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1%% Administrivia/ZeroContextExample entries are not allowed on wiki pages. All such entries have been commented out. Add context to the entries before uncommenting them.
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3[[quoteright:1000:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mv5bztq3owezzjitotjjmi00n2zllwjjodmtowe4nwjjotu1owyzxkeyxkfqcgdeqxvymjexmja3nty_v1_fmjpg_ux1010.jpg]]
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5->''You can see it...you can experience it...but you won't...believe it.''
6-->-- '''Tagline'''
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8''KÀ'' is a Creator/CirqueDuSoleil show installed in a specially-constructed showroom at the [=MGM=] Grand Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada. It opened in 2005 as the company's fourth show in the city and sixteenth production overall.
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10Directed by Robert Lepage, the concept of this show is something that was new to Cirque at the time: a focus on linear storytelling in that the plot is intended as the heart of the experience and the acrobatics and other specialty acts advance it. There is no real world-language dialogue, only a brief English narration at the beginning. [[DoubleMeaningTitle The title is both]] the Egyptian word for "duality" and the Japanese word for "fire"; as the narration points out, fire can be both destructive and life-bringing, and used for good or evil.
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12Heavily inspired by {{Wuxia}}, the story is set in "The Empire", a kingdom of noble warriors, good-hearted commoners, and kind royalty. The teenaged Imperial Twins (boy and girl) have arrived back from overseas to their palace grounds and their parents, the Emperor and Empress. But evil forces (the Archers and Spearmen) led by one known as The Counselor attack; their parents are slain and the Twins are separated. The story proceeds to alternate between the journeys of each. The Twin Sister escapes with her Nursemaid and a trio of Valets and they travel over sea, beach, mountain, and forest, often only steps ahead of the enemy. The Twin Brother and his loyal Court Jester friend wind up captives in a lair where the Counselor's equally wicked son has developed a powerful explosive that requires slave labor to manufacture, but they find a friend in the Chief Archer's Daughter. Eventually the twins and their respective parties will battle the Counselor's army and decide the fate of the Empire.
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14Yes, it's a ClicheStorm. The ''telling'' of the tale is the hook; it starts with SceneryPorn then SerialEscalation. Instead of a conventional stage, two large platforms are hydraulically manipulated from below the audience's line of sight to rise, tilt, spin, and even stand completely vertical to create a variety of settings -- a beach full of whimsical sea creatures, the wall of a cave, a mountain the heroes scramble up by grabbing onto the "arrows" shot into its side by the villains, etc. And from martial arts to full-body puppetry to Cirque-conventional acrobatics, there's lots to see in one of the most elaborate theatrical productions in the world.
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16In North America, the documentary [=DVD=] ''[=KÀ=] Extreme'' (available through the Cirque's online boutique) takes a look at its creation and elaborate staging. The ''Series/{{CSI}}'' episode "Built to Kill, Part 1" features it as the setting of the crime of the week. In 2007, the [[UsefulNotes/GermanTVStations German TV station ZDF]] recorded the whole show in cooperation with Cirque du Soleil -- making it the first time one of their Las Vegas shows has been filmed. It has aired several times in Germany, France, the UK, and Ireland, together with a realtime backstage documentary of the same show, but there are no plans to release a DVD of these recordings. In 2012, [[Creator/MarvelComics Marvel]] published a three-issue ComicBookAdaptation, and the characters and several setpieces were incorporated into the UsefulNotes/ThreeDMovie ''Film/CirqueDuSoleilWorldsAway'' that same year.
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18Tragically, the show suffered Cirque's first-ever onstage fatality on June 29, 2013 when performer Sarah Guyard-Guillot accidentally fell to her death during the "Battlefield" climax, which involved a WireFu battle between the opposing sides. "Battlefield" was initially absent from the show when it reopened a few weeks later, then reinstated with the change that all the performers were ''projected'' onto the wall. The original version of the act was restored at the end of 2014.
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20!!This show contains examples of:
21* ActionFilmQuietDramaScene: The Shadow Play is so well-regarded that for a few years it was one of the clips that introduced the Cirque company website.
