The Ghost and Mrs. Muir: Difference between revisions
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=== Tropes used in ''The Ghost and Mrs. Muir'' include: === |
=== Tropes used in ''The Ghost and Mrs. Muir'' include: === |
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* [[Alternative Character Interpretation]]: Lucy may have imagined Daniel {{spoiler|though the ending sort of disproves this line of thought}} |
* [[Alternative Character Interpretation]]: Lucy may have imagined Daniel {{spoiler|though the ending sort of disproves this line of thought}} |
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* [[Beautiful Dreamer]] |
* [[Beautiful Dreamer]] |
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* {{spoiler|[[Bittersweet Ending]]: Lucy finally ends up with Daniel, but she had to die first.}} |
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* [[Cultured Badass]]: Daniel quotes Keats and is quite eloquent while dictating his memoirs. |
* [[Cultured Badass]]: Daniel quotes Keats and is quite eloquent while dictating his memoirs. |
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* [[Dead Person Conversation]] |
* [[Dead Person Conversation]] |
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* [[Determined Widow]] |
* [[Determined Widow]] |
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* [[Handsome Lech]]: Miles Fairley. Also turns out to be something of a [[Jerkass]], considering {{spoiler|he's already married}}. Ironically, after this secret is revealed he comes off as much more pathetic, perhaps a [[Casanova Wannabe]] |
* [[Handsome Lech]]: Miles Fairley. Also turns out to be something of a [[Jerkass]], considering {{spoiler|he's already married}}. Ironically, after this secret is revealed he comes off as much more pathetic, perhaps a [[Casanova Wannabe]] |
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* [[Haunted House]] |
* [[Haunted House]] |
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* [[Opposites Attract]] |
* [[Opposites Attract]] |
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* [[Our Ghosts Are Different]] |
* [[Our Ghosts Are Different]] |
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* [[Posthumous Character]] |
* [[Posthumous Character]] |
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* [[Second Love]] |
* [[Second Love]] |
Revision as of 01:06, 20 January 2015
The Ghost and Mrs. Muir is a 1947 20th Century Fox film directed by Joseph Manckiewicz, adapted from the 1945 book by R. A. Dick (the pseudonym of Josephine Leslie), and starring Rex Harrison and Gene Tierney. Perhaps most notable for the score, written by Bernard Herrmann.
Lucy Muir, newly widowed, has had it with her domineering in-laws and decides to settle the issue by moving herself, her daughter Anna, and faithful maid Martha to Whitecliffe-By-The-Sea, a charming coastal village somewhere in Edwardian England. Gull Cottage, a beautiful, if slightly run-down house on top of the bluffs is for rent, and the asking price extraordinarily cheap. The agent, however, is none too keen about the idea of someone living in the house, and it is not too long after moving in that Lucy finds out why. |
The late Captain Daniel Gregg, the builder and former owner of the house, has not quite gotten around to moving out, despite being ... dead. A cantankerous and blustery ghost, his attempts to move Lucy and her family out prove futile and short-lived, as he quickly falls in love with the beautiful widow, and she with him. Their cozy, if unusual, domestic arrangement is threatened when Lucy meets Miles Fairley, a suave author and veteran charmer. Fairley is interested, Daniel is jealous, and Lucy has a difficult decision to make. Daniel makes the choice for her, and bows out of her life so she may pursue her own existence, only reappearing to her after she dies of old age. |
The Ghost And Mrs. Muir is hard to categorize: part romance, part tragedy, part supernatural, part drama, part comedy. There's loads of room for Alternative Character Interpretation, but the plot is a permutation on a common story: boy meets girl, and they fall in love.
The film was adapted as a Fantastic Comedy TV sitcom in the '60s, shifting the setting to then-contemporary Maine. Edward Mulhare starred as Captain Gregg, with Hope Lange as his mortal love interest (renamed "Carolyn Muir"). Much was made of the comedic hijinks of Captain Gregg's surviving great-nephew, the venal and cowardly Claymore Gregg (Charles Nelson Reilly). Popular character actress Reta Shaw played the part of Martha.
Tropes used in The Ghost and Mrs. Muir include:
- Alternative Character Interpretation: Lucy may have imagined Daniel though the ending sort of disproves this line of thought
- Beautiful Dreamer
- Bittersweet Ending: Lucy finally ends up with Daniel, but she had to die first.
- Cultured Badass: Daniel quotes Keats and is quite eloquent while dictating his memoirs.
- Damsel in Distress: Subverted. Lucy's not helpless, but Daniel thinks she is.
- Dead Person Conversation
- Determined Widow
- Eerie Pale-Skinned Brunette: Lucy (though she does still have three freckles). This has give no hint about her character, though, as it was merely the favored beauty-type of The Edwardian Era and the late 1940s.
- Handsome Lech: Miles Fairley. Also turns out to be something of a Jerkass, considering he's already married. Ironically, after this secret is revealed he comes off as much more pathetic, perhaps a Casanova Wannabe
- Haunted House
- Innocent Cohabitation
- I Will Wait for You: Subverted. Oh so subverted. Though Lucy has forgotten Daniel's existence, in her later years she appears to be waiting for him. Then, on her death, he does reappear -- so this may be a rare case of I Will Wait for You from a man
- Jacob Marley Apparel: Subverted. Daniel appears as Lucy sees him in the portrait, though that may well have been what he was wearing when he died. Also Lucy, who dies an old woman in her nightgown and appears thereafter a young woman in one of the dresses of her youth.
- Ladykiller in Love: Daniel mentions three women mourning his death. And then he meets Lucy.
- Last Girl Wins
- Love Before First Sight: Lucy, if one subscribes to her Alternative Character Interpretation
- Mentor Occupational Hazard: The mentor's already dead!
- Monster Roommate
- The Mourning After: Invoked, averted, subverted.
- Never Suicide: It's a point of honor with Daniel that he didn't kill himself. Not that what actually killed him is more noble.
- Opposites Attract
- Our Ghosts Are Different
- Posthumous Character
- Second Love