My Man Godfrey: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Servile Snarker]]: The maid Molly, especially to the cops.
* [[Servile Snarker]]: The maid Molly, especially to the cops.
* [[Spoiled Sweet]]: Irene. While ditzy, she still is kind to Godfrey, which is why he agrees to go with her for the scavenger hunt, as opposed to her older [[Rich Bitch]] sister.
* [[Spoiled Sweet]]: Irene. While ditzy, she still is kind to Godfrey, which is why he agrees to go with her for the scavenger hunt, as opposed to her older [[Rich Bitch]] sister.
* [[Time Skip]]: At least two, although they're subtle: first, the story jumps from Godfrey's first day as a butler to some point some weeks or months later; then there is a skip between the pearl necklace affair to some months later with a European trip for the Bullock girls.
* [[Time Skip]]: At least two, although they're subtle: first, the story jumps from Godfrey's first day as a butler to a point some weeks or months later; then there is a skip between the pearl necklace affair to what is probably the next spring, with a European trip for the Bullock girls in between.


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Revision as of 01:16, 13 August 2017

The rich girl Irene with her protege...er, butler

My Man Godfrey is a classic 1936 screwball comedy starring William Powell and Carole Lombard. The time is The Great Depression, and a number of men down on their luck are living in the city dump. By chance, a party of rich people, including Irene Bullock, show up to claim one of the "forgotten men" to win a scavenger hunt. She chooses Godfrey and wins the hunt, and afterward offers him a job as the family butler. Hilarity Ensues as he is confronted with a mad household of spoiled brats and Cloud Cuckoolanders. While Irene falls madly in love with Godfrey, the feeling is not mutual (at first).

Tropes used in My Man Godfrey include: