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Disney Channel celebrates 100 original movies with marathon

From "Snow White" to "Frozen," there's a Disney classic that brings you back to your childhood. But for those who were born in the last 30 years or so, a different kind of Mouse House film helped shape our adolescence: Disney Channel Original Movies.

Since debuting with the Diane Keaton-starring "Northern Lights" on Aug. 23, 1997, this series of made-for-TV films has been usually digestible, often cheesy, sometimes awful way to escape reality for a little bit.

To celebrate its 100th DCOM ("Adventures in Babysitting," a remake of the 1987 movie), the channel is showing 48 movies over the course of June, leading up to the debut of the newest film on June 24.

We've found seven key elements tend to show up over and over in Disney Channel Original Movies.

A launchpad for a future stars

Before they were taking on increasingly random art projects or appearing shirtless in every film, Shia LaBeouf and Zac Efron were just handsome cogs in the good ol' Disney machine. LaBeouf was a main character on the "Even Stevens" series and took on a serious role as a mentally challenged twin in the DCOM "Tru Confessions," while Efron took the "High School Musical" trilogy all the way to actual cinemas.

But there are a handful of other DCOM actors who, despite not starring in a "Transformers" flick, have still done fairly well for themselves. Kirsten Storms, better known as Zenon, has been on "General Hospital" for more than a decade. "Kim Possible's" Christy Carlson Romano and "HSM's" Corbin Bleu have both been in multiple Broadway shows. Hilary Duff is still famous for playing Lizzie McGuire because we've never forgotten how bad "Cadet Kelly" was.

Make it twice (or thrice)

By our count, at least 21 of the 100 DCOMs are not very "original": 13 are sequels, and eight are based on Disney Channel series. The nostalgia train isn't stopping anytime soon, with "Life-Size 2," "Descendants 2" and "High School Musical 4" apparently all in the works.

Make it a musical

DCOMs are the closest thing we have to classic musicals. Intricate, random group dance numbers? Check. Singing your feelings instead of fighting? Check. A ridiculous plot that comes second to the catchy tunes? Check and check. Though legitimate, modern pop stars have used DCOMs as a steppingstone - Demi Lovato, Selena Gomez, Joe Jonas and Miley Cyrus among them - not all the tune-filled flicks are winners. ("Stuck in the Suburbs" or "Pixel Perfect," anyone?) But it would be hard for anyone to deny the impact that musical DCOMs have had on pop culture: Several of the original movies' soundtracks have landed on (or topped) the Billboard 200 chart, and "High School Musical 3: Senior Year," which debuted in theaters after the first two films performed phenomenally on TV, opened to No. 1 at the U.S. box office and grossed over a quarter-billion dollars worldwide.

A misfit as a main character

Plot option No. 1: Do you just not fit in and coincidentally must also overcome some kind of hurdle - probably financial or social - to win the prize/girl/friends/whatever? Disney's got a story (or two dozen) for you. Whether it's the amateur in-line skaters battling the professionals in "Brink!" or the outspoken, ribbon-dancing young girl who doesn't fit in at her new military school (or in her family) in "Cadet Kelly," standing out is "in" for DCOMS.

Underdogs are top dogs

Overlapping with DCOM's affinity for misfits, the other go-to plot choice is a sports tale. Bonus points if the main character is not favored to win and must overcome adversity on the way to the finish line. Where else are you going to find a movie like "Motocrossed," about a girl who poses as her twin brother to win a race that her father wouldn't allow her to enter on her own?

Believe in magic

The fantastical elements in DCOMs include everything from the ability to read dogs' minds ("You Lucky Dog") to the power to turn into a mermaid ("The Thirteenth Year") or leprechaun ("The Luck of the Irish"). It may actually be harder to find a storyline on the Disney Channel that doesn't have an otherworldly twist to it.

Family drama always welcome

On a channel made for kids, it's implied that parents just don't understand, whether it's a computerized house that tries to act like the new mother of a family or Keaton's vehicle about inheriting a nephew after his father died.

Though DCOMs been on a bit of a popcorn-movie streak lately, they never used to shy away from emotionally difficult plot lines or true stories. "Miracle in Lane 2," based on the real tale of a disabled boy who learns to drive a soapbox, and "Going to the Mat," the fictional story of a blind wrestler, both garnered Directors Guild Awards for outstanding achievement in children's programs.

Yes, even a genre that includes a movie called "Stepsister from Planet Weird" can have a deeper meaning after all.

From left to right, Corbiun Bleu and Zac Efron star in the Disney Channel's most successful original movie franchises, "High School Musical 3: Senior Year." Courtesy of Disney
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