Shane: Difference between revisions

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=== '''Tropes in this Film:''' ===
=== '''Tropes in this Film:''' ===

* [[Ax Crazy]]: "Prove it."
* [[Ax Crazy]]: "Prove it."
* [[Badass]]: Shane and Starett
* [[Badass]]: Shane and Starett
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* [[Empathic Environment]]: During the confrontation between Starrett and Shane- one of the best examples of this trope actually
* [[Empathic Environment]]: During the confrontation between Starrett and Shane- one of the best examples of this trope actually
* [[The Film of the Book]]
* [[The Film of the Book]]
* [[Heel Face Turn]]: Chris Calloway.
* [[The Gunslinger]]: Shane
* [[Guns Akimbo]]: Subverted for the title character, who is a firm believer that one gun is all he needs.
* [[Guns Akimbo]]: Subverted for the title character, who is a firm believer that one gun is all he needs.
* [[The Gunslinger]]: Shane
* [[Happy Ending]]: For Jean Arthur's career after thirty years of movies. Few actors have gone out on a higher note.
* [[Happy Ending]]: For Jean Arthur's career after thirty years of movies. Few actors have gone out on a higher note.
* [[Heel Face Turn]]: Chris Calloway.
* [[Heroic Sacrifice]]
* [[Heroic Sacrifice]]
* [[Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain]]: Inverted in terms of casting. Elisha Cook Junior normally plays this type of character, but in this film, he plays a good guy, "Stonewall" Torrey, a Southern [[Determined Homesteader]] and friend of the Starrets. In every other respect, he lives "up" to this trope to a T. He's a consistent failure, resents the fact that neither friends nor enemies take him seriously, but is determined to stand up for himself and the Lost Cause...all of which sets him up as an all-too-easy victim to one of the most effective and unsympathetic villains in Western film history.
* [[Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain]]: Inverted in terms of casting. Elisha Cook Junior normally plays this type of character, but in this film, he plays a good guy, "Stonewall" Torrey, a Southern [[Determined Homesteader]] and friend of the Starrets. In every other respect, he lives "up" to this trope to a T. He's a consistent failure, resents the fact that neither friends nor enemies take him seriously, but is determined to stand up for himself and the Lost Cause...all of which sets him up as an all-too-easy victim to one of the most effective and unsympathetic villains in Western film history.
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* [[Shell Shocked Senior]]
* [[Shell Shocked Senior]]
* [[Small Role, Big Impact]]: Wilson has 8 minutes of screen time and less than 50 words of dialogue. Made the most of it, didn't he? On a more meta level, Wilson is considered one of the definitive Western bad guys and one of the most remembered roles from the career of Jack Palance, who acted for more than ''50 years'' in over 70 movies.
* [[Small Role, Big Impact]]: Wilson has 8 minutes of screen time and less than 50 words of dialogue. Made the most of it, didn't he? On a more meta level, Wilson is considered one of the definitive Western bad guys and one of the most remembered roles from the career of Jack Palance, who acted for more than ''50 years'' in over 70 movies.
* [[Tear Jerker]] - ''"Shane, Come Back!!"''
* [[Tear Jerker]]: ''"Shane, Come Back!!"''


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{{reflist}}

Revision as of 13:47, 21 January 2015

"Shane! Come back!"

Based on the novel by Jack Schaefer.

A Determined Homesteader named Starrett, his wife, and their young son are running a small farm. Some cattle ranchers want to force them out (along with the other Nesters), either with money or with guns. They are using an army of Mooks for this. While this is going on, a wanderer in buckskin clothing named Shane meets Starrett, and after a quickly resolved misunderstanding, Shane is accepted by the family and begins working for Starrett. Shane is soon idolized by the young boy, who wants to learn how to shoot. There is extensive discussion between Shane, Starrett, and his wife about the appropriateness of guns and violence.

Ultimately Shane protects the Determined Homesteader using violence, knowing that this means he will never be able to settle down to a peaceful life, Shane is cursed by his previous choices in life to always be The Gunslinger, always drifting. His final words before leaving is to tell the young boy to run home and tell his mother that she has her wish "there are no more guns in the valley", Shane leaving is of course required for this to be true.

Subject to a famous debate about the ending: Is Shane dead, or did he survive?

Was essentially remade and combined with High Plains Drifter as the Clint Eastwood film Pale Rider, with Clint Eastwood basically playing Alan Ladd's role.


Tropes in this Film: