimper. The door is slammed shut and Alfred sits up, asking why are they throwing him in prison. Alfred yells that he has done nothing wrong, but the soldier walks away. Alfred bangs on the door and screams for somebody to let him out. The night comes and Alfred looks up at the moon when the clouds move and light comes in from the window.

At the same time at the windmill on the hospital's roof, Von Paljas says Alfred isn't there either. He and Henk are standing in the dark outside the windmill, and Henk wonders where has Alfred gone. Von Paljas turns and says the king was also worried about him, and Henk tells him the car's driver said he came on the king's orders. Von Paljas strokes his chin and says that the king doesn't seem to be aware of it. Henk also strokes his own chin and says it's strange. Henk suddendly lowers his paw in surprise and says the magic violin is playing. Von Paljas is surprised and looks around and Henk asks if he hears it, somebody is playing the violin. Von Paljas says he can't hear anything but Henk insists he can. Suddendly, a mist rises around them and the violin's tune becomes audible for the audience.

At the prison the clouds are moving in front of the moon again but there's still light, and Alfred sits on the bed playing the magic tune.

The whole Spiegelstadt is covered in fog and the music is heard all over it. A rabbit child in bed awaken and sits up, rubbing his eyes and lifting his other floppy ear. In another home, a duck child in pajamas also awakens and sits up. In another house where three bear children who share a bed also awaken. In a fift house, a rabbit girl wakes up and walks into the master bedroom where her mother sleeping to take her baby sibling from the cradle and walks out. In another house, three hippo children walk out of the front door, as do dozens of other children who move like sleepwalkers and join into one large crowd. With the violin playing resuming the children form a circle on the marketplace, and from the circle materializes a glowing white disk. The children gasp in wonder and don't seem scared. At least six circles have been formed and the disks start materializing in the other ones, and when children jump on them in a group of three the disk floats away. The remaining children gasp but when a new disk materializes four new children jump on it, and the same happens with the third disk and three children. Soon the sky is filled with the disks flying away in lines, and they all dissappear through the clouds.

Next morning in the palace, Borund the bullterrier minister runs up the stairs, panting. She rushes to the king's quarters where he's still in bed and wearing a nightcap, and asks what's the hurry so early in the morning. Distraught and still panting, Borund tells him all the children have disappeared. The king asks what children, whose children. Borund tells him that ''everybody's'', at least that's what it looks like. The king asks what and Borund says all the country's children, including hers, have vanished. The king asks if she's joking and distraught Borund says it's the truth, mothers and fathers are in panic. The king rubs his head and tells her not to lie, it sounds like a fairytale. The king suddendly straightens and screams, making Borund jump back in shock. She asks what's the matter and the king scowls, saying that it's of course the violinist's fault.

In his cell, Alfred is cheerfully lounging on his bed with the violin and bow propped up in the corner, humming and bouncing his leg up and down. He stops and sits up when he hears noises from the lock. The door opens and the angry king enters, and Alfred stands up on the bed. The king walks right up to him without saying anything, and when he stops he asks Alfred if he has spirited the children away. Alfred loudly asks the king if he threw him in prison. The king looks away into the ceiling and Alfred yells that he destroyed the Mozons, but the king tossed him into jail. THe boar and crocodile guards and Borund stand at the doorway while the king gives Alfred a sideways glance, saying that he made a mistake and that Alfred was right. The king insists that it was a misunderstanding, again averting his gaze from Alfred, and Alfred angrily asks if this means the king never had any intention of keeping his promise. The king asks what promise and Alfred wags his finger, telling him to try to remember. The king looks back at Borund and the guards while Alfred tells him he promised to improve the southeners' living conditions. Borund lowers her head and the king claims that he just remembered he did, but he can't do it in one night. It requires all kinds of planning and long struggle, the king stammers before continuing that it's going to take time because there's so much to do. Alfred, who had been glaring at him angrily the whole time, stands on his toes and yells that at least he can invite the mayor of the south capital to speak with him, negotiate about what they could do together, and then publicly announce it to everybody. The King is shocked by the idea of telling everybody, and Alfred explains that then everybody will know he's actually going to keep his promise. The king relents that if that's what needs to be done, they need to get to it quickly. Alfred nods, angrily saying that's exactly what he wants there.

Some time later a steam train with Biljel aboard arrives at Spiegelstadt's almost deserted train station, and Biljel and an assistant get on the king's car. He goes straight to the palace, where a room full of reporters takes pictures of the king welcoming him and their handshake.

Still in prison, Alfred lounges on the bed with his wings behind his head and smiles with his eyes closed. He opens his eyes when he hears the door opening, and Henk and Von Paljas come in. They don't say anything at first and just stand there, but when Alfred says hi Henk asks what this means, why can't he get out of there. They walk to the bed and Alfred explains it's safest for him to remain in the prison, because if somebody steals the magic violin they can't be sure that the king keeps his promise. While he sits up Von Paljas tells him the king has already done it - a moment ago Biljel led a press conference where he outlined the plans to get rid of the country's inequalities. Alfred, surprised, exclaims that it's wonderful. Von Paljas says it might take a long time, but he's sure that everything will work out. Alfred jumps in place and spreads his wings -still in a sitting position- and proclaims that in that case he wants out right now. Henk casually asks Alfred where all the children have vanished to but Alfred doesn't answer. Instead he grabs the violin and the bow from the corner, smiling and saying he thinks they're having lots of fun somewhere else, but he promises that everybody will return home by evening. He starts playing right away.

After nighfall it's somehow still full moon like the previous night, and Alfred stands on the rail of the palaces's balcony. He plays the violin while the king stands next to him expectantly. King smiles and makes a noise when he sees the line of glowing discs emerging from the clouds and carrying the children. Two of the children dance on their disc while Alfred directs them down in three lines. The parents are all waiting and smile when they see their children waving at them. The disks why straight to the parents of the children they're carrying and the children happily run or jump into their parents' arms, and their parents nuzzle them closely. The king claps on the balcony, while Alfred continues to play with his eyes closed.

The next day, Von Paljas examines the violin in his paws on the hospital roof. He admiringly says the violin is unbelievable, and Alfred who's holding up a see-through violin case asks if he's scientifically interested in it. Von Paljas puts the violin in the case and says he isn't, because science doesn't have answers when faced with this kind of things. Alfred closes the case and laughs, saying it ''is'' a magic violin after all. Von Paljas says it helped them greatly and asks if Alfred wants to return it to the moon in his stead, and Alfred nods and says that of course, he'll return it right away. Von Paljas says he doesn't know the clown on the moon, but asks Alfred to thank him and winks.

Later, the windmill is already in space and on it's way to the moon. Henk floats at the bulging side window and looks out, while Alfred is sitting down on the seat. Henk says it's really dark out there which wakes up Alfed, who was actually sleeping. He blinks and turns to Henk, saying that it was a dream after all. Henk is confused and asks what he said, while Alfred turns to look back forward and say he had a weird dream. Henk asks what kind of a dream and Alfred explains that he was playing a violin, and suddendly all the sick were healed. Henk is shocked and asks what, while Alfred mumbles that children flew to the sky and returned on small floating disks. Henk says Alfred's name but Alfred keeps talking and says it was one weird dream. Henk floats to Alfred and lifts his beak, shaking his head and tells him to stop talking crazy. Alfred suddendly starts floating too and Henk tells him it wasn't a dream, he actually did it. Henk points to the violin in it's glittering, blue-tinted see-though case and asks if he can see it, and explains that the clown on the moon borrowed them a magic violin and they're now returning it to him inna crystal case. Alfred, in tired surprise, says that it did happen after all, but to him it felt like a dream. Henk says Alfred scared him, he thought that Alfred had gone mad from playing the violin too much. He turns back to Alfred but finds him asleep and crosses his arms, saying it's understandable because Alfred really gave his everything. The windmill continues getting closer to the moon.

to:

In Spiegelstadt, When Alfred has destroyed the capital Mozons virus, the king of the Land of Two, Two does not keep to the monkey minister is walking Von Paljas agreement and Henk through the palace and asks Von Paljas if it's completely certain that orders Alfred will be able to exterminate the Mozons virus. Von Paljas assures him that it's possible and says that actually, imprisoned. Alfred is the only one who can do so. The monkey says they will see about that.

In the throne room Alfred tells
forces the king to listen to him, and says he would like to use the magic violin to save everybody who's infected with the Mozons, and as soon as possible. The ministers stare at Alfred while he tells the king that as a reward he asks the king to arrange equally good living conditions to every citizen of the Land of Two, so that everybody will be equal. He tells the king to give some of the south's riches to the poor northeners. The bullterrier minister interrupts him, and haughtily tells the king that he doesn't need to listen an audacious peasant. The king turns to her and stammers that the Mozons has spread to the whole kingdom, but she tells him their doctors will certainly find a cure. Alfred looks on anxiously as the king tells her their time is running out, but she objects to Alfred's demand that they give some of their riches to the poor southeners and tells the king they can't do that. The king says that they still need to save the infected, and Alfred says that he's talking wisely now. The hippo minister asks if the Mozons can really be cured, and who's supposedly going to do it. Von Paljas suddendly appears, causing all eyes to turn to him by saying that it ''can'' indeed be cured. He tells them Alfred is the only person who can save their country. The monkey introduces Von Paljas to the king and other ministers and Von Paljas, and he takes off his hat while Alfred turns to the king. The king asks if ''he'''s Von Paljas and Von Paljas bows, apologises for speaking directly and tells the king to just trust Alfred because he has witnessed with his own eyes that the magic violin makes he Mozons viruses dissappear. The king says fine and tells Alfred he trusts him and promises to reward him by "thinking of ways" to solve the inequality between the north and the south. Alfred tells him he should get started right now but the king tells him it's impossible. Alfred tells him it's not and that he will do something right now or he will return the magic violin to the moon. King is shocked and asks where, but Alfred angrily yells that then the Mozons will spread everywhere and more and more people will get infected. The king waves his hands and relents, saying that he will hand over some of the north's riches to the poor southeners and build schools and hospitals in the south. Von Paljas smiles and nods and Alfred bows to the king, thanking him and saying that he can now help the king and destroy the Mozons virus with the violin. Alfred then says he has one more wish and the king angrily ask what he means, and Alfred explains that he would like to play on the radio. Then as many infected people as possible would hear the music, and he wouldn't need to visit every hospital. The king smiles and calls it a good idea.

Later Alfred, Henk, and Von Paljas are in the king's car, with a chauffeur who's driving them to the radio station. Von Paljas tells Alfred that he has to play for at least five hours without pause, and Alfred stares at him in shock. Von Paljas explains that then all the infected people through the country will for sure hear his playing. Alfred asks what if somebody just happens to not hear him, and Von Paljas tells him he will then need to play again.

The king paces in the palace, the end of his beard tied into a knot. His ministers stand and watch while he tosses his beard around, until the bullterrier interrupts the pacing with an apology and asks if the king will really
keep his promise. The king tosses his beard again and whips around angrily, and the bullterrier asks him if he thinks it's right that a part of their riches will be "stolen" from them northeners, and ''just handed over'' to help the poor southeners. The monkey minister objects to her that Alfred is the only person who can help them in their emergency. She asks so what, even if he did heal the sick would they need to "give up their wellbeing". The king growls and asks who said they have to, surprising the ministers. He ask them if he has promised something, has he put his name on a contract? He chuckles and smirks while the ministers look on.

At the radio station, Henk is standing on a table with a fruit bowl, drinks, and a sandwich and peels an apple with a knife taller than him. Alfred tells him it's enough and he's full and can't eat any more, holding another sandwich in his wing and looking tired. Henk finishes peeling the apple and tells Alfred he must eat a lot because he needs to have the strenght to play for five hours. He cuts the apple in half while a cat who uses the machines behind the glass tells them there's one minute to the start of the transmission, while Von Paljas and four other cats working at the station stand around him. Alfred looks at the violin and the cat says the transmission will cover the whole country and all the radio broadcasts will send Alfred's playing on live. Alfred groans and waves at the animals behind the glass.

At a hospital, an old monkey and an old crocodile in wheelchairs are pushed
promise by nurses when a voice at the intercom announces that Alfred will soon start playing a magic violin for them. In another hospital hallway, oldened patients who can still walk move on their own.

In an alley somewhere in Spiegelstadt, a young yellow rabbit runs past a crowd and a lone dog lying on the street, while the continuing voiceover asks everybody infected with the Mozons to immediately seek out radios. The rabbit goes into a house without a door and grabs the radio on the table, listening while the voice says the transmission will go on for about five hours. He then runs into another room with a curtain in the doorway where his grey, Mozons-infected father is in bed. He tugs at his father and tells him to wake up, holding up the radio and telling him to listen to it. The radio voice says Alfred wants to say a few words to the listeners, and Alfred's voice starts explaining that he will play the tune for everybody infected with the Mozons.

Back at the radio station, Alfred explains to the microphone that the clown on the moon borrowed the violin to him, and that the viruses will dissappear right away once they hear the magic violin and. He adds that this has been scientifically proven, and he wishes the audience to trust him and to calmly listen to his performance. One of the cats Alfred then starts playing and the cats turns on the tape machine and Alfredd gets ready, but his face starts twitching. Henk, Von Paljas, and the cats jump in surprise and the cat turns off the tape machine, but the tape is spilling out.

In the previous hospital, the patients and nurses are standing expectantly.

At the radio station Alfred's expression twitches and he turnsto Henk behind him,
making anxious noises. Henk crosses his arms with a worried expression and taps his foot, and Alfred turns back to the microphone. He rubs the bow on his beak and starts to play the violin, and Henk smiles. Von Paljas and the cats also smile behind the glass.

The nurses at the hospital's reception look up hopefully. The intercoms are broadcasting the music in the bedridden patients' rooms, one intercom above every bed while the nurse there also looks up, and the patients and nurses who came to the hallway are still standing around with nothing happening. In another alley where a platypus, a dog, and a rooster sitting around, a large dog man runs through carrying a grey-haired dog woman with a determined look on his face. Inside a building with a radio many animals, mostly dogs but also two birds inside and other animals outside and one dog lying in bed, are listening to one radio. A dog leaning on the cupboard[?] the radio is placed on turn to look when the large dog walks in and puts the woman on a vacant seat. He tells her to sit for a while and listen to the music. She whines wordlessly and he looks forwards desperately. At the rabbits' house the young rabbit is still holding up the radio for his father, and leans down to look at him. The room dr. Parses showed to Alfred and Von Paljas is still full and everybody is confined to their beds, and the hallway is also filled with sitting and standing animals with the Mozons. Patients are also crowding outside in hundreds and looking up at large loudspeakers broadcasting the music. The ones that can't stand are sitting on the ground or lying on blankets,
all exhausted and depressed.

At his palace, the king dances to the music and hums aloud, and the crocodile guard and the boar guard are also swaying side to side outside the palace's entrance.

At the rabbits' house the father's almost white fur starts to darken to it's normal brownish color and he opens his eyes and turns to look at his son, who's amazed. At the dog building, the Mozons patients' colors also start to darken from white to to their normal hues, and the large dog exclaims happily when the woman he carried there raises her head. In the alley the platypus, the dog, and the rooster have also returned to normal colors and are looking up. The rooster can stand up on his own and smiles. In the rabbits' house the father manages to sit up in the bed, and his son is overjoyed. In his hospital dr. Parses proclaims that this is unbelievable, while Biljel tells him he already believed it when the clown on the moon appeared to him in a dream three times and talked about a magic violin. They walk to the same room they had showed to Von Paljas and Alfred, and see the patients with their colors returned sitting on their beds, one even standing. Parses walks up to a puma who sits in his bed and asks how is he feeling, and he says he's feeling great. Parses nods and looks around the room, while a crocodile patient rises from bed and stretches. Biljel smiles at the doorway.

At the radio station, Alfred is tiring out and his movements are getting twitchy. Still at the table, Henk puts straws together to form a long one. He pushes one end for Alfred to take in his beak and connects the other end to a straw already in a juice glass. When Alfred empties the glass quickly, Henk detaches the long straw from the straw in the glass, and connects the other glass next to it in the same way. Alfred is sweating, his violin wing has trouble staying still and his bow wing's movements are jerky.

In the palace the king's dancing is interrupted by a knock, and he order the knocker in. The monkey minister enters and bows, and the king asks about the situation. The monkey tells him they've beard that all the patients have recovered very quickly, and the king says that's wonderful while turning away to stroke his beard. The monkey also tells him that the researchers at the medical institute's have also noticed that all the viruses have dissappeared from their blood samples. The king says it really ''is'' a magic violin, and the monkey exclaims it's all thanks to Alfred. The king tells the monkey he wants all the information that they got from the patients checked, and that he wants a detailed report delivered to him later. Monkey bows and leaves while the king walks over to a table radio [?? You know, those things executives in 80s and 90s had in their office and summoned their secretaries with], and tells the person on the other end to get Alfred to the security police's "care".

At the radio station Alfred is extremely tired and stumbles from side to side in front of the microphone, but still continues playing. The cat who's controlling the broadcast starts looking worried, while Henk jumps down from the table via a chair and tries to support Alfred by holding up the violin's scroll. However Alfred starts slumping down heavier and heavier and Henk struggles to hold him up, and Alfred eventually falls on the floor on his toes and chest. Despite this he's still playing and Henk manages to push him back into a standing position. However Alfred starts stumbling backwarsds on one foot and Henk runs to support him. However Alfred suddendly stops and Henk lowers his arms, while Alfred continues playing the violin while standing on one foot and barely conscious. However he suddendly collapses on Henk. Despite this he still doesn't stop playing and Henk, who's under his head, pushes him up into a standing position, and Alfred slowly walks towards the microphone. The cat yells to Alfred that he's doing well and he needs go on just a little while. Alfred stumbles left and right innfront of the microphone, before going on a walking spiral next to it.

In the hospital, a lizard in a wheelchair stands up, to the amazement of himself and the nurse, and holds hands with a hippo woman who has also gotten out of her wheelchair. Around them, the other patients are also standing up, smiling and hugging each other. Outside the patients lying on blankets have regained their colors completely and start sitting and standing up, amazed.

At the radio station Alfred is still playing, leaning his side on the table and Henk moving his violin wing, groaning and sweating. Henk then collapses on the table, accidentally pushing Alfred crashing on the floor. The music stops but the cat stands up behind the controls and yells that they did great and other praises, and the other cats applause. Henk lies on the table's edge and pants, still sweating all over, while on the floor Alfred's leg twitches and his wing are still going through the motions of playing the violin despite the violin and the bow lying on the ground in different sides of his body.

At the hospital room with speakers all the patients are sitting or standing up, stretching and holding each other's hands. In another room the patients are laughing, dancing, and hugging each other while the announcer's voice returns to the intercom. It says that Alfred's performance will be interrupted for the news, the magic violin has proven it's power and it's all thanks to Alfred. The patients outside the hospital are all cheering, and rushing out of the hospital and out of the doors in the Spiegelstad's alley, cheering and dancing outside. In the palace balcony, the king proclaims that the horrible Mozons virus has finally been beaten, and they don't need to die from it. People are celebrating in Spiegelstadt's streets, and when they dance the king says "Long live the Land of Two" and talks about a bright future. The crowd cheers and waves their hands.

At the radio station Henk runs into the broadcast room where Alfred is tiredly sitting in the chair, yelling that he has good news. Henk runs up to the chair and tells Alfred that almost all of the patients have listened to the tune, and those who didn't will hear it from tape later. Alfred's expression doesn't change and Henk tells him Von Paljas has tested everything in institute of medicine. Alfred mumbles that it's nice and says he needs to go meet the king now, and Henk cheerfully tells him the king has sent his car to pick Alfred up. Shortly, the car leaves from front of the station and Henk watches it go.

Shortly, a soldier carries Alfred through a prison hallway, haging him by the scarf. The soldier literally throws Alfred inside a cell, so hard he flies to the other end of the room with a whimper. The door is slammed shut and Alfred sits up, asking why are they throwing him in prison. Alfred yells that he has done nothing wrong, but the soldier walks away. Alfred bangs on the door and screams for somebody to let him out. The night comes and Alfred looks up at the moon when the clouds move and light comes in from the window.

At the same time at the windmill on the hospital's roof, Von Paljas says Alfred isn't there either. He and Henk are standing in the dark outside the windmill, and Henk wonders where has Alfred gone. Von Paljas turns and says the king was also worried about him, and Henk tells him the car's driver said he came on the king's orders. Von Paljas strokes his chin and says that the king doesn't seem to be aware of it. Henk also strokes his own chin and says it's strange. Henk suddendly lowers his paw in surprise and says the magic violin is playing. Von Paljas is surprised and looks around and Henk asks if he hears it, somebody is playing the violin. Von Paljas says he can't hear anything but Henk insists he can. Suddendly, a mist rises around them and the violin's tune becomes audible for the audience.

At the prison the clouds are moving in front of the moon again but there's still light, and Alfred sits on the bed playing the magic tune.

The whole Spiegelstadt is covered in fog and the music is heard all over it. A rabbit child in bed awaken and sits up, rubbing his eyes and lifting his other floppy ear. In another home, a duck child in pajamas also awakens and sits up. In another house where three bear
children who share a bed also awaken. In a fift house, a rabbit girl wakes up and walks into the master bedroom where her mother sleeping to take her baby sibling from the cradle and walks out. In another house, three hippo children walk out of the front door, as do dozens of other children who move like sleepwalkers and join into one large crowd. With the violin playing resuming the children form a circle on the marketplace, and from the circle materializes a glowing white disk. The children gasp in wonder and don't seem scared. At least six circles have been formed and the disks start materializing in the other ones, and when children jump on them in a group of three the disk floats away. The remaining children gasp but when a new disk materializes four new children jump on it, and the same happens with the third disk and three children. Soon the sky is filled with the disks flying away in lines, and they all dissappear through the clouds.

Next morning in the palace, Borund the bullterrier minister runs up the stairs, panting. She rushes to the king's quarters where he's still in bed and wearing a nightcap, and asks what's the hurry so early in the morning. Distraught and still panting, Borund tells him all the children have disappeared. The king asks what children, whose children. Borund tells him that ''everybody's'', at least that's what it looks like. The king asks what and Borund says all the country's children, including hers, have vanished. The king asks if she's joking and distraught Borund says it's the truth, mothers and fathers are in panic. The king rubs his head and tells her not to lie, it sounds like a fairytale. The king suddendly straightens and screams, making Borund jump back in shock. She asks what's the matter and the king scowls, saying that it's of course the violinist's fault.

In his cell, Alfred is cheerfully lounging on his bed with the violin and bow propped up in the corner, humming and bouncing his leg up and down. He stops and sits up when he hears noises from the lock. The door opens and the angry king enters, and Alfred stands up on the bed. The king walks right up to him without saying anything, and when he stops he asks Alfred if he has spirited the children away. Alfred loudly asks the king if he threw him in prison. The king looks away into the ceiling and Alfred yells that he destroyed the Mozons, but the king tossed him into jail. THe boar and crocodile guards and Borund stand at the doorway while the king gives Alfred a sideways glance, saying that he made a mistake and that Alfred was right. The king insists that it was a misunderstanding, again averting his gaze from Alfred, and Alfred angrily asks if this means the king never had any intention of keeping his promise. The king asks what promise and Alfred wags his finger, telling him to try to remember. The king looks back at Borund and the guards while Alfred tells him he promised to improve the southeners' living conditions. Borund lowers her head and the king claims that he just remembered he did, but he can't do it in one night. It requires all kinds of planning and long struggle, the king stammers before continuing that it's going to take time because there's so much to do. Alfred, who had been glaring at him angrily the whole time, stands on his toes and yells that at least he can invite the mayor of the south capital to speak with him, negotiate about what they could do together, and then publicly announce it to everybody. The King is shocked by the idea of telling everybody, and Alfred explains that then everybody will know he's actually going to keep his promise. The king relents that if that's what needs to be done, they need to get to it quickly. Alfred nods, angrily saying that's exactly what he wants there.

Some time later a steam train with Biljel aboard arrives at Spiegelstadt's almost deserted train station, and Biljel and an assistant get on the king's car. He goes straight to the palace, where a room full of reporters takes pictures of the king welcoming him and their handshake.

Still in prison, Alfred lounges on the bed with his wings behind his head and smiles with his eyes closed. He opens his eyes when he hears the door opening, and Henk and Von Paljas come in. They don't say anything at first and just stand there, but when Alfred says hi Henk asks what this means, why can't he get out of there. They walk to the bed and Alfred explains it's safest for him to remain in the prison, because if somebody steals the magic violin they can't be sure that the king keeps his promise. While he sits up Von Paljas tells him the king has already done it - a moment ago Biljel led a press conference where he outlined the plans to get rid of the country's inequalities. Alfred, surprised, exclaims that it's wonderful. Von Paljas says it might take a long time, but he's sure that everything will work out. Alfred jumps in place and spreads his wings -still in a sitting position- and proclaims that in that case he wants out right now. Henk casually asks Alfred where all the children have vanished to but Alfred doesn't answer. Instead he grabs the violin and the bow from the corner, smiling and saying he thinks they're having lots of fun somewhere else, but he promises that everybody will return home by evening. He starts playing right away.

After nighfall it's somehow still full moon like the previous night, and Alfred stands on the rail of the palaces's balcony. He plays the violin while the king stands next to him expectantly. King smiles and makes a noise when he sees the line of glowing discs emerging from the clouds and carrying the children. Two of the children dance on their disc while Alfred directs them down in three lines. The parents are all waiting and smile when they see their children waving at them. The disks why straight to the parents of the children they're carrying and the children happily run or jump into their parents' arms, and their parents nuzzle them closely. The king claps on the balcony, while Alfred continues to play with his eyes closed.

The next day, Von Paljas examines the violin in his paws on the hospital roof. He admiringly says the violin is unbelievable, and Alfred who's holding up a see-through violin case asks if he's scientifically interested in it. Von Paljas puts the violin in the case and says he isn't, because science doesn't have answers when faced with this kind of things. Alfred closes the case and laughs, saying it ''is'' a magic violin after all. Von Paljas says it helped them greatly and asks if Alfred wants to return it to the moon in his stead, and Alfred nods and says that of course, he'll return it right away. Von Paljas says he doesn't know the clown on the moon, but asks Alfred to thank him and winks.

Later, the windmill is already in space and on it's way to the moon. Henk floats at the bulging side window and looks out, while Alfred is sitting down on the seat. Henk says it's really dark out there which wakes up Alfed, who was actually sleeping. He blinks and turns to Henk, saying that it was a dream after all. Henk is confused and asks what he said, while Alfred turns to look back forward and say he had a weird dream. Henk asks what kind of a dream and Alfred explains that he was playing a violin, and suddendly all the sick were healed. Henk is shocked and asks what, while Alfred mumbles that children flew to the sky and returned on small floating disks. Henk says Alfred's name but Alfred keeps talking and says it was one weird dream. Henk floats to Alfred and lifts his beak, shaking his head and tells him to stop talking crazy. Alfred suddendly starts floating too and Henk tells him it wasn't a dream, he actually did it. Henk points to the violin in it's glittering, blue-tinted see-though case and asks if he can see it, and explains that the clown on the moon borrowed them a magic violin and they're now returning it to him inna crystal case. Alfred, in tired surprise, says that it did happen after all, but to him it felt like a dream. Henk says Alfred scared him, he thought that Alfred had gone mad from playing the violin too much. He turns back to Alfred but finds him asleep and crosses his arms, saying it's understandable because Alfred really gave his everything. The windmill continues getting closer to the moon.
disappear.
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Added: 6603

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Next morning in the palace,



to:

Next morning in the palace,


palace, Borund the bullterrier minister runs up the stairs, panting. She rushes to the king's quarters where he's still in bed and wearing a nightcap, and asks what's the hurry so early in the morning. Distraught and still panting, Borund tells him all the children have disappeared. The king asks what children, whose children. Borund tells him that ''everybody's'', at least that's what it looks like. The king asks what and Borund says all the country's children, including hers, have vanished. The king asks if she's joking and distraught Borund says it's the truth, mothers and fathers are in panic. The king rubs his head and tells her not to lie, it sounds like a fairytale. The king suddendly straightens and screams, making Borund jump back in shock. She asks what's the matter and the king scowls, saying that it's of course the violinist's fault.

In his cell, Alfred is cheerfully lounging on his bed with the violin and bow propped up in the corner, humming and bouncing his leg up and down. He stops and sits up when he hears noises from the lock. The door opens and the angry king enters, and Alfred stands up on the bed. The king walks right up to him without saying anything, and when he stops he asks Alfred if he has spirited the children away. Alfred loudly asks the king if he threw him in prison. The king looks away into the ceiling and Alfred yells that he destroyed the Mozons, but the king tossed him into jail. THe boar and crocodile guards and Borund stand at the doorway while the king gives Alfred a sideways glance, saying that he made a mistake and that Alfred was right. The king insists that it was a misunderstanding, again averting his gaze from Alfred, and Alfred angrily asks if this means the king never had any intention of keeping his promise. The king asks what promise and Alfred wags his finger, telling him to try to remember. The king looks back at Borund and the guards while Alfred tells him he promised to improve the southeners' living conditions. Borund lowers her head and the king claims that he just remembered he did, but he can't do it in one night. It requires all kinds of planning and long struggle, the king stammers before continuing that it's going to take time because there's so much to do. Alfred, who had been glaring at him angrily the whole time, stands on his toes and yells that at least he can invite the mayor of the south capital to speak with him, negotiate about what they could do together, and then publicly announce it to everybody. The King is shocked by the idea of telling everybody, and Alfred explains that then everybody will know he's actually going to keep his promise. The king relents that if that's what needs to be done, they need to get to it quickly. Alfred nods, angrily saying that's exactly what he wants there.

Some time later a steam train with Biljel aboard arrives at Spiegelstadt's almost deserted train station, and Biljel and an assistant get on the king's car. He goes straight to the palace, where a room full of reporters takes pictures of the king welcoming him and their handshake.

Still in prison, Alfred lounges on the bed with his wings behind his head and smiles with his eyes closed. He opens his eyes when he hears the door opening, and Henk and Von Paljas come in. They don't say anything at first and just stand there, but when Alfred says hi Henk asks what this means, why can't he get out of there. They walk to the bed and Alfred explains it's safest for him to remain in the prison, because if somebody steals the magic violin they can't be sure that the king keeps his promise. While he sits up Von Paljas tells him the king has already done it - a moment ago Biljel led a press conference where he outlined the plans to get rid of the country's inequalities. Alfred, surprised, exclaims that it's wonderful. Von Paljas says it might take a long time, but he's sure that everything will work out. Alfred jumps in place and spreads his wings -still in a sitting position- and proclaims that in that case he wants out right now. Henk casually asks Alfred where all the children have vanished to but Alfred doesn't answer. Instead he grabs the violin and the bow from the corner, smiling and saying he thinks they're having lots of fun somewhere else, but he promises that everybody will return home by evening. He starts playing right away.

After nighfall it's somehow still full moon like the previous night, and Alfred stands on the rail of the palaces's balcony. He plays the violin while the king stands next to him expectantly. King smiles and makes a noise when he sees the line of glowing discs emerging from the clouds and carrying the children. Two of the children dance on their disc while Alfred directs them down in three lines. The parents are all waiting and smile when they see their children waving at them. The disks why straight to the parents of the children they're carrying and the children happily run or jump into their parents' arms, and their parents nuzzle them closely. The king claps on the balcony, while Alfred continues to play with his eyes closed.

The next day, Von Paljas examines the violin in his paws on the hospital roof. He admiringly says the violin is unbelievable, and Alfred who's holding up a see-through violin case asks if he's scientifically interested in it. Von Paljas puts the violin in the case and says he isn't, because science doesn't have answers when faced with this kind of things. Alfred closes the case and laughs, saying it ''is'' a magic violin after all. Von Paljas says it helped them greatly and asks if Alfred wants to return it to the moon in his stead, and Alfred nods and says that of course, he'll return it right away. Von Paljas says he doesn't know the clown on the moon, but asks Alfred to thank him and winks.

Later, the windmill is already in space and on it's way to the moon. Henk floats at the bulging side window and looks out, while Alfred is sitting down on the seat. Henk says it's really dark out there which wakes up Alfed, who was actually sleeping. He blinks and turns to Henk, saying that it was a dream after all. Henk is confused and asks what he said, while Alfred turns to look back forward and say he had a weird dream. Henk asks what kind of a dream and Alfred explains that he was playing a violin, and suddendly all the sick were healed. Henk is shocked and asks what, while Alfred mumbles that children flew to the sky and returned on small floating disks. Henk says Alfred's name but Alfred keeps talking and says it was one weird dream. Henk floats to Alfred and lifts his beak, shaking his head and tells him to stop talking crazy. Alfred suddendly starts floating too and Henk tells him it wasn't a dream, he actually did it. Henk points to the violin in it's glittering, blue-tinted see-though case and asks if he can see it, and explains that the clown on the moon borrowed them a magic violin and they're now returning it to him inna crystal case. Alfred, in tired surprise, says that it did happen after all, but to him it felt like a dream. Henk says Alfred scared him, he thought that Alfred had gone mad from playing the violin too much. He turns back to Alfred but finds him asleep and crosses his arms, saying it's understandable because Alfred really gave his everything. The windmill continues getting closer to the moon.



* DisproportionateRetribution
* InvasionOfTheBabySnatchers
* MagicMusic
* VillainHasAPoint:
* SinsOfOurFathers
* For some reason Alfred doesn't float in the spaceship until Henk shakes his head.
* AllJustADream: The episode looks like it tries to bait this at the end, until Henk tells Alfred it really happened.
* BigLippedAlligatorMoment: Von Paljas randomly winks while asking Alfred to thank Pierrot. His intended message is unclear.
* Von Paljas' talk about science near the episode's end is questionable, because the whole point of science is to examine and explain the unknown and collect new information, and he should know it.
* RevengeByProxy: Alfred targets every child in the Land of Two. Not even the children of the people whose fault it is, either. ''Every'' child in the whole country dissappears, presumably including the poor southeners'.
* ProtagonistCenteredMorality: Alfred's actions are presented in a good light and nobody carries a grudge.
* SkewedPriorities: Alfred thinks the violin being stolen would be a bad thing - not because he would be unable to return the children, but because then the king could break his promise again.
* TheCakeIsALie: The king was never going to give any money to the poor.
* Alfred acts like he thinks that kind of a project can start and be done quickly. At least he relents when the king tells him it's impossible and settles to the king making a public promise so that he can't back down again.
* GivingSomeoneThePointedFinger: Alfred angrily points his finger at the king while they're talking in the prison cell.
* AdultFear: Every child in the whole Land of Two dissappears overnight, and their parents are distraught. However the only parent who's ''shown'' is Borund who reports the childrens' dissappearance to the king.
* The episode's plot is a clear reference to [[Literature/ThePiedPiperOfHamelin]].



* The king has Alfred secretly arrested, and then pretends to not know anything amd be worried when Von Paljas asks after him.

to:

* The king has Alfred secretly arrested, and then pretends to not know anything amd and be worried when Von Paljas asks after him.



* SurpriseJump: Henk's hat and sunglasses, and Von Paljas and the cats when Alfred suddendly gets stage fright.

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* SurpriseJump: SurpriseJump:
**
Henk's hat and sunglasses, and Von Paljas and the cats when Alfred suddendly gets stage fright.fright.
** Later the king's hat is sent flying when he realzes the mass dissappearance of children is Alfred's doing.



* ProtagonistCenteredMorality: Aside from threatening to return the violin to the moon without curing anybody and later abducting every child in the whole country - including those of random innocent people and possibly also those of the southeners - Alfred also demands that the king sends half of ''everything'' in the north to the south ''immediately''. Doing something on that scale would be impossible even if the king wanted to do it, and Alfred doesn't stop to consider how '''half of everything''' being taken away from the north will impact the common people, because not even in the north is everybody rich.

to:

* ProtagonistCenteredMorality: Aside from threatening to return the violin to the moon without curing anybody and later abducting every child in the whole country - including those of random innocent people and possibly also those of the southeners - Alfred also demands that the king sends half of ''everything'' in the north to the south ''immediately''. Doing something on that scale would be impossible even if the king wanted to do it, and Alfred doesn't stop to consider how '''half of everything''' being taken away from the north will impact the common people, because not even in the north is everybody rich.rich.
----
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The whole Spiegelstadt is covered in fog and the music is heard all over it.




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The whole Spiegelstadt is covered in fog and the music is heard all over it.



it. A rabbit child in bed awaken and sits up, rubbing his eyes and lifting his other floppy ear. In another home, a duck child in pajamas also awakens and sits up. In another house where three bear children who share a bed also awaken. In a fift house, a rabbit girl wakes up and walks into the master bedroom where her mother sleeping to take her baby sibling from the cradle and walks out. In another house, three hippo children walk out of the front door, as do dozens of other children who move like sleepwalkers and join into one large crowd. With the violin playing resuming the children form a circle on the marketplace, and from the circle materializes a glowing white disk. The children gasp in wonder and don't seem scared. At least six circles have been formed and the disks start materializing in the other ones, and when children jump on them in a group of three the disk floats away. The remaining children gasp but when a new disk materializes four new children jump on it, and the same happens with the third disk and three children. Soon the sky is filled with the disks flying away in lines, and they all dissappear through the clouds.

Next morning in the palace,


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In an alley somewhere, a young yellow rabbit runs past a crowd and a lone dog lying on the street, while the continuing voiceover asks everybody infected with the Mozons to immediately seek out radios. The rabbit goes into a house without a door and grabs the radio on the table, listening while the voice says the transmission will go on for about five hours. He then runs into another room with a curtain in the doorway where his grey, Mozons-infected father is in bed. He tugs at his father and tells him to wake up, holding up the radio and telling him to listen to it. The radio voice says Alfred wants to say a few words to the listeners, and Alfred's voice starts explaining that he will play the tune for everybody infected with the Mozons.

to:

In an alley somewhere, somewhere in Spiegelstadt, a young yellow rabbit runs past a crowd and a lone dog lying on the street, while the continuing voiceover asks everybody infected with the Mozons to immediately seek out radios. The rabbit goes into a house without a door and grabs the radio on the table, listening while the voice says the transmission will go on for about five hours. He then runs into another room with a curtain in the doorway where his grey, Mozons-infected father is in bed. He tugs at his father and tells him to wake up, holding up the radio and telling him to listen to it. The radio voice says Alfred wants to say a few words to the listeners, and Alfred's voice starts explaining that he will play the tune for everybody infected with the Mozons.



At the hospital room with speakers all the patients are sitting or standing up, stretching and holding each other's hands. In another room the patients are laughing, dancing, and hugging each other while the announcer's voice returns to the intercom. It says that Alfred's performance will be interrupted for the news, the magic violin has proven it's power and it's all thanks to Alfred. The patients outside the hospital are all cheering, and rushing out of the hospital and out of the doors in the Spiegelstad's alley.






to:

At the hospital room with speakers all the patients are sitting or standing up, stretching and holding each other's hands. In another room the patients are laughing, dancing, and hugging each other while the announcer's voice returns to the intercom. It says that Alfred's performance will be interrupted for the news, the magic violin has proven it's power and it's all thanks to Alfred. The patients outside the hospital are all cheering, and rushing out of the hospital and out of the doors in the Spiegelstad's alley.





alley, cheering and dancing outside. In the palace balcony, the king proclaims that the horrible Mozons virus has finally been beaten, and they don't need to die from it. People are celebrating in Spiegelstadt's streets, and when they dance the king says "Long live the Land of Two" and talks about a bright future. The crowd cheers and waves their hands.

At the radio station Henk runs into the broadcast room where Alfred is tiredly sitting in the chair, yelling that he has good news. Henk runs up to the chair and tells Alfred that almost all of the patients have listened to the tune, and those who didn't will hear it from tape later. Alfred's expression doesn't change and Henk tells him Von Paljas has tested everything in institute of medicine. Alfred mumbles that it's nice and says he needs to go meet the king now, and Henk cheerfully tells him the king has sent his car to pick Alfred up. Shortly, the car leaves from front of the station and Henk watches it go.

Shortly, a soldier carries Alfred through a prison hallway, haging him by the scarf. The soldier literally throws Alfred inside a cell, so hard he flies to the other end of the room with a whimper. The door is slammed shut and Alfred sits up, asking why are they throwing him in prison. Alfred yells that he has done nothing wrong, but the soldier walks away. Alfred bangs on the door and screams for somebody to let him out. The night comes and Alfred looks up at the moon when the clouds move and light comes in from the window.

At the same time at the windmill on the hospital's roof, Von Paljas says Alfred isn't there either. He and Henk are standing in the dark outside the windmill, and Henk wonders where has Alfred gone. Von Paljas turns and says the king was also worried about him, and Henk tells him the car's driver said he came on the king's orders. Von Paljas strokes his chin and says that the king doesn't seem to be aware of it. Henk also strokes his own chin and says it's strange. Henk suddendly lowers his paw in surprise and says the magic violin is playing. Von Paljas is surprised and looks around and Henk asks if he hears it, somebody is playing the violin. Von Paljas says he can't hear anything but Henk insists he can. Suddendly, a mist rises around them and the violin's tune becomes audible for the audience.

At the prison the clouds are moving in front of the moon again but there's still light, and Alfred sits on the bed playing the magic tune.

The whole Spiegelstadt is covered in fog and the music is heard all over it.






* OminousFog: A fog rises over the whole country of the Land of Two when Alfred starts playing the magic violin to get back at the king.
* BalconySpeech: The king holds a speech to a crowd celebrating in front of the palace. It's confusing in first shots where it isn't shown where the king is or who is he talking to.
* The king has Alfred secretly arrested, and then pretends to not know anything amd be worried when Von Paljas asks after him.
* WhatAnIdiot: Von Paljas and Henk don't appear to even consider the possibility that the king had something to do with Alfred's dissappearance.
* Alfred somehow doesn't choke when a solider carries him in the air by his scarf.



* AmbiguousSpecies: The female animal the wheelchair lizard holds hands with after they're cured. Is she a lizard? A hippo? She appears to lack ears and no hippo this far has been drawn with hair.

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* AmbiguousSpecies: AmbiguousSpecies:
**
The female animal the wheelchair lizard holds hands with after they're cured. Is she a lizard? A hippo? She appears to lack ears and no hippo this far has been drawn with hair.hair.
** Is the first child who hears the violin a dog or a rabbit? He had whiskers which dogs in the seroes aren't usually drawn with, but the ears and rest of the head could go either way.

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\n\n\n\n\n\nAt the hospital room with speakers all the patients are sitting or standing up, stretching and holding each other's hands. In another room the patients are laughing, dancing, and hugging each other while the announcer's voice returns to the intercom. It says that Alfred's performance will be interrupted for the news, the magic violin has proven it's power and it's all thanks to Alfred. The patients outside the hospital are all cheering, and rushing out of the hospital and out of the doors in the Spiegelstad's alley.







Added DiffLines:

* ILied: Once Alfred has cured the people, the king has him arrested by the security police and thrown to jail.
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At the rabbits' house the father's almost white fur starts to darken to it's normal brownish color and he opens his eyes and turns to look at his son, who's amazed. At the dog building, the Mozons patients' colors also start to darken from white to to their normal hues, and the large dog exclaims happily when the woman he carried there raises her head. In the alley the platypus, the dog, and the rooster have also returned to normal colors and are looking up, and the rooster can stand up






to:

At the rabbits' house the father's almost white fur starts to darken to it's normal brownish color and he opens his eyes and turns to look at his son, who's amazed. At the dog building, the Mozons patients' colors also start to darken from white to to their normal hues, and the large dog exclaims happily when the woman he carried there raises her head. In the alley the platypus, the dog, and the rooster have also returned to normal colors and are looking up, and the up. The rooster can stand up





up on his own and smiles. In the rabbits' house the father manages to sit up in the bed, and his son is overjoyed. In his hospital dr. Parses proclaims that this is unbelievable, while Biljel tells him he already believed it when the clown on the moon appeared to him in a dream three times and talked about a magic violin. They walk to the same room they had showed to Von Paljas and Alfred, and see the patients with their colors returned sitting on their beds, one even standing. Parses walks up to a puma who sits in his bed and asks how is he feeling, and he says he's feeling great. Parses nods and looks around the room, while a crocodile patient rises from bed and stretches. Biljel smiles at the doorway.

At the radio station, Alfred is tiring out and his movements are getting twitchy. Still at the table, Henk puts straws together to form a long one. He pushes one end for Alfred to take in his beak and connects the other end to a straw already in a juice glass. When Alfred empties the glass quickly, Henk detaches the long straw from the straw in the glass, and connects the other glass next to it in the same way. Alfred is sweating, his violin wing has trouble staying still and his bow wing's movements are jerky.

