Hipsters: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
(Import from TV Tropes TVT:Main.Hipsters 2012-07-01, editor history TVTH:Main.Hipsters, CC-BY-SA 3.0 Unported license)
 
m (Mass update links)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{trope}}
{{trope}}
''Hipsters'' is a Russian musical directed by Valery Todorovsky in 2008. It was screened at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2009. Mels, an average young adult living in 1950s Communist Russia, meets a beautiful [[Hipster]] who goes by the name of Polly. For [[Love At First Sight|pretty obvious reasons]], he gets drawn into her world and soon becomes a hipster himself.
''Hipsters'' is a Russian musical directed by Valery Todorovsky in 2008. It was screened at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2009. Mels, an average young adult living in 1950s Communist Russia, meets a beautiful [[Hipster]] who goes by the name of Polly. For [[Love At First Sight|pretty obvious reasons]], he gets drawn into her world and soon becomes a hipster himself.
{{examples|Examples:}}
{{examples}}


* [[An Aesop]]: It's not important what the style is. What matters is that the style exists.
* [[An Aesop]]: It's not important what the style is. What matters is that the style exists.
Line 14: Line 14:
* [[Large Ham]]: Sergey Garmash as Mel's father acts in its usual over-the-top style, and steals quite a few scenes.
* [[Large Ham]]: Sergey Garmash as Mel's father acts in its usual over-the-top style, and steals quite a few scenes.
* [[Naive Newcomer]]: Mel among the hipsters. Naturally, he goes through a lot of hazing.
* [[Naive Newcomer]]: Mel among the hipsters. Naturally, he goes through a lot of hazing.
* [[One Scene Wonder]]: Oleg Yankovskiy as Fred's father gives the movie's most lauded performance, despite having about 5 minutes of screen time.
* [[One-Scene Wonder]]: Oleg Yankovskiy as Fred's father gives the movie's most lauded performance, despite having about 5 minutes of screen time.
* [[Period Piece]]
* [[Period Piece]]
* [[Shell Shocked Veteran]]: Subverted. Mel's father is a veteran of the [[Great Patriotic War]] who definitely went through a lot, but keeps his cheerful demeanor.
* [[Shell-Shocked Veteran]]: Subverted. Mel's father is a veteran of the [[Great Patriotic War]] who definitely went through a lot, but keeps his cheerful demeanor.
* [[Shout Out]]
* [[Shout Out]]
** Fred giving Mel the Kama Sutra could well be a shout out to ''[[American Pie]]'', where the protagonist is also given a sex text book by a more experienced friend.
** Fred giving Mel the Kama Sutra could well be a shout out to ''[[American Pie]]'', where the protagonist is also given a sex text book by a more experienced friend.
** Polly {{spoiler|giving birth to a black baby, and the kid being passed around by a surprised crowd}} is a definitely a shout out to the Soviet movie ''Circus'' (1936).
** Polly {{spoiler|giving birth to a black baby, and the kid being passed around by a surprised crowd}} is a definitely a shout out to the Soviet movie ''Circus'' (1936).
* [[What Do You Mean Its Not Political]]: Mel's father reading a Soviet newspaper: "Look! A crisis in the U.S. economy!"
* [[What Do You Mean It's Not Political?]]: Mel's father reading a Soviet newspaper: "Look! A crisis in the U.S. economy!"
* [[Win the Crowd]]: [[In Universe]], Mel has to do it to win the "hipsters'" favour.
* [[Win the Crowd]]: [[In Universe]], Mel has to do it to win the "hipsters'" favour.



Revision as of 17:34, 9 January 2014

Hipsters is a Russian musical directed by Valery Todorovsky in 2008. It was screened at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2009. Mels, an average young adult living in 1950s Communist Russia, meets a beautiful Hipster who goes by the name of Polly. For pretty obvious reasons, he gets drawn into her world and soon becomes a hipster himself.

Examples of Hipsters include:


  • An Aesop: It's not important what the style is. What matters is that the style exists.
  • Color Coded for Your Convenience: Word of God states that the trope was deliberately exaggerated, with the hipsters wearing outrageously colorful clothing, and the "squares" clad in dull grey apparel.
  • Femme Fatale: Polly starts off as one.
  • The Fifties: A rather balanced view of the Fifties in Soviet Russia, as a time of both post-war depression, political pressure and paranoia - and a longing for a bright abd flashy life.
  • Gainax Ending: The movie ends with a parade of different subcultures on the Red Square.
  • Mood Whiplash: The film, sometimes jarringly, swings from a light-hearted musical to serious period drama.
  • Nerd Glasses: Worn by Bob (the chubby guy).
  • It Got Worse: Subverted, surprisingly. Late in the movie, many bad things happen, but most of the time the characters manage to shrug it off and continue having fun, until the final scenes.
  • Jerkass: Polly, Fred and their friends act downright mean towards Mel at first, but become much nicer when he wins the crowd.
  • Large Ham: Sergey Garmash as Mel's father acts in its usual over-the-top style, and steals quite a few scenes.
  • Naive Newcomer: Mel among the hipsters. Naturally, he goes through a lot of hazing.
  • One-Scene Wonder: Oleg Yankovskiy as Fred's father gives the movie's most lauded performance, despite having about 5 minutes of screen time.
  • Period Piece
  • Shell-Shocked Veteran: Subverted. Mel's father is a veteran of the Great Patriotic War who definitely went through a lot, but keeps his cheerful demeanor.
  • Shout Out
    • Fred giving Mel the Kama Sutra could well be a shout out to American Pie, where the protagonist is also given a sex text book by a more experienced friend.
    • Polly giving birth to a black baby, and the kid being passed around by a surprised crowd is a definitely a shout out to the Soviet movie Circus (1936).
  • What Do You Mean It's Not Political?: Mel's father reading a Soviet newspaper: "Look! A crisis in the U.S. economy!"
  • Win the Crowd: In Universe, Mel has to do it to win the "hipsters'" favour.