She is very happy that Rumplestiltskin kept something to remember her by and she decides to stay with him. After Belle loses her memories accidentally, Mr. Gold visits her in the hospital with the chipped cup. He gives it to her in hopes that she will recall her old memories. However, the subject of magic scares Belle, and she asks him to take the cup back but he insists she tries, but she refuses.
In the midst of Belle trying to push the cup back, Belle takes the chipped cup and hurls it against the wall, where it shatters into pieces. Belle asks him to leave one, which he finally does in his despair of the destroyed cup. Gold later manages to collect the shards of the cup and keeps them in the safe of his shop. When the Trigger to destroy Storybrooke is activated, he uses a potion given by Leroy that helps people regain their true memories, which must be drunk from an object that's important to them, and restores the cup from the shards.
He then pours the potion in it for Belle and himself and has her drink it in a toast. Belle regains her memories and is reunited with Mr. Henry is kidnapped to Neverland by Greg and Tamara , leading Mr. Gold to join in on the journey there to rescue him in honor of Neal. While he believes the only way to save Henry from the villainous Peter Pan is to sacrifice his own life, Regina suggests that there must be a way to contain their nemesis.
Gold has just the item for the job, except the weapon itself, is sitting in his pawnshop in Storybrooke, so Regina barters with a mermaid, Ariel , to retrieve it. Ariel is sent off to Storybrooke with a request from Mr. Gold to give Belle a magically enchanted sand dollar.
Once the item reaches Belle's hands, she activates it to project an image of Mr. Gold along with a specific message from him. He informs her that she can indeed find the necessary item to defeat Pan "with the strength of their love". The riddle puzzles Belle until she thinks of the one item that is symbolic of the wear and tears their love has been through, which is the chipped cup.
Unsure what to do with the cup, she places it back in the cupboard on a saucer; triggering a spell to open a hidden compartment on the floor. Inside, Belle finds Pandora's Box. While Merida takes a break, the chipped cup is sitting in front of Gold, who's tied up. He reaches for the cup and kisses it before whispering "I'm sorry Belle" and smashes the cup so that he can use one of the pieces to break his ropes.
It's last seen in shards when Merida and Emma find that he escaped. In the Edge of Realms, after Mr. Gold and Belle build themselves a new home there, they decorate the inside of the house, with the chipped cup being one of the items placed on display. Following Belle's death, Mr. Gold has the chipped cup placed on her coffin. Somehow, the chipped cup ends up in Hyperion Heights while the curse is in effect. When Tilly starts to regain memories of her old life, she leads Weaver to an alley shed and shows him the cup in an attempt to jolt him into remembering his true love.
Weaver is confused and instead points out that it's just a chipped cup. Growing frantic that he is not waking up as he should be, Tilly makes a grab for Weaver's gun and points it at him. Weaver questions why she is doing this, to which she angrily reveals he told her to. Tilly then shoots him, and upon seeing Weaver collapse in a pool of his own blood, she is so shocked by her own actions that she drops the cup, shattering it into pieces.
Weaver later attempts to fix the chipped cup. Chip appears in the live-action remake, portrayed by Nathan Mack. He has a British accent like Mrs. Potts in this adaptation. His role at the castle is fairly similar to the original film, with his movement of hopping around replaced, with moving around by rolling on his saucer.
His role on the climax was changed by not following Belle back to the village when she leaves to save Maurice and instead participated himself into a battle with his fellow castle staff against the invading villagers led by Gaston. This incarnation of Chip also has no siblings in the remake. Chip is one of the residents of the castle who lived with Prince Adam who was selfish and unkind.
Later as he is transformed into a hideous beast as punishment, Chip and all the other residents of the castle are transformed into objects as the spell is cast all around the castle. If Beast has until his 21st birthday, then Beast must still be 20 when this story is taking place.
If they have been "rusting" for 10 years, technically, Beast should have been around 10 or 11 when he fell under the spell. If the enchantress cursed an unkind year-old for not letting a stranger stay in his castle, that would be pretty unfair. However, in the beginning scenes, Beast scratches a picture of himself when he was human, but he was a full-grown man, not a little boy. In the new version, the line "10 years we've been rusting" is changed to "Too long we've been rusting," thus correcting this oversight.
Belle likes to go to town and borrow books from the local book shop. But wait, she borrows books from a bookstore? Disney overlooked this in the first movie, but fixed it in the live action version when Belle claimed she would be borrowing a book and referred to the place as a library. In the original, the book shop was very large considering Belle was one of the only book worms in town. Disney fixed this in the new version by makng the amount of books much smaller. One man even refers to her as the only book worm in town.
Gaston falls into a mud pit right after being shoved out of Belle's house. However, there is no mud pit in any of the other scenes.
There's even a slightly winding staircase that would make this fall seem very far-fetched. The new movie fixed this by making Gaston walk out of the house normally, but still honored the original by having Gaston step in a pile of mud farther down the path. Philippe managed to take Belle to the castle, even though he never went and had no way of knowing that Maurice found his way into the castle.
That's a pretty smart horse. In the new version Philippe and Maurice fight off the wolves together and instead of getting separated, Philippe and Maurice go to the castle together. Philippe runs off when Beast startles him, which explains how Philippe was able to take Belle straight to the castle. Although, the fact that Philippe was able to find his home and then take Belle to the castle is still pretty impressive.
Judging by the clothes, weapons, and steam-powered machinery, this movie probably takes place in the late s or early s. However, during "Be Our Guest," the Eiffel tower is depicted, yet construction did not start until In the live action version, the Eiffel tower is not depicted during this famous song.
Belle must have some serious princess super strength to lift that large, unconscious Beast up on to her horse by herself. The new version takes a more realistic approach when Belle says, "You have to help me. You have to stand," implying that Beast had a hand in getting on the horse. Judging by the first movie error which says that the characters have been under the spell for the last ten years, Chip shouldn't be alive.
Since he seems younger than 10, Chip must have either been born a tea cup or Beast is the only one who can age in the castle. In the new version, Chip is seen in the first scene, which means that Mrs.
Potts did not give birth to Chip as a tea cup. They also avoid this issue altogether when they remove the line "10 years we've been rusting.
Potts sounded like she might be around 60 years old in the original movie. Then, when she went back to human form, she had grey hair and looked more like a grandmother than the mother of a very young boy.
In the new version, Chip's mother looked much younger when in human form. She even sounded younger in her version of "Tale As Old As Time," while still maintaining the old version's iconic sound. Disney even makes fun of the old version when they have Le Fou mistake Mrs. Potts for Chip's grandmother. Potts does not have a spot on her until the scene where she sees it in her reflection.
Disney fixed this in the new version by putting the obvious spot on chip. How did Chip get that machine running anyway? In the new version, Chip does not escape with Belle at all.
He stays at the castle during the scene where the furniture attacks the villagers. Belle and Maurice get locked in a cart and pick the lock to escape. The townspeople were completely unaware that there was a castle right down the road. They also did not wonder where the royalty and live-in staff have been all this time.
The new version goes more into detail and explains that the reason why the townspeople are clueless is because the enchantress made the townspeople forget everyone that lived in the castle and the existence of the castle altogether. Instead of taking the path to the fair that he usually usIes, Maurice decides to take the scary path which he calls "the short cut," despite the fact that Philippe does not want to go down that path at all.
In the new version, lightning strikes a tree, blocking the path he usually takes. For this reason, Maurice decides to take the other path. Maurice seems much more intelligent and less oblivious in the new version, which makes more sense considering how intelligent his daughter turned out to be.
Nowadays, many working adults, high school graduates, and retired lifelong learners are choosing to advance their careers, lives, and personal knowledge by completing school at home. This plan backfires and Belle and her father are locked in the basement; however, Chip is able to free them by using Maurice's wood-cutting invention to hack away at the basement door, proving his usefulness to Belle and Maurice.
When Belle and Maurice rush to the castle to warn the Beast about Gaston Chip is brought along, presumably in Belle's bag. Belle was too late to actually warn Beast; however, Beast and the other inhabitants of the castle were able to fend Gaston and the townspeople off, but the fight drained Beast of much of his power leaving him nearly dead.
Belle begged and pleaded that he not die for the fact that she was in love with him, that phrase causes the Beast to transform back into a Human just in time, along with the other inhabitants, thus breaking the curse. Chip is seen in his human form rushing into the arms of his mother, Mrs. This edit will also create new pages on Comic Vine for:. Until you earn points all your submissions need to be vetted by other Comic Vine users.
This process takes no more than a few hours and we'll send you an email once approved. Chip appears in 26 issues View all. Origin Chip was originally a young human boy; however, on the night that The Beast turned down the Enchantress who was disguised as an old beggar woman he was changed alongside the other members of the castle. Creation The story in which Chip stars in, Beauty and the Beast, was written and adapted by several different authors throughout history; however, the most popular version was written by Jeanne-Marie Leprince de Beaumont.
Tweet Clean. It was great. Disney Theory Explained. By Adrienne Tyler Published Jan 30, Share Share Tweet Email 0. Related Topics SR Originals beauty and the beast disney.
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