In the palace the king's dancing is interrupted by a knock, and he order the knocker in. The monkey minister enters and bows, and the king asks about the situation. The monkey tells him they've beard that all the patients have recovered very quickly, and the king says that's wonderful while turning away to stroke his beard. The monkey also tells him that the researchers at the medical institute's have also noticed that all the viruses have dissappeared from their blood samples. The king says it really ''is'' a magic violin, and the monkey exclaims it's all thanks to Alfred. The king tells the monkey he wants all the information that they got from the patients checked, and that he wants a detailed report delivered to him later. Monkey bows and leaves while the king walks over to a table radio [?? You know, those things executives in 80s and 90s had in their office and summoned their secretaries with], and tells the person on the other end to get Alfred to the security police's "care".

At the radio station Alfred is extremely tired and stumbles from side to side in front of the microphone, but still continues playing. The cat who's controlling the broadcast starts looking worried, while Henk jumps down from the table via a chair and tries to support Alfred by holding up the violin's scroll. However Alfred starts slumping down heavier and heavier and Henk struggles to hold him up, and Alfred eventually falls on the floor on his toes and chest. Despite this he's still playing and Henk manages to push him back into a standing position. However Alfred starts stumbling backwarsds on one foot and Henk runs to support him. However Alfred suddendly stops and Henk lowers his arms, while Alfred continues playing the violin while standing on one foot and barely conscious. However he suddendly collapses on Henk. Despite this he still doesn't stop playing and Henk, who's under his head, pushes him up into a standing position, and Alfred slowly walks towards the microphone. The cat yells to Alfred that he's doing well and he needs go on just a little while. Alfred stumbles left and right innfront of the microphone, before going on a walking spiral next to it.

In the hospital, a lizard in a wheelchair stands up, to the amazement of himself and the nurse, and holds hands with a hippo woman who has also gotten out of her wheelchair. Around them, the other patients are also standing up, smiling and hugging each other. Outside the patients lying on blankets have regained their colors completely and start sitting and standing up, amazed.

At the radio station Alfred is still playing, leaning his side on the table and Henk moving his violin wing, groaning and sweating. Henk then collapses on the table, accidentally pushing Alfred crashing on the floor. The music stops but the cat stands up behind the controls and yells that they did great and other praises, and the other cats applause. Henk lies on the table's edge and pants, still sweating all over, while on the floor Alfred's leg twitches and his wing are still going through the motions of playing the violin despite the violin and the bow lying on the ground in different sides of his body.









Added DiffLines:

* AmbiguousSpecies: The female animal the wheelchair lizard holds hands with after they're cured. Is she a lizard? A hippo? She appears to lack ears and no hippo this far has been drawn with hair.
* FurryFemaleMane: The bird nurses have hair, as well as many of the nameless patoents seen during the violin montage?
* StateSec / SecretPolice: The Land of Two has something like this, and the king orders it to arrest Alfred after the magic tune has destroyed the Mozons virus everywhere.
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Back at the radio station, Alfred explains to the microphone that the clown on the moon borrowed the violin to him, and that the viruses will dissappear right away once they hear the magic violin and. He adds that this has been scientifically proven, and he wishes the audience to trust him and to calmly listen to his performance. One of the cats Alfred then starts playing and the cats turns on the tape machine and Alfredd gets ready, but his face starts twitching. Henk, Von Paljas, and the cats jump in surprise and the cat turns off the tape machine, but the tape is spilling out.

to:

Back at the radio station, Alfred explains to the microphone that the clown on the moon borrowed the violin to him, and that the viruses will dissappear right away once they hear the magic violin and. He adds that this has been scientifically proven, and he wishes the audience to trust him and to calmly listen to his performance. One of the cats cats Alfred then starts playing and the cats turns on the tape machine and Alfredd gets ready, but his face starts twitching. Henk, Von Paljas, and the cats jump in surprise and the cat turns off the tape machine, but the tape is spilling out.

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At the radio station, Henk is peeling an apple when Alfred tells him it's enough




to:

At the radio station, Henk is peeling standing on a table with a fruit bowl, drinks, and a sandwich and peels an apple when with a knife taller than him. Alfred tells him it's enough



enough and he's full and can't eat any more, holding another sandwich in his wing and looking tired. Henk finishes peeling the apple and tells Alfred he must eat a lot because he needs to have the strenght to play for five hours. He cuts the apple in half while a cat who uses the machines behind the glass tells them there's one minute to the start of the transmission, while Von Paljas and four other cats working at the station stand around him. Alfred looks at the violin and the cat says the transmission will cover the whole country and all the radio broadcasts will send Alfred's playing on live. Alfred groans and waves at the animals behind the glass.

At a hospital, an old monkey and an old crocodile in wheelchairs are pushed by nurses when a voice at the intercom announces that Alfred will soon start playing a magic violin for them. In another hospital hallway, oldened patients who can still walk move on their own.

In an alley somewhere, a young yellow rabbit runs past a crowd and a lone dog lying on the street, while the continuing voiceover asks everybody infected with the Mozons to immediately seek out radios. The rabbit goes into a house without a door and grabs the radio on the table, listening while the voice says the transmission will go on for about five hours. He then runs into another room with a curtain in the doorway where his grey, Mozons-infected father is in bed. He tugs at his father and tells him to wake up, holding up the radio and telling him to listen to it. The radio voice says Alfred wants to say a few words to the listeners, and Alfred's voice starts explaining that he will play the tune for everybody infected with the Mozons.

Back at the radio station, Alfred explains to the microphone that the clown on the moon borrowed the violin to him, and that the viruses will dissappear right away once they hear the magic violin and. He adds that this has been scientifically proven, and he wishes the audience to trust him and to calmly listen to his performance. One of the cats Alfred then starts playing and the cats turns on the tape machine and Alfredd gets ready, but his face starts twitching. Henk, Von Paljas, and the cats jump in surprise and the cat turns off the tape machine, but the tape is spilling out.

In the previous hospital, the patients and nurses are standing expectantly.

At the radio station Alfred's expression twitches and he turnsto Henk behind him, making anxious noises. Henk crosses his arms with a worried expression and taps his foot, and Alfred turns back to the microphone. He rubs the bow on his beak and starts to play the violin, and Henk smiles. Von Paljas and the cats also smile behind the glass.

The nurses at the hospital's reception look up hopefully. The intercoms are broadcasting the music in the bedridden patients' rooms, one intercom above every bed while the nurse there also looks up, and the patients and nurses who came to the hallway are still standing around with nothing happening. In another alley where a platypus, a dog, and a rooster sitting around, a large dog man runs through carrying a grey-haired dog woman with a determined look on his face. Inside a building with a radio many animals, mostly dogs but also two birds inside and other animals outside and one dog lying in bed, are listening to one radio. A dog leaning on the cupboard[?] the radio is placed on turn to look when the large dog walks in and puts the woman on a vacant seat. He tells her to sit for a while and listen to the music. She whines wordlessly and he looks forwards desperately. At the rabbits' house the young rabbit is still holding up the radio for his father, and leans down to look at him. The room dr. Parses showed to Alfred and Von Paljas is still full and everybody is confined to their beds, and the hallway is also filled with sitting and standing animals with the Mozons. Patients are also crowding outside in hundreds and looking up at large loudspeakers broadcasting the music. The ones that can't stand are sitting on the ground or lying on blankets, all exhausted and depressed.

At his palace, the king dances to the music and hums aloud, and the crocodile guard and the boar guard are also swaying side to side outside the palace's entrance.

At the rabbits' house the father's almost white fur starts to darken to it's normal brownish color and he opens his eyes and turns to look at his son, who's amazed. At the dog building, the Mozons patients' colors also start to darken from white to to their normal hues, and the large dog exclaims happily when the woman he carried there raises her head. In the alley the platypus, the dog, and the rooster have also returned to normal colors and are looking up, and the rooster can stand up







Added DiffLines:

* StageFright: Alfred when he's supposed to play the magic violin on the radio.
* SurpriseJump: Henk's hat and sunglasses, and Von Paljas and the cats when Alfred suddendly gets stage fright.


Added DiffLines:

* The cat who turns the tape machine on and off has a weirdly long and coiled tail.
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* Where did Von Paljas get the five hours from, especially if records apparently work?

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* PlotHole: Where did Von Paljas get the five hours from, especially if records apparently work?work? Why can't they just record for, say, a hour, and then play it in a loop on the radio?
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In Spiegelstadt, the capital of the Land of Two, the moneky minister is walking Von Paljas and Henk through the palace and asks Von Paljas if it's completely certain that Alfred will be able to exterminate the Mozons virus. Von Paljas assures him that it's possible and says that actually, Alfred is the only one who can do so. The moneky says they will see about that.

to:

In Spiegelstadt, the capital of the Land of Two, the moneky monkey minister is walking Von Paljas and Henk through the palace and asks Von Paljas if it's completely certain that Alfred will be able to exterminate the Mozons virus. Von Paljas assures him that it's possible and says that actually, Alfred is the only one who can do so. The moneky monkey says they will see about that.

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Later Alfred, Henk, and Von Paljas are in the king's car with a chauffeur who's driving them to the radio station






to:

Later Alfred, Henk, and Von Paljas are in the king's car car, with a chauffeur who's driving them to the radio station





station. Von Paljas tells Alfred that he has to play for at least five hours without pause, and Alfred stares at him in shock. Von Paljas explains that then all the infected people through the country will for sure hear his playing. Alfred asks what if somebody just happens to not hear him, and Von Paljas tells him he will then need to play again.

The king paces in the palace, the end of his beard tied into a knot. His ministers stand and watch while he tosses his beard around, until the bullterrier interrupts the pacing with an apology and asks if the king will really keep his promise. The king tosses his beard again and whips around angrily, and the bullterrier asks him if he thinks it's right that a part of their riches will be "stolen" from them northeners, and ''just handed over'' to help the poor southeners. The monkey minister objects to her that Alfred is the only person who can help them in their emergency. She asks so what, even if he did heal the sick would they need to "give up their wellbeing". The king growls and asks who said they have to, surprising the ministers. He ask them if he has promised something, has he put his name on a contract? He chuckles and smirks while the ministers look on.

At the radio station, Henk is peeling an apple when Alfred tells him it's enough





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* IdenticalStranger: The Land of Two's king's driver looks weirdly similiar to sir Poen van Kalekoen's driver from the season 2 episode 17. He's even wearing the same clothes.

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In the throne room Alfred tells the king to listen to him, and says he would like to use the magic violin to save everybody who's infected with the Mozons, and as soon as possible. The ministers stare at Alfred while he tells the king that as a reward he asks the king to arrange equally good living conditions to every citizen of the Land of Two, so that everybody will be equal. He tells the king to give some of the south's riches to the poor northeners. The bullterrier minister interrupts him, and haughtily tells the king that he doesn't need to listen an audacious peasant. The king turns to her and stammers that the Mozons has spread to the whole kingdom, but she tells him their doctors will certainly find a cure. Alfred looks on anxiously as the king tells her their time is running out, but she objects to Alfred's demand that they give some of their riches to the poor southeners and tells the king they can't do that. The king says that they still need to save the infected, and Alfred says that he's talking wisely now. The hippo minister asks if the Mozons can really be cured, and who's supposedly going to do it. Von Paljas suddendly appears, causing all eyes to turn to him by saying that it ''can'' indeed be cured. He tells them Alfred is the only person who can save their country. The monkey introduces Von Paljas to the king and other ministers and Von Paljas, and he takes off his hat while Alfred turns to the king. The king asks if ''he'''s Von Paljas and Von Paljas bows, apologises for speaking directly and tells the king to just trust Alfred because he has witnessed with his own eyes that the magic violin makes he Mozons viruses dissappear. The king says fine and tells Alfred he trusts him and promises to reward him by "thinking of ways" to solve the inequality between the north and the south. Alfred tells him he should get started right now but the king tells him it's impossible. Alfred tells him it's not and that he will do something right now or he will return the magic violin to the moon. King is shocked and asks where, but Alfred angrily yells that then the Mozons will spread everywhere and more and more people will get infected. The king waves his hands and relents, saying that he will hand over some of the north's riches to the poor southeners and build schools and hospitals in the south. Von Paljas smiles and nods and Alfred bows to the king, thanking him and saying that he can now help the king and destroy the Mozons virus with the violin. Alfred then says he has one more wish






to:

In the throne room Alfred tells the king to listen to him, and says he would like to use the magic violin to save everybody who's infected with the Mozons, and as soon as possible. The ministers stare at Alfred while he tells the king that as a reward he asks the king to arrange equally good living conditions to every citizen of the Land of Two, so that everybody will be equal. He tells the king to give some of the south's riches to the poor northeners. The bullterrier minister interrupts him, and haughtily tells the king that he doesn't need to listen an audacious peasant. The king turns to her and stammers that the Mozons has spread to the whole kingdom, but she tells him their doctors will certainly find a cure. Alfred looks on anxiously as the king tells her their time is running out, but she objects to Alfred's demand that they give some of their riches to the poor southeners and tells the king they can't do that. The king says that they still need to save the infected, and Alfred says that he's talking wisely now. The hippo minister asks if the Mozons can really be cured, and who's supposedly going to do it. Von Paljas suddendly appears, causing all eyes to turn to him by saying that it ''can'' indeed be cured. He tells them Alfred is the only person who can save their country. The monkey introduces Von Paljas to the king and other ministers and Von Paljas, and he takes off his hat while Alfred turns to the king. The king asks if ''he'''s Von Paljas and Von Paljas bows, apologises for speaking directly and tells the king to just trust Alfred because he has witnessed with his own eyes that the magic violin makes he Mozons viruses dissappear. The king says fine and tells Alfred he trusts him and promises to reward him by "thinking of ways" to solve the inequality between the north and the south. Alfred tells him he should get started right now but the king tells him it's impossible. Alfred tells him it's not and that he will do something right now or he will return the magic violin to the moon. King is shocked and asks where, but Alfred angrily yells that then the Mozons will spread everywhere and more and more people will get infected. The king waves his hands and relents, saying that he will hand over some of the north's riches to the poor southeners and build schools and hospitals in the south. Von Paljas smiles and nods and Alfred bows to the king, thanking him and saying that he can now help the king and destroy the Mozons virus with the violin. Alfred then says he has one more wish





wish and the king angrily ask what he means, and Alfred explains that he would like to play on the radio. Then as many infected people as possible would hear the music, and he wouldn't need to visit every hospital. The king smiles and calls it a good idea.

Later Alfred, Henk, and Von Paljas are in the king's car with a chauffeur who's driving them to the radio station







Added DiffLines:

* Where did Von Paljas get the five hours from, especially if records apparently work?

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Changed: 38

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In the throne room Alfred tells the king to listen to him, and says he would like to use the magic violin to save everybody who's infected with the Mozons, and as soon as possible. The ministers stare at Alfred while he tells the king that as a reward he asks the king to arrange equally good living conditions to every citizen of the Land of Two, so that everybody will be equal. He tells the king to give some of the south's riches to the poor northeners. The bullterrier minister interrupts him, and haughtily tells the king that he doesn't need to listen an audacious peasant. The king turns to her and stammers that the Mozons has spread to the whole kingdom, but she tells him their doctors will certainly find a cure. Alfred looks on anxiously as the king tells her their time is running out, but she objects to Alfred's demand that they give some of their riches to the poor southeners and tells the king they can't do that. The king says that they still need to save the infected, and Alfred says that he's talking wisely now. The hippo minister asks if the Mozons can really be cured, and who's supposedly going to do it. Von Paljas suddendly appears, causing all eyes to turn to him by saying that it ''can'' indeed be cured. He tells them Alfred is the only person who can save their country. The monkey introduces Von Paljas to the king and other ministers and Von Paljas, and he takes off his hat while Alfred turns to the king. The king asks if ''he'''s Von Paljas and Von Paljas bows, apologises for speaking directly and tells the king to just trust Alfred because he has witnessed with his own eyes that the magic violin makes he Mozons viruses dissappear. The king says fine and tells Alfred he trusts him and promises to reward him by "thinking of ways" to solve the inequality between the north and the south. Alfred tells him he should get started right now but the king tells him it's impossible. Alfred tells him it's not and that he will do something right now or he will return the magic violin to the moon. King is shocked and asks where, but Alfred angrily yells that then the Mozons will spread everywhere and more and more people will get infected. The king waves his hands and relents, saying that he will hand over some of the north's riches to the poor southeners and build schools and hospitals in the south. Von Paljas smiles and nods and Alfred bows to the king, thanking him and saying that he can now help the king and destroy the Mozons virus with the violin.






to:

In the throne room Alfred tells the king to listen to him, and says he would like to use the magic violin to save everybody who's infected with the Mozons, and as soon as possible. The ministers stare at Alfred while he tells the king that as a reward he asks the king to arrange equally good living conditions to every citizen of the Land of Two, so that everybody will be equal. He tells the king to give some of the south's riches to the poor northeners. The bullterrier minister interrupts him, and haughtily tells the king that he doesn't need to listen an audacious peasant. The king turns to her and stammers that the Mozons has spread to the whole kingdom, but she tells him their doctors will certainly find a cure. Alfred looks on anxiously as the king tells her their time is running out, but she objects to Alfred's demand that they give some of their riches to the poor southeners and tells the king they can't do that. The king says that they still need to save the infected, and Alfred says that he's talking wisely now. The hippo minister asks if the Mozons can really be cured, and who's supposedly going to do it. Von Paljas suddendly appears, causing all eyes to turn to him by saying that it ''can'' indeed be cured. He tells them Alfred is the only person who can save their country. The monkey introduces Von Paljas to the king and other ministers and Von Paljas, and he takes off his hat while Alfred turns to the king. The king asks if ''he'''s Von Paljas and Von Paljas bows, apologises for speaking directly and tells the king to just trust Alfred because he has witnessed with his own eyes that the magic violin makes he Mozons viruses dissappear. The king says fine and tells Alfred he trusts him and promises to reward him by "thinking of ways" to solve the inequality between the north and the south. Alfred tells him he should get started right now but the king tells him it's impossible. Alfred tells him it's not and that he will do something right now or he will return the magic violin to the moon. King is shocked and asks where, but Alfred angrily yells that then the Mozons will spread everywhere and more and more people will get infected. The king waves his hands and relents, saying that he will hand over some of the north's riches to the poor southeners and build schools and hospitals in the south. Von Paljas smiles and nods and Alfred bows to the king, thanking him and saying that he can now help the king and destroy the Mozons virus with the violin.





