The Boys from Brazil: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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(fixed tilde-markup link, removed redlink trope)
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* [[Large Ham]]: Both protagonists are enjoying their roles, particularly Peck.
* [[Large Ham]]: Both protagonists are enjoying their roles, particularly Peck.
* [[Make It Look Like an Accident]]
* [[Make It Look Like an Accident]]
* [[Nazi Argentina|Nazi Brazil]]
* [[Nazi Hunter]]
* [[Nazi Hunter]]
* ~Ooh Me Accent's Slipping~: James Mason has a truly fake attempt at a German accent.
* [[Ooh Me Accent's Slipping]]: James Mason has a truly fake attempt at a German accent.
* [[One-Hit Wonder]]: Jeremy Black, who played the titular kids, never had another film role, although he still had a career as a stage actor.
* [[One-Hit Wonder]]: Jeremy Black, who played the titular kids, never had another film role, although he still had a career as a stage actor.
* [[Playing Against Type]]: Gregory Peck is the bad guy here.
* [[Playing Against Type]]: Gregory Peck is the bad guy here.

Revision as of 13:07, 13 August 2014

A Simon Wiesenthal Center operative finds something big. All around the world.

A 1976 novel by Ira Levin, it was adapted into a 1978 film starring Laurence Olivier as Nazi hunter Ezra Lieberman and Gregory Peck as Dr Josef Mengele.

The novel and film are a speculative fiction type story involving infamous Nazi scientist Mengele (known as the "Angel of Death" for the extent of death he inflicted upon his victims during the Holocaust) trying to resurrect the Third Reich by cloning Hitler and recreating the events of his youth in order to make sure his Hitler Clones become as much like the original as possible.

Unfortunately for him, Mengele has a group of devoted Nazi hunters on his trail...

Tropes used in The Boys from Brazil include: