Elmer Gantry: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
m (trope=>work)
No edit summary
 
(3 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 6: Line 6:
Elmer Gantry was once a college athlete who decided to go into the legal profession. He ditches the legal profession and becomes a traveling salesman. During his travels, he "decides" his true calling is in the ministry and becomes a preacher. However, his actions do much more harm than good.
Elmer Gantry was once a college athlete who decided to go into the legal profession. He ditches the legal profession and becomes a traveling salesman. During his travels, he "decides" his true calling is in the ministry and becomes a preacher. However, his actions do much more harm than good.


{{tropelist}}
----
* [[Corrupt Church]]{{context}}
=== This and its adaptations feature examples of: ===

* [[Corrupt Church]]
* [[Dry Crusader]]: Gantry pretends to be this publicly.
* [[Dry Crusader]]: Gantry pretends to be this publicly.
* [[Hypocrite]]
* [[Hypocrite]]
Line 16: Line 14:


{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Films of the 1960s0s]]
[[Category:Films of the 1960s]]
[[Category:Lit Fic]]
[[Category:Lit Fic]]
[[Category:Academy Award]]
[[Category:Academy Award]]
[[Category:Elmer Gantry]]
[[Category:Elmer Gantry]]
[[Category:Films Based on Novels]]
[[Category:Film]]
[[Category:Literature]]

Latest revision as of 15:53, 5 October 2020

"I have here in my pocket - and thank heaven you can't see them - lewd, dirty, obscene, and I'm ashamed to say this: French postcards. They were sold to me in front of your own innocent high school by a man with a black beard... a foreigner."
Elmer Gantry.

A 1926 novel by Sinclair Lewis (written in 1926, first published in 1927), Elmer Gantry was brought to the screen by Director and Writer Richard Brooks in 1960. The title role was played by Burt Lancaster, who won an Oscar along with co-star Shirley Jones and Brooks' screenplay.

Elmer Gantry was once a college athlete who decided to go into the legal profession. He ditches the legal profession and becomes a traveling salesman. During his travels, he "decides" his true calling is in the ministry and becomes a preacher. However, his actions do much more harm than good.

Tropes used in Elmer Gantry include: