The Good, the Bad, the Weird: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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{{tropelist}}
=== The film provides examples of: ===

* [[Action Survivor]]: Tae-goo seems to be this; no one knows what skills he has, they just know that he survives no matter what you throw at him. In several scenes he gets away only because Do-won helps him out. In truth, though, this is [[Obfuscating Stupidity]], and he is in fact a textbook [[Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass]].
* [[Action Survivor]]: Tae-goo seems to be this; no one knows what skills he has, they just know that he survives no matter what you throw at him. In several scenes he gets away only because Do-won helps him out. In truth, though, this is [[Obfuscating Stupidity]], and he is in fact a textbook [[Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass]].
* [[Ass Shove]]: Tae-goo kills two people this way. When the Japanese find the bodies, they think he's a pervert.
* [[Ass Shove]]: Tae-goo kills two people this way. When the Japanese find the bodies, they think he's a pervert.
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Revision as of 19:52, 6 April 2017

Three Koreans in exile cross paths in 1930s Manchuria during the Japanese occupation. Park Chang-yi, the hitman/bandit leader, is hired to steal a treasure map from a Japanese official, but a train robber, Yoon Tae-goo, beats him to the punch - only to be captured by a Bounty Hunter, Park Do-won. Tae-goo talks Do-won into helping him search for the treasure instead, and they set off through the desert together, with Chang-yi's gang and the Japanese army in pursuit. During the action-filled chase that follows, each of the three turns out to have some hidden motives.

The Good The Bad The Weird is a Korean remake of The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, but while the original is an epic Spaghetti Western, the remake is a more fast-paced and less serious action film.

Compare and Contrast with Sukiyaki Western Django.


Tropes used in The Good, the Bad, the Weird include: