Christine (King novel): Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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m (SelfCloak moved page Christine (1983 novel) to Christine (King novel) without leaving a redirect: proper disambiguation)
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* [[Badass Driver]]: Christine herself.
* [[Badass Driver]]: Christine herself.
** Also Arnie, as it is later revealed that he was driving, at least part of the time.
** Also Arnie, as it is later revealed that he was driving, at least part of the time.
* [[Bad to the Bone]]: Christine's theme song, sort of.
* [[Big Bad]]: Christine.
* [[Big Bad]]: Christine.
* [[Black Dude Dies First]]: In the movie, at least.
* [[Black Dude Dies First]]: In the movie, at least.
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** To be more exact the radio in the 70s plays nothing but hits from the 50s.
** To be more exact the radio in the 70s plays nothing but hits from the 50s.
* [[Split Personality Takeover]]
* [[Split Personality Takeover]]
* [[Standard Pre-Ass-Kicking Snippet]]: Former trope namer "Bad to the Bone" is Christine's theme song, sort of.
* [[Sweater Girl]]: Leigh.
* [[Sweater Girl]]: Leigh.
* [[Switching POV]]: The first part is narrated by Dennis, the second part is told by an omniscient third-person narrator and mostly focuses on Arnie, and the third part is narrated by Dennis again.
* [[Switching POV]]: The first part is narrated by Dennis, the second part is told by an omniscient third-person narrator and mostly focuses on Arnie, and the third part is narrated by Dennis again.

Revision as of 11:07, 5 October 2018

"She had the smell of a brand new car, and that's just about the finest smell in the world, except maybe for pussy."
Roland D. LeBay to Arnie Cunningham regarding the worst auto purchase in history. For both of them.

A 1983 novel by Stephen King that was also adapted into a feature film in the same year by John Carpenter. The basic premise is that the most unpopular guy in a Pittsburgh area high school buys his first car, much like any other teenager the world over. The problem is that his car is extremely and psychotically attached to him. The novel details his transition from normal, if nerdy and unhappy, teenager into a somewhat popular greaser loner, and eventually into a lonely psychotic as the the car and the ghost of the previous owner begin to exact an ever increasing amount of control over him.

Tropes used in Christine (King novel) include: