What Happens To The Villain In Treasury Of Fairy Tales?

2026-03-23 19:24:00 338
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2 Answers

Wyatt
Wyatt
2026-03-27 04:41:53
The villains in 'Treasury of Fairy Tales' usually meet spectacularly grim ends, which is half the fun! The evil queen in 'Snow White' dances herself to death in red-hot iron shoes, and Cinderella’s stepsisters mutilate their own feet trying to fit the slipper. It’s wild how creative the punishments get—almost like the stories are competing for the most memorable comeuppance. My personal favorite? The devil in 'The Brave Little Tailor' getting tricked into getting stitches and then exploding from rage. These endings aren’t subtle, but they’re why fairy tales feel so visceral even today.
Valerie
Valerie
2026-03-27 11:53:43
Ohh, the villains in 'Treasury of Fairy Tales' get what they deserve, but it’s never just a simple 'happily ever after' for them. Take the Wolf from 'Little Red Riding Hood'—classic case of poetic justice. He gets his belly slit open by the huntsman, and honestly, after all that scheming to eat Grandma and Little Red, it feels satisfying in a darkly humorous way. Then there’s the witch from 'Hansel and Gretel.' She’s shoved into her own oven! The irony is chef’s kiss—a cannibalistic hag getting roasted like the kids she wanted to snack on.

But what fascinates me is how these endings aren’t just about punishment; they’re warnings wrapped in folklore. The villains often represent greed, vanity, or cruelty, and their fates hammer home the moral. Like Rumpelstiltskin tearing himself in two out of rage when his name’s revealed—it’s over-the-top, but it makes you remember: don’t make shady deals with creepy little men. The brutality of these endings sticks with you because they’re not sanitized. Fairy tales were originally dark, and 'Treasury' keeps that tradition alive. I kinda love how unapologetic it is—no redemption arcs, just karma served ice cold.
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