Neighbors: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
(tropelist, not to be confused with)
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* [[Dynamic Entry]]
* [[Dynamic Entry]]
* [[Dysfunctional Family]]: "Her father's abused her long enough; Now I want to marry her and take her home to ''my'' father."
* [[Dysfunctional Family]]: "Her father's abused her long enough; Now I want to marry her and take her home to ''my'' father."
* [[Everything's Cuter With Kittens]]
* [[Feuding Families]]
* [[Feuding Families]]
* [[Girl Next Door]]: Or at least in the building across the alley.
* [[Girl Next Door]]: Or at least in the building across the alley.

Revision as of 21:52, 27 February 2020

The Flower of Love could find no more romantic spot in which to blossom than in this poet's Dream Garden.

opening card

In this 1920 two-reeler, Buster Keaton and Virginia Fox are a lower-class Romeo and Juliet who live in neighboring tenements.

This film can be seen in its entirety at Google Video.

Not to be confused with the 1981 Black Comedy feature of the same name, which starred Dan Aykroyd and John Belushi, nor the long-running Australian soap opera.

Tropes used in Neighbors include: