Greed (film): Difference between revisions
Content added Content deleted
Looney Toons (talk | contribs) m (removed Category:Greed; added Category:Greed (film) using HotCat) |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{work|wppage=Greed (1924 film)}} |
{{work|wppage=Greed (1924 film)}} |
||
{{delete|This page has been tagged with {{tl|trope list needs context}} for more than six months. As per [[att:Style Guide#Adding Tropes to Works|this wiki's Style Guide]], "Work pages with nothing but Zero Context Examples are themselves subject to deletion if no one chooses to rescue them." Two-week notice: Fix this page before May 18, 2024, or see it deleted by the Mods.}} |
|||
{{trope list needs context}} |
{{trope list needs context}} |
||
[[File:Greed 1924 poster.jpg|thumb|350px]] |
[[File:Greed 1924 poster.jpg|thumb|350px]] |
Latest revision as of 17:02, 4 May 2024
This page has been marked as a candidate for speedy deletion. Reason: This page has been tagged with {{trope list needs context}} for more than six months. As per this wiki's Style Guide, "Work pages with nothing but Zero Context Examples are themselves subject to deletion if no one chooses to rescue them." Two-week notice: Fix this page before May 18, 2024, or see it deleted by the Mods.. You can discuss this deletion at the talk page. Check links and the page history before deleting. |
Many (or possibly all) of the tropes listed in this page's trope list need context. A list of tropes is not a description. See ATT:ZCE for advice on how to fix this. |
Greed is a 1924 silent film directed by Erich von Stroheim, based on the novel McTeague. Particularly noteworthy as one of the earliest examples of various "troubled production" tropes, the film's original cut came in at a stunning nine and a half hours. MGM eventually took the film out of von Stroheim's hands and released it with a running time of about two and a half hours. The shortened film was a flop, panned by critics and disowned by its director.
A four-hour version of the film (with inserted stills from cut scenes) was created in 1999 by Turner Entertainment.
Tropes used in Greed (film) include:
- Downer Ending
- Dude, She's Like, in a Coma
- Epic Movie
- The Film of the Book
- Gold Fever
- Love Triangle: Gone horribly wrong.
- Money Fetish
- San Francisco: Shot on location.
- Staggered Zoom: The chilling last shot, where the film zooms out to show McTeague handcuffed to a corpse in the middle of a desert.
- Thanatos Gambit
- Thirsty Desert
- Wanted Poster
- Worthless Yellow Rocks: You got the gold. Mazel tov. Too bad you're in the middle of a desert with no water.