MacGuffin/Headscratchers: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 11: Line 11:
*** Then it's been improperly labeled as a [[MacGuffin]]. The definition is quite clear here -- if it matters at all what it is (besides gross characteristics like, say, weight) it's not a [[MacGuffin]].
*** Then it's been improperly labeled as a [[MacGuffin]]. The definition is quite clear here -- if it matters at all what it is (besides gross characteristics like, say, weight) it's not a [[MacGuffin]].
* I don't really understand the whole "interchangable" idea, especially in the context of Indiana Jones (which is typically used as an example of what a [[MacGuffin]] is). Is the Holy Grail, from "The last Crusade" a [[MacGuffin]]? The main page says it is, whcih means it DOESN'T really do anything major, but it does effect the plot (namely healing Henry's wounds, which is something, say, a bag of Gold couldn't do.
* I don't really understand the whole "interchangable" idea, especially in the context of Indiana Jones (which is typically used as an example of what a [[MacGuffin]] is). Is the Holy Grail, from "The last Crusade" a [[MacGuffin]]? The main page says it is, whcih means it DOESN'T really do anything major, but it does effect the plot (namely healing Henry's wounds, which is something, say, a bag of Gold couldn't do.
** It could have been the Rod of Asclepius, or the Alatyr, or a unicorn horn – there was nothing in the story that required it to be the Holy Grail specifically.
** It could have been the Rod of Asclepius, or a piece of the Alatyr, or a unicorn horn – there was nothing in the story that required it to be the Holy Grail specifically.


{{tropesubpagefooter}}
{{tropesubpagefooter}}

Revision as of 17:08, 20 January 2023



Back to MacGuffin