

Like the Duloc Castle scene above, the children would take it to mean they were mocking his short stature, though the manner in which they were describing him, combined with the measuring comment above implies they were actually talking about his genitalia. There are those who think little of him!" before laughing.

After winning the tournament, Shrek tells the crowd, "I'm here till Thursday, try the veal." It is an old-timey reference to when nightclubs that comedians performed at would make most of their money from serving fancy food.face!" During the phrase, the front row of dolls rotate to show their butt cracks, implying that they were going to sing the word "ass" (which rhymes with "grass") instead of "face". Welcome to Duloc", the Duloc Dolls sing "Please keep off of the grass, shine your shoes, wipe your.When Shrek sees the size of Farquaad's castle, he asks Donkey, "Do you think maybe he's compensating for something?" While children in the audience are led to think Shrek is talking about Farquaad's height, the usual meaning of the phrase is in reference to genitalia.When the Magic Mirror presents Snow White as a bachelorette to Lord Farquaad, stating "although she lives with seven other men, she's not easy!" The joke is that living with "seven other men" (the Seven Dwarfs) would imply that Snow White is promiscuous, but by saying "she's not easy", the Magic Mirror says otherwise.The word "broad" is an archaic term used to describe a woman of loose morals. When Shrek sees the Seven Dwarfs place Snow White's coffin on his table, he yells, "Dead broad off the table!".Presumably he was going to say "What a load of shit". When Shrek uses the storybook page as toilet paper, he says, "What a load of-" and flushes the toilet.
#Every time donkey says shrek movie
The movie (more than its sequels) contains a decent amount of profanity compared to other family animated films, with the words "damn", "ass" (as a pun) and "crap" used on several occasions (including in song lyrics).His height is also a thought to be a jab at the significant size difference between Eisner and Katzenberg.The film's producers have, at least officially, denied this, claiming that it is an inside joke about the quadrangles at Notre Dame University (the people nobody liked would be sent to the furthest "quad").

Farquaad's name is also believed to be a corruption of the slur "fuckwad".Lord Farquaad is thought to be a caricature of Michael Eisner, then-CEO of the Walt Disney Company and a subject of DreamWorks' then-CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg's (and the film's) ire.
