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(Import from TV Tropes TVT:Film.HighNoon 2012-07-01, editor history TVTH:Film.HighNoon, CC-BY-SA 3.0 Unported license) |
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[[File:High-noon-DVDcover 8370.jpg|frame]]
{{quote|''Do not forsake me, Oh my Darlin'''
''On this our wedding day.''|'''''The Ballad of High Noon'''''}}
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''High Noon'' is the film most requested for viewing by [[The Presidents|the U.S. Presidents]]. [[Bill Clinton]] named it his favorite (allegedly having it screened in the White House a record 17 times), but [[Ronald Reagan]] and [[Dwight Eisenhower]] also liked it.
Additionally, ''High Noon'' "inspired" ''[[Rio Bravo]]'' and ''[[Outland (
{{tropelist}}
* [[Batman Grabs a Gun]]: Amy, when she rescues Will by {{spoiler| going against her Quaker beliefs and shooting one of his enemies.}}
* [[Bloodless Carnage]]: Used inconsistently: a fistfight leaves Kane covered in blood, but people who're shot just fell over.
* [[Broken Aesop]]: This film's message is supposedly about innocent men (
* [[Children Are Innocent]]: The children dismissed from the church aren't the least bit upset about Miller's impending return, which they've just heard about, and are content to cheerfully play around. (It's possible they don't really know who he is, though.)
* [[Cowboys and Indians]]: Kane runs into kids who imitate the battle between him and Miller, with him shot to death.
* [[Crapsack World]]: Hadleyville. Marshal Kane ask the town's help for stopping a returning villain and his gang. Only a 14-year-old, a half
{{quote|
* [[Deliberately Monochrome]]: While it doesn’t hurt that color wasn’t in vogue for serious/art films at the time, the black-and-white color schemes are suggestive of a good-vs.-evil conflict in a morally-complex story. The photography was intended to look 19th-century, and especially intended to resemble the solemn palettes from photography of the [[The American Civil War|Civil War]]. When the idea of colorizing black and white films turned to ''High Noon'', [[Word of God]] was, in essence,
* [[Divided We Fall]]: Will's deputy refuses to help him unless Will agrees to him being the next marshal.
* [[Expository Theme Tune]]: "The Ballad of High Noon
* [[Extremely Short Timespan]]: The film is in real-time; there are clocks in almost every room, constantly keeping track.
* [[Good Scars, Evil Scars]]: Frank Miller sports some evil scars.
* [[Guns Akimbo]]: Colby, a member of Miller's gang ([[Lee Van Cleef]]), rushes into the barn blazing wildly with two guns. Kane picks him off neatly with one gun.
* [[Hair of Gold]]: Amy, initially depicted as naive and innocent
* [[Hero Looking for Group]]: Tragically subverted. See [[Posse]] below.
* [[Honor Before Reason]]
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* [[Insignia Rip Off Ritual]]: Kane takes off his own badge.
* [[In the Back]]: Amy shoots one of Miller's man, Pierce, in the back through a window.
* [[Knight in Sour Armor]]: Will Kane.
* [[Light Is Not Good]]: Frank Miller dresses in white in contrasting his goons wearing black.
* [[Lock and Load Montage]]: Subverted. Two minutes before he faces Frank Miller alone at noon, Kane sits down in his office and begins preparing by writing his will. Enter Dimitri Tiomkin's score and a [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7MooNISe8aM montage] of Kane at his desk, the omnipresent clock, Amy and Helena in the hotel, Miller's goons at the depot, and pretty much everybody else in the whole town at the saloon or church.
* [[Offstage Villainy]]: Frank Miller for most of the movie.
* [[Magic Countdown]]: Subverted; the hour before the train arrives is done in real time.
* [[May
* [[Meek Townsman]]: Just about everyone in town.
* [[The Missus and
{{quote|
'''Amy''': Why don't you?
'''Helen''': He is not my man. He's yours.
* [[Neutral Female]]: Subverted. Amy vows not to support or help her husband fight the thugs, but ultimately she is the only person to help him fight. She shoots a bad guy and is even able to break free of Miller's hold so her husband can shoot him.
** Played straight by many of the female townspeople. Some seem disgusted at their husbands' refusal to help Kane, but do nothing themselves.
* [[Politically
* [[Posse]]: Subverted; Kane tries to get one, but unsuccessfully.
* [[Put Down Your Gun and Step Away]]
* [[Real Time]]: Kane's one hour deadline ticks down in real time.
* [[Recycled in Space]]: The sci-fi film ''[[Outland (
* [[Retired Gunfighter]]: Will Kane, trying to hang up his guns to marry his Quaker bride.
* [[Riding Into the Sunset]]: Will and Amy at the end, though [[Captain Obvious|it's not a sunset]].
* [[Right
* [[Rousing Speech]]: Subverted in the church.
* [[Showdown At High Noon]]: Of course.
* [[Training the Peaceful Villagers]]: Subverted. Kane tries, but they aren't interested, even when their town is at stake.
* [[Violence Really Is the Answer]]: Many people urge Kane to run away rather than fight, including his pacifist wife, but he stands his ground, and his wife forsakes pacifism to save his life.
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* [[Wedding Day]]: The entire movie takes place on Will's wedding day.
* [[The Western]]
* [[What the Hell, Townspeople?]]: Kane shows his contempt for the cowardly townsfolk after he wins; when they gather around him, he drops his badge and leaves without a word.
* [[When the Clock Strikes Twelve]]: Twelve o'clock Noon, in this case. We are constantly given shots of the clock and pendulum to remind us of Kane's supposedly imminent comeuppance.
{{AFI's 100 Years 100 Heroes and Villains}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category:
[[Category:
[[Category:Index of Film Westerns]]▼
[[Category:Films of the 1950s]]▼
[[Category:Film]]
[[Category:Films Based on Short Stories]]
▲[[Category:Films of the 1950s]]
[[Category:National Film Registry]]
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