McLintock!: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Irony]]: McLintock and the Commanche chief were once [[Retired Badass|heroic figures]] on [[Worthy Opponent|opposing sides]] in wars gone by and are now living in an age where the West is leaving them both behind.
* [[Irony]]: McLintock and the Commanche chief were once [[Retired Badass|heroic figures]] on [[Worthy Opponent|opposing sides]] in wars gone by and are now living in an age where the West is leaving them both behind.
* [[Rule of Funny]]: The fight scene near the mud-hole, everyone that ''could'' fall in... did.
* [[Rule of Funny]]: The fight scene near the mud-hole, everyone that ''could'' fall in... did.
* [[The Savage Indian]]: Lampshaded. It is long past the days when real mayhem was done in the West. And the Indians are just doing the equiv of a panty raid. But they pull out all the stops to reinforce the stereotype and frighten the annoying folk they want to frighten.
* [[Southern Gentleman]]: Ol' Douglas Jr. tries to be this, but mostly comes across as a hapless geek.
* [[Southern Gentleman]]: Ol' Douglas Jr. tries to be this, but mostly comes across as a hapless geek.
* [[Tar and Feathers]]
* [[Tar and Feathers]]

Revision as of 17:26, 16 February 2017

McLintock! is a 1963 American-made film, directed by Andrew V. McLaglen, and starring John Wayne and Maureen O'Hara.

Cattle baron George Washington McLintock (John Wayne) is living the single life on his ranch. He is estranged from his snobbish wife, Katherine (Maureen O'Hara), who left him two years before. McLintock hires young Devlin Warren as a hand and his beautiful mother, Louise Warren, as his cook and welcomes their family into his home. He also butts heads with Matt Douglas, a sleazy bureaucrat who is looking to discredit McLintock, and remove the local Indians. Sparks begin to fly as an unexpected turn of events results in brawls, gunfire, an Indian attack... and the return of Mrs. McLintock, who wants custody over their daughter Becky (coming home from college) and a divorce from G.W.


The film has the following tropes:

Ching: Crummy family, crummy family!

  • Determined Homesteader's Wife: Katie started out as this, then she became a stuffy Rich Bitch.
  • Fiery Redhead: Maureen O'Hara's character, Katherine; her behavior certanly fits that red hair.
  • Injun Country: Actually the Indian's where fighting to stay in one perticular part of the country, unfortunatly Cuthbert H. Humphrey had other ideas.
  • Irony: McLintock and the Commanche chief were once heroic figures on opposing sides in wars gone by and are now living in an age where the West is leaving them both behind.
  • Rule of Funny: The fight scene near the mud-hole, everyone that could fall in... did.
  • The Savage Indian: Lampshaded. It is long past the days when real mayhem was done in the West. And the Indians are just doing the equiv of a panty raid. But they pull out all the stops to reinforce the stereotype and frighten the annoying folk they want to frighten.
  • Southern Gentleman: Ol' Douglas Jr. tries to be this, but mostly comes across as a hapless geek.
  • Tar and Feathers
  • The Wild West
  • You Wouldn't Hit a Guy with Glasses: Ol' Jr. puts on a pair after he's told that somebody should put a stop to a fist fight he's currently watching.