violin. Alfred then says he has one more wish







Added DiffLines:

* Nobody was ever shown testing whether or not the violin's magic actually works over the radio, and it doesn't really seem like it was considered that it's possible the music won't reach ''everybody'' in the poor south (how many people tyere have radios?), let alone whatever origin source from which the Mozons virus originally jumped to people.
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* ProtagonistCenteredMorality: Aside from threatening to return the violin to the moon without curing anybody and abducting every child in the whole country, including those of random innocent people and possibly also those of the southeners, Alfred also demands that the king sends half of ''everything'' in the north to the south. Doing something on that scale would be impossible even if the king wanted to do it, and Alfred doesn't stop to consider how '''half of everything''' being taken away from the north will impact the common people, because not even in the north is everybody rich.

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* ProtagonistCenteredMorality: Aside from threatening to return the violin to the moon without curing anybody and later abducting every child in the whole country, country - including those of random innocent people and possibly also those of the southeners, southeners - Alfred also demands that the king sends half of ''everything'' in the north to the south.south ''immediately''. Doing something on that scale would be impossible even if the king wanted to do it, and Alfred doesn't stop to consider how '''half of everything''' being taken away from the north will impact the common people, because not even in the north is everybody rich.
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In the throne room Alfred tells the king to listen to him, and says he would like to use the magic violin to save everybody who's infected with the Mozons, and as soon as possible. The ministers stare at Alfred while he tells the king that as a reward he asks the king to arrange equally good living conditions to every citizen of the Land of Two, so that everybody will be equal. He tells the king to give some of the south's riches to the poor northeners. The bullterrier minister interrupts him, and haughtily tells the king that he doesn't need to listen an audacious peasant. The king turns to her and stammers that the Mozons has spread to the whole kingdom, but she tells him their doctors will certainly find a cure. Alfred looks on anxiously as the king tells her their time is running out, but she objects to Alfred's demand that they give some of their riches to the poor southeners and tells the king they can't do that. The king says that they still need to save the infected, and Alfred says that he's talking wisely now. The hippo minister asks if the Mozons can really be cured, and who's supposedly going to do it. Von Paljas suddendly appears, causing all eyes to turn to him by saying that it ''can'' indeed be cured. He tells them Alfred is the only person who can save their country. The monkey introduces Von Paljas to the king and other ministers and Von Paljas, and he takes off his hat while Alfred turns to the king. The king asks if ''he'''s Von Paljas and Von Paljas bows, apologises for speaking directly and tells the king to just trust Alfred because he has witnessed with his own eyes that the magic violin makes he Mozons viruses dissappear. The king says fine and tells Alfred he trusts him and promises to reward him by "thinking of ways" to solve the inequality between the north and the south. Alfred tells him he should get started right now but the king tells him it's impossible. Alfred tells him it's not and that he will do something right now or he will return the magic violin to the moon. King is shocked and asks where, but Alfred angrily yells that then the Mozons will spread everywhere and more and more people will get infected. The king waves his hands and relents, saying that he will hand over some of the north's riches to the poor southeners and build schools and hospitals in the south. Von Paljas smiles and nods and Alfred bows to the king, thanking him and saying that he can now help the king and destroy the Mozons virus with the violin.






to:

In the throne room Alfred tells the king to listen to him, and says he would like to use the magic violin to save everybody who's infected with the Mozons, and as soon as possible. The ministers stare at Alfred while he tells the king that as a reward he asks the king to arrange equally good living conditions to every citizen of the Land of Two, so that everybody will be equal. He tells the king to give some of the south's riches to the poor northeners. The bullterrier bullterrier minister interrupts him, and haughtily tells the king that he doesn't need to listen an audacious peasant. The king turns to her and stammers that the Mozons has spread to the whole kingdom, but she tells him their doctors will certainly find a cure. Alfred looks on anxiously as the king tells her their time is running out, but she objects to Alfred's demand that they give some of their riches to the poor southeners and tells the king they can't do that. The king says that they still need to save the infected, and Alfred says that he's talking wisely now. The hippo minister asks if the Mozons can really be cured, and who's supposedly going to do it. Von Paljas suddendly appears, causing all eyes to turn to him by saying that it ''can'' indeed be cured. He tells them Alfred is the only person who can save their country. The monkey introduces Von Paljas to the king and other ministers and Von Paljas, and he takes off his hat while Alfred turns to the king. The king asks if ''he'''s Von Paljas and Von Paljas bows, apologises for speaking directly and tells the king to just trust Alfred because he has witnessed with his own eyes that the magic violin makes he Mozons viruses dissappear. The king says fine and tells Alfred he trusts him and promises to reward him by "thinking of ways" to solve the inequality between the north and the south. Alfred tells him he should get started right now but the king tells him it's impossible. Alfred tells him it's not and that he will do something right now or he will return the magic violin to the moon. King is shocked and asks where, but Alfred angrily yells that then the Mozons will spread everywhere and more and more people will get infected. The king waves his hands and relents, saying that he will hand over some of the north's riches to the poor southeners and build schools and hospitals in the south. Von Paljas smiles and nods and Alfred bows to the king, thanking him and saying that he can now help the king and destroy the Mozons virus with the violin.





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to:

In Spiegelstadt, the capital of the Land of Two, the moneky minister is walking Von Paljas and Henk through the palace and asks Von Paljas if it's completely certain that Alfred will be able to exterminate the Mozons virus. Von Paljas assures him that it's possible and says that actually, Alfred is the only one who can do so. The moneky says they will see about that.

In the throne room Alfred tells the king to listen to him, and says he would like to use the magic violin to save everybody who's infected with the Mozons, and as soon as possible. The ministers stare at Alfred while he tells the king that as a reward he asks the king to arrange equally good living conditions to every citizen of the Land of Two, so that everybody will be equal. He tells the king to give some of the south's riches to the poor northeners. The bullterrier minister interrupts him, and haughtily tells the king that he doesn't need to listen an audacious peasant. The king turns to her and stammers that the Mozons has spread to the whole kingdom, but she tells him their doctors will certainly find a cure. Alfred looks on anxiously as the king tells her their time is running out, but she objects to Alfred's demand that they give some of their riches to the poor southeners and tells the king they can't do that. The king says that they still need to save the infected, and Alfred says that he's talking wisely now. The hippo minister asks if the Mozons can really be cured, and who's supposedly going to do it. Von Paljas suddendly appears, causing all eyes to turn to him by saying that it ''can'' indeed be cured. He tells them Alfred is the only person who can save their country. The monkey introduces Von Paljas to the king and other ministers and Von Paljas, and he takes off his hat while Alfred turns to the king. The king asks if ''he'''s Von Paljas and Von Paljas bows, apologises for speaking directly and tells the king to just trust Alfred because he has witnessed with his own eyes that the magic violin makes he Mozons viruses dissappear. The king says fine and tells Alfred he trusts him and promises to reward him by "thinking of ways" to solve the inequality between the north and the south. Alfred tells him he should get started right now but the king tells him it's impossible. Alfred tells him it's not and that he will do something right now or he will return the magic violin to the moon. King is shocked and asks where, but Alfred angrily yells that then the Mozons will spread everywhere and more and more people will get infected. The king waves his hands and relents, saying that he will hand over some of the north's riches to the poor southeners and build schools and hospitals in the south. Von Paljas smiles and nods and Alfred bows to the king, thanking him and saying that he can now help the king and destroy the Mozons virus with the violin.








* SpoilerTitle: "All's well that ends well" indicates that everything will be somehow resolved by the end of the episode.

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* SchmuckBait: For some reason, Alfred keeps the magic violin when he's thrown in prison. Nturally, he uses it quickly.
* SpoilerTitle: "All's well that ends well" indicates that everything will be somehow resolved by the end of the episode.episode.
* ProtagonistCenteredMorality: Aside from threatening to return the violin to the moon without curing anybody and abducting every child in the whole country, including those of random innocent people and possibly also those of the southeners, Alfred also demands that the king sends half of ''everything'' in the north to the south. Doing something on that scale would be impossible even if the king wanted to do it, and Alfred doesn't stop to consider how '''half of everything''' being taken away from the north will impact the common people, because not even in the north is everybody rich.
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* WhatTheHellHero

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* WhatTheHellHeroWhatTheHellHero
* SpoilerTitle: "All's well that ends well" indicates that everything will be somehow resolved by the end of the episode.
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Added DiffLines:

!! Continued from Pierrot (Clown On The Moon)


!! Tropes:
* WhatTheHellHero

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