In terms of TV, The Good Place has a surprisingly refreshing twist on the concept of death and the afterlife — instead of heaven and hell, it talks about the impossibility of accurately gauging so-called "goodness" according to a points system, or even having a scorecard in the first place. The characters range in personality and circumstance, from complicated humans to kindly angel-robots to horrifyingly devious demons, and their interactions are absolutely fascinating.

RELATED: The Good Place: 10 Facts You Forgot From The First Episode

Likewise, Disney characters are quite unique as well, even if their narratives aren't really as deep or elaborate as The Good Place. It's an intriguing endeavor to establish commonalities between the characters populating both of these very different worlds.

Chidi Anagonye — Flounder (The Good Place)

The Good Place Disney Chidi Flounder

Chidi is the classic seesaw. It's impossible for him to define boundaries of any kind because everything in the universe makes perfect sense to him, thereby hampering his ability to choose a specific course of action.

Likewise, Flounder acts like Ariel's so-called conscience, much like Chidi does for Eleanor, but most of his advice is rooted in the fact that he is a naturally nervous character. At the same time, both of them exhibit a powerful sense of devotion to their favorite women, enough to overstep their preset notions.

Michael — Wreck-It Ralph (Wreck-It Ralph)

The Good Place Disney Michael Ralph

Michael, a Hell demon, and Wreck-It Ralph, an arcade game villain, are equally destructive people, but it's because they have the abstract concept of "evil" deeply encoded into their consciousness.

These two are prone to random bursts of fury that tend to arrive when things don't go their way Psychologically speaking, it is their way of lashing out at the world. Michael and Ralph begin their journeys in antagonistic roles, believing that they were destined to be the bad guy, but their actions along the way reflect quite the opposite.

Tahani Al-Jamil — Gaston (Beauty and the Beast)

The Good Place Disney Tahani Gaston

Comparing Tahani to Gaston doesn't seem accurate (and is an insult to the former), but it rings true when considered from a surface perspective. She's all about her social standing and maintaining a stunning appearance, while he's only focused on his own physical features to the point of horrible pomposity.

RELATED: 5 Disney Princess Who Are Great Role Models (& 5 Who Aren't)

Tahani tends to drop names wherever she can — she has allegedly told Elon Musk to "reach for the stars" and claims that her godfather is Big Ben, the iconic London clock tower. If Gaston could string more than a few educated syllables together, there's no doubt he'd be doing the same thing.

Mindy St. Claire — Cogsworth (Beauty and the Beast)

The Good Place Disney Mindy Cogsworth

Mindy St. Claire, the only inhabitant of the Medium Place and its beige-toned nightmarescape, is so tired with "life" that she seeks thrills from any source she can find. For instance, she records Eleanor and Chidi having sex, basically because she doesn't have much else to do with her life.

Cogsworth might be an anthropomorphic clock, but he remains quite serious in terms of his role in Beast's mansion. Also, both he and Mindy have slightly bloated egos, but in each case they can be deflated with a single prick.

Judge Gen — Zazu (The Lion King)

The Good Place Disney Judge Gen Zazu

Judge Gen and Zazu are control freaks who literally lose it when their instructions are disobeyed or when their rigidly established protocols are not followed. One of them tries to helicopter parent Simba and Nala, which ends in the two cubs sneaking off to the elephant graveyard for a misadventure.

The other calmly decides to "reset" existence itself, because the numbers weren't adding up as smoothly as they should have been. The difference, however, is that Zazu has no actual power, while the Judge is the most powerful being in the cosmos.

Eleanor Shellstrop — Jafar (Aladdin)

The Good Place Disney Eleanor Jafar

Jafar is a straight-up villain, as is Eleanor for most of her life on earth. Both care about themselves, to hell with everyone else in the world. It's just a matter of detail: the Aladdin antagonist desires more power, and Ms. Shellstrop requires excessive amounts of validation in spite of showing the barest amount of courtesy — or none at all.

RELATED: Stranger Things Characters & Their Disney Counterparts

Of course, Eleanor is given a chance to rectify her wrongs, at least after several hundred cycles, so the question to be asked is: Can a sorcerer like Jafar really become a good person?

Janet — Baloo (The Jungle Book)

The Good Place Disney Janet Baloo

Janet (the Good Place Janet, to be specific) is created for a singular purpose, to assist anyone and everyone who calls on her. Baloo is not really a divine robot, but he is charming, friendly, and always ready to help — not to mention he always has a smile on his face.

Janet bypasses her conditioning when it comes to the man she has inexplicably fallen in love with, going to dangerous extents to protect him from harm. Baloo does the same thing for Mowgli, specifically pouncing on Shere Khan before the latter is about to murder his new best friend.

Derek — Rafiki (The Lion King)

The Good Place Disney Derek Rafiki

Rafiki is the tribal "doctor" of the Pride Lands. His job is mainly traditional, mainly consisting of announcing the new heir to the metaphorical throne or communing with the ancient spirits through the stars.

Derek is a malfunctioning child-robot that happens to look like a human being, but in the finale of the show, he undergoes a transcendental transformation due to Mindy having reloaded his programming millions of times. He turns into an omniscient entity, far outclassing all the Janets put together.

Jason Mendoza — Kronk (The Emperor's New Groove)

The Good Place Disney Jason Kronk

It's no surprise that Jason Mendoza is going to be paired with Kronk — they nearly every attribute, from their devotion to their friends to their absolute lack of concern regarding how the world actually works. To put it simply: they are unlikely to obtain a membership at Mensa anytime soon.

RELATED: Disney's Hercules: Every God Of Olympus From Least To Most Historically Accurate, Ranked

Jason spends most of his time vacuously considering the most ridiculous life philosophies, and Kronk regularly lapses into private discussions with his angel/demon mini-versions whenever conflicted. At the end, though, both of them are truly compassionate people.

Shawn — Darla (Finding Nemo)

The Good Place Disney Shawn Darla

Shawn is the placeholder for the biblical Satan; it isn't clear if he has any Hellish superiors, though. His greatest (read: only) ambition is to cause pain and suffering to everyone he comes across, but torture is supposed to be his job.

Darla, the dentist's niece in Finding Nemo isn't willfully malicious, but her utterly callous behavior with the fish she receives as a pet proves that she has some chaotic evil developing within her. Hopefully her parents or authority figures will set her straight, because the next step for Darla isn't going to do the world any good.

NEXT: The Good Place: 10 Unpopular Opinions (According To Reddit)