Is This Love?: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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The film follows the emotional travails of Peggy, a college student with only a year left before graduation. Unfortunately, she has fallen in love with hunky football guy Joe, and she wants to drop out of college to marry. Peggy's roommate Liz is not too keen on the idea, suggesting that they're moving too fast and haven't thought through all the problems they might face, but Peggy's feelings will not be denied. Throughout the short, Liz and her boyfriend Andy are set up as a counterpoint to Peggy's emotional rush, taking their own relationship nice and slow (as is heavily implied to be the "correct" course).
The film follows the emotional travails of Peggy, a college student with only a year left before graduation. Unfortunately, she has fallen in love with hunky football guy Joe, and she wants to drop out of college to marry. Peggy's roommate Liz is not too keen on the idea, suggesting that they're moving too fast and haven't thought through all the problems they might face, but Peggy's feelings will not be denied. Throughout the short, Liz and her boyfriend Andy are set up as a counterpoint to Peggy's emotional rush, taking their own relationship nice and slow (as is heavily implied to be the "correct" course).


In the end, in the face of overwhelming pressure from Peggy's parents and from Liz, Peggy and Joe elope. Unusually for films of this vintage, despite the fact that the film clearly sets up the young couple as heading for trouble, we never see Peggy either realizing the error of her ways nor [[Scare Em Straight|coming face to face with the consequences of her brash actions]]; the story ends with Joe and Peggy visiting a Justice Of The Peace, and ultimately [[No Ending|resolves nothing]].
In the end, in the face of overwhelming pressure from Peggy's parents and from Liz, Peggy and Joe elope. Unusually for films of this vintage, despite the fact that the film clearly sets up the young couple as heading for trouble, we never see Peggy either realizing the error of her ways nor [[Scare'Em Straight|coming face to face with the consequences of her brash actions]]; the story ends with Joe and Peggy visiting a Justice Of The Peace, and ultimately [[No Ending|resolves nothing]].


For the ''[[Mystery Science Theater 3000 (TV)|Mystery Science Theater 3000]]'' episode see ''[[Mystery Science Theater 3000 (TV)/Recap/S05 E14 Teen Age Strangler|here]]''.
For the ''[[Mystery Science Theater 3000 (TV)|Mystery Science Theater 3000]]'' episode see ''[[Mystery Science Theater 3000 (TV)/Recap/S05 E14 Teen Age Strangler|here]]''.
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* [[Dawson Casting]]: Liz (the actress who played her was 37 years old at the time) is probably the Most Triumphant Example of this trope.
* [[Dawson Casting]]: Liz (the actress who played her was 37 years old at the time) is probably the Most Triumphant Example of this trope.
* [[No Ending]]: Kind of a bold step in that day and age. Although the film goes out of its way to imply that Peggy and Joe are wrong for wanting to marry/elope, in the end nothing is solved and the narrator asks questions that aren't answered.
* [[No Ending]]: Kind of a bold step in that day and age. Although the film goes out of its way to imply that Peggy and Joe are wrong for wanting to marry/elope, in the end nothing is solved and the narrator asks questions that aren't answered.
* [[Scare Em Straight]]: Averted. The implications that Joe and Peggy are in the wrong remain only implications; as noted above, no consequences are shown.
* [[Scare'Em Straight]]: Averted. The implications that Joe and Peggy are in the wrong remain only implications; as noted above, no consequences are shown.
* [[Too Dumb to Live]]: Peggy.
* [[Too Dumb to Live]]: Peggy.
* [[What Do You Mean Its Not Heinous|What Do You Mean, It's Not Heinous?]] / [[Values Dissonance]]: Liz and Andy's blowout fight over drinking in college dorms.
* [[What Do You Mean It's Not Heinous?|What Do You Mean, It's Not Heinous?]] / [[Values Dissonance]]: Liz and Andy's blowout fight over drinking in college dorms.
{{quote| '''Mike:''' Drinking? In college? I've never heard of such a thing...}}
{{quote| '''Mike:''' Drinking? In college? I've never heard of such a thing...}}



Revision as of 23:58, 9 January 2014

  Servo: Or is it just rough sex with Michael Douglas?

'Is This Love' is a 1950s educational short about how to make a bad soap opera know you're ready for love. Apparently.

The film follows the emotional travails of Peggy, a college student with only a year left before graduation. Unfortunately, she has fallen in love with hunky football guy Joe, and she wants to drop out of college to marry. Peggy's roommate Liz is not too keen on the idea, suggesting that they're moving too fast and haven't thought through all the problems they might face, but Peggy's feelings will not be denied. Throughout the short, Liz and her boyfriend Andy are set up as a counterpoint to Peggy's emotional rush, taking their own relationship nice and slow (as is heavily implied to be the "correct" course).

In the end, in the face of overwhelming pressure from Peggy's parents and from Liz, Peggy and Joe elope. Unusually for films of this vintage, despite the fact that the film clearly sets up the young couple as heading for trouble, we never see Peggy either realizing the error of her ways nor coming face to face with the consequences of her brash actions; the story ends with Joe and Peggy visiting a Justice Of The Peace, and ultimately resolves nothing.

For the Mystery Science Theater 3000 episode see here.


The short provides the following tropes:

  • Dawson Casting: Liz (the actress who played her was 37 years old at the time) is probably the Most Triumphant Example of this trope.
  • No Ending: Kind of a bold step in that day and age. Although the film goes out of its way to imply that Peggy and Joe are wrong for wanting to marry/elope, in the end nothing is solved and the narrator asks questions that aren't answered.
  • Scare'Em Straight: Averted. The implications that Joe and Peggy are in the wrong remain only implications; as noted above, no consequences are shown.
  • Too Dumb to Live: Peggy.
  • What Do You Mean, It's Not Heinous? / Values Dissonance: Liz and Andy's blowout fight over drinking in college dorms.

  Mike: Drinking? In college? I've never heard of such a thing...