King Solomon's Mines: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Crossing the Desert]]
* [[Crossing the Desert]]
* [[Darkest Africa]]
* [[Darkest Africa]]
* [[Fair for Its Day]]: Africans are generally treated as human. Some are Homerically awesome, some are just faithful employees. Kukuanas have a sophisticated military with distinct units, regimental traditions, and the ability to stand in formation. The only part that really makes one wince is when a Kukuana girl acknowledges the impossibility of a white man and a black girl marrying. Not because(which was true in the story context)they lived in totally different cultures and one would have to make an adjustment that would be almost intolerable, but simply because one was black and one white.
* [[Gentleman Adventurer]]: Sir Henry Curtis and Captain John Good
* [[Gentleman Adventurer]]: Sir Henry Curtis and Captain John Good
* [[Great White Hunter]]: Allan Quatermain
* [[Great White Hunter]]: Allan Quatermain
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* [[Mighty Whitey]]: Sir Henry Curtis
* [[Mighty Whitey]]: Sir Henry Curtis
* [[Proud Warrior Race Guy]]: Ignosi
* [[Proud Warrior Race Guy]]: Ignosi
* [[Scary Black Man]]: ''Lots'' of Scary Black Men.
* [[Sealed Room in the Middle of Nowhere]]
* [[Sealed Room in the Middle of Nowhere]]
* [[Tested on Humans]]: The king of the Kukuana people asks Allan Quatermain to show the effects of his rifle upon his assembled warriors. Quatermain replies by telling the king he would be glad to do so if the king volunteers to be the subject of the experiment. At which point it is decided to use an ox instead.
* [[Tested on Humans]]: The king of the Kukuana people asks Allan Quatermain to show the effects of his rifle upon his assembled warriors. Quatermain replies by telling the king he would be glad to do so if the king volunteers to be the subject of the experiment. At which point it is decided to use an ox instead.

Revision as of 20:05, 16 February 2018

King's Solomon's Mines is an adventure novel by H. Rider Haggard, first published in 1885. It tells of a group of Englishmen who travel into Darkest Africa in search of the legendary diamond mines of The Bible's King Solomon.

It was enormously successful, launching the Jungle Opera genre, and was followed by over a dozen sequels and prequels featuring the protagonist Allan Quatermain, including a crossover with Haggard's other most famous novel, She. It has been adapted for film and television many times.

Tropes used in King Solomon's Mines include:

Haggard's sequels and prequels provide examples of:

Adaptations provide examples of:

  • Improbable Hairstyle: Elizabeth Curtis from the Deborah Kerr adaptation gets sick of her waist length hair in the humid African jungle and hacks a slice out of it. When it cuts to the next scene she has cut it short into a perfectly styled short do. That style might have been fashionable in the 1950s when the film came out but the film is set in the 1800s when women didn't have short hair. Test audiences actually laughed their heads off at the scenes when they first saw them that the producers nearly removed them. But they couldn't explain Elizabeth's change of hairstyle so they kept the improbable scenes in the film.
  • Throw-Away Guns: Parodied in the 1985 comedy/adventure film adaptation. The female character throws a gun at the villain; he shouts: "Thank you!" and uses it to blast away at her.
  • Token Romance: Every single adaptation of King Solomon's Mines manages to shoehorn in a white female love interest who wasn't in the book.
  • Tree-Top Town: In the version with Richard Chamberlain they meet a tribe of people who live entirely in the trees, never touching the ground.