The Big Parade: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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== Tropes associated with this work: ==
== Tropes associated with this work: ==


* [[An Arm and A Leg]]
* [[An Arm and a Leg]]
* [[Earn Your Happy Ending]]: They sure do.
* [[Earn Your Happy Ending]]: They sure do.
* [[Everyone Looks Sexier If French]]: Though rather mild.
* [[Everyone Looks Sexier If French]]: Though rather mild.
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* [[Precision F-Strike]]: "They got him! They got him! GOD DAMN THEIR SOULS!" Quite daring for 1925.
* [[Precision F-Strike]]: "They got him! They got him! GOD DAMN THEIR SOULS!" Quite daring for 1925.
* [[Shell-Shocked Veteran]]: The guy screaming in delirium in the hospital.
* [[Shell-Shocked Veteran]]: The guy screaming in delirium in the hospital.
* [[Stranger in A Familiar Land]]: Jim when he comes home.
* [[Stranger in a Familiar Land]]: Jim when he comes home.
* [[Title Drop]]
* [[Title Drop]]
* [[Train Station Goodbye]]: Or rather, a troop transport goodbye, but the dynamic is the same.
* [[Train Station Goodbye]]: Or rather, a troop transport goodbye, but the dynamic is the same.

Revision as of 16:20, 8 April 2014

The Big Parade is a 1925 silent film directed by King Vidor.

The story follows Jim Apperson, an idle rich boy who joins the US Army's Rainbow Division and is sent to France to fight in World War I, becomes friends with two working class men, experiences the horrors of trench warfare, and finds love with a French girl.

The movie was considered ground breaking for removing the propaganda and glorification of war present in other wars, especially those representing World War I being produced at the time. It won the Photoplay Medal of Honor Award (a precursor to the Oscars) in 1925, and is believed to be the highest-grossing film of the 1920s. In 1992 The Big Parade was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".


Tropes associated with this work:

 You're in the army now,

You're not behind a plow;

You'll never get rich,

You son-of-a-gun,

You're in the army now!