Abuela Alma condemns Mirabel’s part in the crack
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Abuela Alma confronts Mirabel and Isabela about the chaos caused by Mirabel's actions, leading to a heated argument about responsibility and family dynamics.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Consumed by a righteous anger that masks profound fear and unresolved grief over her husband Pedro’s sacrifice and the fraying of the miracle she has devoted her life to protecting.
Abuela Alma strides into the courtyard in a fury, her presence alone fracturing the earth beneath her feet. She blames Mirabel for every calamity—past, present, and future—her words lashing like the cracks splitting the ground. Though she briefly stands aghast as the house collapses, she never falters in her certainty until the candle’s extinction forces her onto the yielding earth outside.
- • preserve the perception of the Madrigal’s unbroken perfection
- • discredit Mirabel as the source of their undoing
- • the Madrigals' magic and legacy depend on absolute conformity to her vision
- • any deviation threatens not just the family but the very foundation of the Encanto
Overwhelmed and helpless, his physical awkwardness mirroring the precarious state of the family.
Agustín arrives with Julieta, his clumsy gestures reflecting frantic concern as he witnesses the crisis unfolding. His presence underscores the patriarchal anxiety beneath the family’s performative cheer.
- • protect Mirabel and the family
- • mask his own fear with action
- • keeping the peace benefits everyone
- • Mirabel’s actions reflect poorly on him as a father
Despairing and frantic, her weather magic spiraling out of control as the crisis spirals beyond bounds.
Pepa bursts in with desperate warnings about the candle and the house collapsing, her emotions whipping uncontrollable weather into the fray. She demonstrates how the family’s emotional extremes fuel the catastrophe.
- • warn the family of impending doom
- • rein in her uncontrollable gift
- • emotions must be controlled or they destroy everything
- • the family expects her to maintain order
Panicked yet steadfast, her instincts to shield her daughter override fear as the walls around them fracture and shift.
Julieta enters the courtyard alarmed by the tremors and Abuela’s raised voice, calling out to Mirabel as the house begins to collapse. She seeks to comfort and guide her family even as they are forcibly evacuated by the house itself.
- • locate and protect Mirabel
- • guide her family to safety
- • open conflict must yield before physical peril
- • family unity is the bedrock of survival
Urgent and scared, his actions driven by love rather than fear, signaling the familial bonds that persist beneath chaos.
Félix rushes to save Antonio from falling debris moments before his animal door collapses, showcasing his protective energy and affection for the family.
- • save Antonio from injury
- • maintain family cohesion
- • family bonds matter more than appearances
- • his role is to keep everyone safe
Frustrated and helpless as his control over his gift abandons him mid-quest.
Camilo attempts to use his shapeshifting to reach the candle as his powers waiver, his flexible form faltering when the house retracts his door’s magic. He’s saved by the house’s timely intervention, underscoring his reliance on external affirmation.
- • contribute meaningfully to saving the miracle
- • prove his usefulness despite his fading gift
- • being entertaining earns love
- • his magic defines his worth
Shaken by the collapse of her curated perfection, her anxiety manifesting in physical instability and diminishing magic under Abuela’s accusing gaze.
Isabela lies amid her erratic vines, her magic visibly failing as the house nears collapse. Initially entrenched in perfectionism, her fragility surfaces when she cannot control her gift anymore. She remains seated, powerless, as the house literally catches her fall before her vines dissolve and her door fades, reduced to trembling silence.
- • survive the collapse of their shared world
- • avoid further shame in front of her family
- • perfection is the only way to be worthy of love
- • her magic is a burden when it spirals beyond control
Deeply worried about the escalating crisis and her dissipating strength, driving her to seek answers.
Luisa rushes into the courtyard following a tremor, her presence signaling the widespread alarm rippling through the Encanto.
- • assess dangers to the family
- • find a way to stabilize the situation
- • her strength must be sufficient to protect everyone
- • failure is not an option
Antonio watches helplessly as the animals escape through his dying door and a chunk of the house nearly falls on …
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The miracle candle, once a steady beacon above Casa Madrigal, becomes the focal point of the crisis as cracks snake up the house toward it. It flickers erratically then melts rapidly under the strain of the family’s collapsing belief in the Encanto. Mirabel’s desperate climb and grasp at it represent her final attempt to restore their shared magic before it goes out forever.
Isabela’s magical flowers spiral uncontrollably across the courtyard, tangling Mirabel and Isabela while embodying the sister’s suppressed truths and perfectionism unraveling. Isabela’s vines later fail entirely, their dissolution mirroring her loss of control and the erosion of her carefully cultivated identity.
The frayed rope railing on Bruno’s tower collapses as the house fails, providing Mirabel a perilous yet vital ladder to reach the candle. It sags and strains under her weight but offers the only path to salvation mid-collapse.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Encanto valley around Casa Madrigal trembles violently as cracks split the earth and mountains groan under hidden pressure, mirroring the family’s internal fractures. The valley’s magic, once a source of wonder, now amplifies devastation as every living thing reacts to the dying miracle.
The rooftop becomes the epicenter of the crisis as Mirabel scrambles across the tiles toward the candle, the house itself reshaping to aid her ascent. The roof cracks and collapses under Bruno’s falling tower, underscoring the futility of her quest even as the house tries to intervene.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
No narrative connections mapped yet
This event is currently isolated in the narrative graph
Key Dialogue
"ABUELA ALMA: What are you talking about? Look at our home. Look at your sister!"
"MIRABEL: Please, just - Isabela wasn’t happy and -"
"ABUELA ALMA: Of course she isn’t happy, you ruined her proposal --"