22* ActionGirl: Twin Sister, who begins the show with Twin Brother by playfully demonstrating her combat prowess for their Parents, and alongside Twin Brother, leads the battle against the Counselor.
23* AllThereInTheManual: The show does its best to make the story and character development clear, but yes, reading up on it beforehand via the official website helps. The ComicBookAdaptation also clarifies a few minor plot points, such as the nature of the conflict (the Chief Archer had to be convinced by the Counselor to go to war with the Empire).
24* AnnoyingArrows: Avoided with the Archers' weapons of choice, which are definitely deadly, and begin the story by killing the Emperor and Empress.
25* AudienceParticipation: Unconventional example. Since the story and staging prevent Cirque's usual invocation of this trope, the theater's lobby and seating areas are presented as a "village" the audience is visiting for the celebration of the twins' return. As such, all of the ushers ("Gatekeepers") are residents of the village who welcome the visitors and joke with them in-character; each with a unique character at that. As showtime draws closer, the stage area (which appears as a giant, firey pit) and surrounding catwalks are revealed to be the depths of the villains' mine as the Archers and Spearmen scramble about.
26* BambooTechnology: The Mountain Tribe's flying machine, which is quickly constructed by them to help Twin Sister and the Nursemaid Escape.
27* BeachEpisode: An entire scene that features the Twin Sister and the Nursemaid washing up on the shore after the storm, reuniting with the Valets, and their encounters with several creatures that come their way.
28* BewareTheSillyOnes: Make no mistake at how comical Twin Sister's Nursemaid and Valets are, they are fiercely protective of their Princess and will put their lives on the line to keep her from harm.
29* BigCreepyCrawlies: Human-sized insects, to be exact -- a potato bug on the beach and a grasshopper in the forest.
30* TheCenterpieceSpectacular: The Slave Cage, which sets up the climactic battle. (For a while, it ''was'' the climax of the show after the death of Sarah Guyard-Guillot.)
31* ChaseScene: The Climb. As the Valets, the Nursemaid and Twin Sister escape from the Archer's by using their Arrows as foot holds up the mountainside.
32* ClimbingTheCliffsOfInsanity: The Climb, as the Twin Sister's party flees the villains via a ''very'' steep mountainside.
33* CostumePorn: From royal robes to warriors' tattoos to full-body animal outfits (which cross over with puppetry).
34* CrosscastRole: The Twin Brother, due to casting identical female twins for the lead roles.
35* CurbStompBattle: The Archer Chief is practically unbeatable in one on one combat. [[spoiler: The Counselor has to cheat to defeat him]]. How he does it depends on which variation of the show is being performed.
36* DanceOfRomance: An aerial version occurs when Twin Sister falls into the forest and meets the Firefly Boy. The two then have a midair dance on aerial straps as they fall in love.
37* DeathByAdaptation: In the original iteration, the Chief Archer is betrayed by the Counselor and his Son, chained and then later freed by his Daughter, the Twins and the Firefly Boy, and he is at the Coronation of the Twins, giving his Blessing to Twin Brother and his Daughter's union, and declaring peace between the Empire and the Archers. In the retool of the show, he is beaten by the Counselor's forces, then thrown over the railing into the pit to his death, as his daughter is made to watch her father die, by the Counselor's Son for spurning his advances.
38* DistressedDude: The Twin Brother and the Court Jester are captured and caged, and freed by the Chief Archer's Daughter.
39* EarnYourHappyEnding: All the good guys suffer through myriad trials, but their efforts pay off in spades.
40* TheEmpire: In terms of the trope it's the Archer Village. They kick off the story in their attempt to conquer the lands around them and slay the Imperial Family. The actual Empire in ''KÀ'' is benevolent and experiencing a golden age... until they're invaded at least.
41* EverythingsBetterWithSparkles: The Firefly Boy, referred to at the trope entry as "sparkly Tarzan".
42* EvilChancellor: The Counselor; AllThereInTheManual material confirms that he's the one who's convinced the Chief Archer to lead the Archers and Spearmen into war with the benevolent Empire, all along planning to usurp him when the time is right.
43* ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin: All the character names! The Heroes Twin Brother and Twin Sister are Twins, the Nursemaid is their Nursemaid, The Firefly Boy is a boy that glides around like a firefly, The Head Archer's Daughter is the daughter of the Head Archer...seeing a pattern?
44* FantasticFireworks: [[spoiler:The Counselor and Counselor's Son]] present these at the Twins coronation as a gift of peace between the nations.
45* ForcedToWatch: During his betrayal, The Counselor's Son forces the Chief Archer's Daughter to watch her father be beaten and eventually killed by his forces.
46* HalfIdenticalTwins: Our heroes. Fraternal Twins, dressed in similar style, yet different colors.
47* HairOfGoldHeartOfGold: Both Twin Sister and Twin Brother are of blonde locks, and kind, heroic individuals.
48* HappilyEverAfter: Oh so much. [[spoiler: The Prince marries the Chief's Daughter, joining the Archer Village to the Empire. The Princess marries the Firefly Boy, joining the Forest Tribe to the Empire. The Nursemaid marries a member of the Mountain Tribe, also adding their people to the Empire. All the nations peacefully unified as one, the Archers destroy their weapons and renounce war. The Counselor and his Son have learned the follies of their evil, are forgiven by the others, and reveal they've transformed Kà into a symbol of peace]].
49* HeelFaceTurn: In the end, [[spoiler: all the villains -- yes, even the Counselor and his son -- ]]repent of their evil ways.
50* HoistByHisOwnPetard: It doesn't actually result in death, but [[spoiler: the Counselor's Son is permanently blinded by his own explosive when he tries to use it against the good guys.]]
51* HumanResources: The explosive is a powder created when a certain ore and human bones are ground up together. The villains have no shortage of either; now all they need are slaves to power the grinding machine...
52* InvoluntaryGroupSplit: The premise of the plot - everyone made it aboard the escape boat in the beginning, but then the Twin Brother is shot off the boat, and the Court Jester leaps off at the last minute to get him to safety.
53* JungleJapes: The Forest that the Firefly Boy rules that Twin Sister falls into, and where the two share a romantic air duet with the vines.
54* KickTheDog: The theater rules are presented without dialogue as the Counselor and his son encounter an "audience member" (plant) who breaks the three rules: no flash photography, cell phones must be turned off, and no smoking. They toss his camera into the pit, then his cell phone...then ''him''.
55* LoveAtFirstSight: The Twin Sister and the Firefly Boy. The Chief Archer's Daughter also falls in love with the Twin Brother upon seeing him and the Court Jester playing with shadow puppets (a detail clarified in the ComicBookAdaptation).
56* LoveRedeems: The Head Archer's Daughter falls in love with Twin Brother, and sides with him and Twin Sister against the Counselor and his son.
57* LoveTriangle: The Chief Archer's Daughter finds herself in one between the unwanted advances of the evil [[AbhorrentAdmirer Counselor's Son]] and the ForbiddenLove between her and kind Twin Brother.
58* NamedByTheAdaptation: In the Marvel Comics adaptation, the Chief Archer's Daughter is named Diana. Also a MeaningfulName, as Diana is the goddess of the hunt, among other things, in Roman Myth/ClassicalMythology.
59* NamelessNarrative: Unusually for a Cirque show, no character has a proper name!
60* NoFourthWall: As usually for a Cirque. The show actually begins in the lobby were the audience is greeted into the "Village" by some of the characters. The archers begin their attack from the audience. Twin Sister, the Nursemaid and the Nomads take flight above the audience, with Twin Sister, hanging from just her legs, acknowledging and waving to the audience below her.
61* NoTalkingOrPhonesWarning: An actor playing an audience member is punished for taking a flash photo, using his cell phone, and smoking. The Counselor and his son respond by throwing his camera, his phone, and eventually the audience member into the pit.
62* OlderSidekick: The Valets and the Nursemaid for the Twin Sister, and the Court Jester for the Twin Brother.
63* OminousLatinChanting: Change "Latin" to "Simlish" and you're good to go whenever the action heats up. The music for this show was mostly prerecorded so they could give it a full orchestra and choir to augment the live musicians.
64%% * OneWomanWail: "Aftermath".
65%% * OpeningNarration: Needed to set up the premise.
66%% * OrchestralBombing: "Battlefield", which underscores the climactic battle.
67%% * PluckyComicRelief: The Valets and the Nursemaid.
68* {{Retool}}: The show has had significant tweaks, some to make the story flow and "read" better.
69** Originally the Chief Archer's Daughter first encountered the good guys in a mountain scene involving huge pillars the performers jumped to and from. It took so long to set up and take down that the surrounding scenes with the Twin Sister's group had to be padded, hurting the show's momentum. (It's also been said that this scene caused too many injuries.) The pillars were dropped and instead she encounters them during Shadow Play -- which better establishes her interest in the Twin Brother as well.
70** The Twin Sister arrived at the tail end of the Forest People scene, and her romance with the Firefly Boy was thus abrupt; later the scene was retooled to give the performers an aerial strap act that allowed the audience to ''see'' them fall in love.
71** With the death of a performer in 2013, Battlefield was temporarily dropped. The Slave Cage sequence became the climax, rather than TheCenterpieceSpectacular, and the epilogue was extended to make up for lost time (via showing the twins being prepared for the ceremony). Battlefield was then restored by ''projecting'' the performers onto the wall, but at the end of 2014 the original version of the sequence was reinstated.
72* RewrittenPopVersion / RearrangeTheSong: The last three tracks on the soundtrack album are mostly-English pop songs based on tunes from the score.
73* SatelliteLoveInterest: The Chief Archer's Daughter for the Twin Brother, and the Firefly Boy for the Twin Sister. At least both pitch in to help the heroes -- the former frees the Twin Brother and the Jester from their cages, and the latter participates in the final battle along with his fellow forest dwellers.
74* SceneryPorn: Oh so much, the giants sets and platforms that rise out of and across the stage and the catwalks that surround the audience are critically acclaimed.
75* SetSwitchSong: The Deep (and its song) allows the set to switch from The Storm to The Archers' Den by concealing it behind a screen.
76* ShooOutTheClowns: The lighter characters (the Valets, Nursemaid, etc.) are absent from the Battlefield climax. They all return for the epilogue.
77%% * SpeakingSimlish: As per Cirque's usual style.
78* SoundtrackDissonance: The scene after Pageant -- where the enemy emerges for their attack on the unknowing citizens of the Empire -- features two conflicting music tracks.
79* SparedByTheAdaptation: The Court Jester. He was thrown off to his death in the original "Pillars" scene at the base of the mountain. His absence for the remainder of the show made his curtain call appearance all the more triumphant -- [[HesBack he is the last character to show up and rises out in front of the Wheel of Death that towers above the rest of the cast]]. After revisions that took out this scene, the Court Jester now gets captured along with the Twin Brother at the end of Shadowplay, thus ensuring he remains alive for the rest of the story.
80* SilenceIsGolden: No English-language dialogue. The ComicBookAdaptation follows on from this by using text describing events in the third person instead of dialogue.
81* SpectacularSpinning: The Love Dance (manipulation) and the Slave Cage (wheel of death). Even the ''stage'' is better with spinning in this show!
82* {{Storyboard}}: The creators used storyboards as part of the larger creative process; some can be seen at the offical website.
83* SupernaturalMartialArts: The fighters flying about the Battlefield.
84%% * TattooedCrook: The Archers and Spearmen, as well as the Counselor's Son.
85%% * ThoseMagnificentFlyingMachines: The Mountain Tribe has one of these.
86%% * VillainOpeningScene: The preshow set in the villains' mine, capped off by the KickTheDog moment mentioned above.
87%% * VillainousCheekbones: The Counselor and his son, accomplished in part with makeup.
88* WalkOnWater: It's AllThereInTheManual, but the Battlefield is the surface of a ''lake''; this is why the performers' feet touching it causes ripples to appear.
89%% * WireFu: Battlefield.
90* WomenAreWiser: The Nursemaid teaches the Mountain Tribe how to bake the fish on the fire to make it taste better.

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