The Man With One Red Shoe: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Cassandra Truth]]: "There are {{spoiler|three}} dead men in your apartment"
* [[Cassandra Truth]]: "There are {{spoiler|three}} dead men in your apartment"
* [[Cold War]]: Half subverted- not a single Russian agent anywhere in the film.
* [[Cold War]]: Half subverted- not a single Russian agent anywhere in the film.
* [[Deep Cover Agent]]: What Drew is mistaken for.
* [[Deep-Cover Agent]]: What Drew is mistaken for.
* [[Femme Fatale]]: Used by the Deputy to get close to Drew {{spoiler|played arrow straight, up to and including [[Redemption By Sex]]}}
* [[Femme Fatale]]: Used by the Deputy to get close to Drew {{spoiler|played arrow straight, up to and including [[Redemption By Sex]]}}
* [[Feed the Mole]]: The Director's house is wired for sound. Which is why he has all important conversations out on his lawn with the sprinklers running, and stands directly in front of the bugs when he want to be sure they hear what he wants them to hear.
* [[Feed the Mole]]: The Director's house is wired for sound. Which is why he has all important conversations out on his lawn with the sprinklers running, and stands directly in front of the bugs when he want to be sure they hear what he wants them to hear.
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* [[Practical Joke]]: Drew's friend stole one shoe out of each of his pairs before his flight to DC, resulting in his mismatched footwear.
* [[Practical Joke]]: Drew's friend stole one shoe out of each of his pairs before his flight to DC, resulting in his mismatched footwear.
* [[Resignations Not Accepted]]: Used {{spoiler|toward the [[Femme Fatale]], who is willing to betray her employer. [[Subverted Trope|Subverted, in that she turns states evidence in exchange for clemency at the end, getting out of the game in the process.]]}}
* [[Resignations Not Accepted]]: Used {{spoiler|toward the [[Femme Fatale]], who is willing to betray her employer. [[Subverted Trope|Subverted, in that she turns states evidence in exchange for clemency at the end, getting out of the game in the process.]]}}
* [[Spy Versus Spy]]: The internal politics of the CIA drive the entire plot.
* [[Spy-Versus-Spy]]: The internal politics of the CIA drive the entire plot.
* [[Take a Level In Badass]]: By the end, Drew has gone from a mild mannered musician to [[Crowning Moment of Awesome|charging an oncoming car with his bike, using a length of pipe as a lance.]]
* [[Take a Level In Badass]]: By the end, Drew has gone from a mild mannered musician to [[Crowning Moment of Awesome|charging an oncoming car with his bike, using a length of pipe as a lance.]]
* [[Title Drop]]: When the Director's right hand man picks him out of the crowd at the airport.
* [[Title Drop]]: When the Director's right hand man picks him out of the crowd at the airport.

Revision as of 17:15, 26 January 2014

When an ambitious deputy director frames the head of the CIA in a drug smuggling operation gone wrong, the director leaks info that a star witness will be coming into town, and sends his right hand man to the airport to make contact. The so called witness is a dupe picked at random based on a signal made up on the fly.

That man is Richard Drew, concert violinist and title character. When the deputy director takes the bait, coming to more and more paranoid conclusions based on completely innocent aspects of his life, Drew is dragged into the deadly spy battle, complete with Femme Fatale, wiretaps, tailing agents and multiple assassinations.

Also, its a comedy starring Tom Hanks.

Released in the 1980's, this movie plays with many of the spy thriller tropes, and also features a rare credited appearance by Carrie Fisher.

Examples of: