Pennies From Heaven: Difference between revisions
Content added Content deleted
No edit summary |
Looney Toons (talk | contribs) (copyedits, needs more tropes) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{work}} |
{{work}} |
||
{{workstub}} |
{{workstub}} |
||
Philandering 1930s sheet music salesman Arthur Parker escapes from his dull life by fantasizing elaborately choreographed musical numbers in which he and the other characters lip-sync to original |
Philandering 1930s sheet music salesman Arthur Parker escapes from his dull life by fantasizing elaborately choreographed musical numbers in which he and the other characters lip-sync to original recordings of popular 1930s music. |
||
1978 BBC mini-series created by Dennis Potter |
1978 BBC mini-series created by Dennis Potter starring [[Bob Hoskins]], Gemma Craven, and Cheryl Campbell. |
||
Starring [[Bob Hoskins]],Gemma Craven,and Cheryl Campbell. |
|||
Later remade as a 1981 film |
Later remade as a 1981 film starring [[Steve Martin]], Jessica Harper, [[Bernadette Peters]] and [[Christopher Walken]]. |
||
Starring [[Steve Martin]], Jessica Harper, [[Bernadette Peters]] and [[Christopher Walken]]. |
|||
{{tropelist}} |
{{tropelist}} |
||
Line 14: | Line 12: | ||
* [[Downer Ending]] |
* [[Downer Ending]] |
||
* [[Nothing but Hits]]: Averted - many of the songs are rather obscure. |
* [[Nothing but Hits]]: Averted - many of the songs are rather obscure. |
||
* [[One-Scene Wonder]]: [[Christopher Walken]] in his " |
* [[One-Scene Wonder]]: [[Christopher Walken]] in his "Let's Misbehave" lip-syncing tap-dancing strip-tease. |
||
** The best part, of course, is Bernadette Peter's reaction. |
** The best part, of course, is Bernadette Peter's reaction. |
||
*** All the other musical numbers were done as set pieces; showing her reactions as an observer is somewhat distracting and takes away from the whole premise of the film. |
*** All the other musical numbers were done as set pieces; showing her reactions as an observer is somewhat distracting and takes away from the whole premise of the film. |
||
* [[Soundtrack Dissonance]]: Basically the central concept of both the movie and the mini-series. |
* [[Soundtrack Dissonance]]: Basically the central concept of both the movie and the mini-series. |
||
{{Needs More Tropes}} |
|||
{{reflist}} |
{{reflist}} |
Revision as of 15:10, 12 February 2015
This Work page is a stub. You can help All The Tropes by expanding it. If you have checked or updated this page and found the content to be suitable, please remove this notice. |
Philandering 1930s sheet music salesman Arthur Parker escapes from his dull life by fantasizing elaborately choreographed musical numbers in which he and the other characters lip-sync to original recordings of popular 1930s music.
1978 BBC mini-series created by Dennis Potter starring Bob Hoskins, Gemma Craven, and Cheryl Campbell.
Later remade as a 1981 film starring Steve Martin, Jessica Harper, Bernadette Peters and Christopher Walken.
Tropes used in Pennies From Heaven include:
- Corrupt the Cutie: From meek schoolteacher to hooker in a few months.
- Deconstruction: Of Depression-era musicals.
- Downer Ending
- Nothing but Hits: Averted - many of the songs are rather obscure.
- One-Scene Wonder: Christopher Walken in his "Let's Misbehave" lip-syncing tap-dancing strip-tease.
- The best part, of course, is Bernadette Peter's reaction.
- All the other musical numbers were done as set pieces; showing her reactions as an observer is somewhat distracting and takes away from the whole premise of the film.
- The best part, of course, is Bernadette Peter's reaction.
- Soundtrack Dissonance: Basically the central concept of both the movie and the mini-series.
This page needs more trope entries. You can help this wiki by adding more entries or expanding current ones. |