Ratman's Notebooks: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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(Import from TV Tropes TVT:Literature.RatmansNotebooks 2012-07-01, editor history TVTH:Literature.RatmansNotebooks, CC-BY-SA 3.0 Unported license)
 
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* [[Does Not Like Women]]: Ratman. He gets better.
* [[Does Not Like Women]]: Ratman. He gets better.
* {{spoiler|[[Downer Ending]]:}} The 1971 movie
* {{spoiler|[[Downer Ending]]:}} The 1971 movie
* [[Dragon in Chief]]: Ben
* [[Dragon-in-Chief]]: Ben
* [[Even Bad Men Love Their Mamas]]: Averted in the book, but played straight in the movies.
* [[Even Bad Men Love Their Mamas]]: Averted in the book, but played straight in the movies.
* [[Even Evil Has Standards]]
* [[Even Evil Has Standards]]
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* {{spoiler|[[Gainax Ending]]}}: The 2003 movie
* {{spoiler|[[Gainax Ending]]}}: The 2003 movie
* [[Gory Discretion Shot]]: With {{spoiler|Mister Martin (but only in the book; a certain deleted scene from the 2003 movie should NOT be watched by the faint of heart)}}, very much not the case with {{spoiler|Socrates}}
* [[Gory Discretion Shot]]: With {{spoiler|Mister Martin (but only in the book; a certain deleted scene from the 2003 movie should NOT be watched by the faint of heart)}}, very much not the case with {{spoiler|Socrates}}
* [[Half Human Hybrid]]: The general public believes Ratman to be one of these (in no small part due to his disguise)
* [[Half-Human Hybrid]]: The general public believes Ratman to be one of these (in no small part due to his disguise)
* {{spoiler|[[Happy Ending]]:}} ''Ben'' (the movie, not the song of the same name)
* {{spoiler|[[Happy Ending]]:}} ''Ben'' (the movie, not the song of the same name)
* [[Hard Work Montage]]: The 2003 movie
* [[Hard Work Montage]]: The 2003 movie
* [[It Got Worse]]: From the POV of the townspeople.
* [[It Got Worse]]: From the POV of the townspeople.
* [[Killed Mid Sentence]]: {{spoiler|The end of the book, although the "killed" bit is open for debate}}
* [[Killed Mid-Sentence]]: {{spoiler|The end of the book, although the "killed" bit is open for debate}}
* [[Knight of Cerebus]]: {{spoiler|Mr. Martin, when he kills Socrates.}} Up until this point, the novel reads something like a dark satire about various human foibles. Only from this point onward does it truly feel like a horror story.
* [[Knight of Cerebus]]: {{spoiler|Mr. Martin, when he kills Socrates.}} Up until this point, the novel reads something like a dark satire about various human foibles. Only from this point onward does it truly feel like a horror story.
* [[Kubrick Stare]]: One of the elevator scenes in the 2003 movie.
* [[Kubrick Stare]]: One of the elevator scenes in the 2003 movie.
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* [[Meganekko]]: Eve in ''Ben''.
* [[Meganekko]]: Eve in ''Ben''.
* [[Missing Mom]] (but not initially)
* [[Missing Mom]] (but not initially)
* [[My God What Have I Done]]
* [[My God, What Have I Done?]]
* [[Mythology Gag]]: In the 2003 remake, a television is turned on to a radio station, and the song ''Ben'' by Michael Jackson is played. This is especially interesting, because the song, ''Ben'' was written for the sequel of the same name to the original 1971 Willard, but it would stand to reason that in the world of the 2003 remake, there has been no movie Willard and thus no sequel. So in the 2003 film, the song exists out of nowhere.
* [[Mythology Gag]]: In the 2003 remake, a television is turned on to a radio station, and the song ''Ben'' by Michael Jackson is played. This is especially interesting, because the song, ''Ben'' was written for the sequel of the same name to the original 1971 Willard, but it would stand to reason that in the world of the 2003 remake, there has been no movie Willard and thus no sequel. So in the 2003 film, the song exists out of nowhere.
* [[No Name Given]]: EVERYBODY except Martin, Ben, and Socrates.
* [[No Name Given]]: EVERYBODY except Martin, Ben, and Socrates.
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* [[Villainous BSOD]]
* [[Villainous BSOD]]
* [[Villain Protagonist]]
* [[Villain Protagonist]]
* [[What Do You Mean Its Not Awesome]]: The 2003 movie. When Willard starts "hearing things", a bunch of children's voices are thrown in for apparently no reason other than to add to the disorienting effect.
* [[What Do You Mean It's Not Awesome?]]: The 2003 movie. When Willard starts "hearing things", a bunch of children's voices are thrown in for apparently no reason other than to add to the disorienting effect.
* [[Whos Laughing Now]]
* [[Who's Laughing Now?]]
* [[You Dirty Rat]]
* [[You Dirty Rat]]
* [[You Have Outlived Your Usefulness]]
* [[You Have Outlived Your Usefulness]]

Revision as of 05:16, 9 January 2014

 "Tear him up."\

Ratman's Notebooks is a 1968 horror novel by Stephen Gilbert. Written as a series of diary entries, it tells the story of a reclusive man who discovers he can train rats to do his bidding. Initially, he uses this for some innocent, yet creepy fun. Then he graduates to using them for thievery and finally murder.

Much like Robert Bloch's Psycho, the book seems to have been influenced by real-life murderer, Ed Gein.

It is perhaps best remembered for its two movie adaptations, both called Willard. The first was made in 1971 and starred Bruce Davison. The second one was in 2003 and had Crispin Glover cast in the lead role.

The 1971 movie also had a sequel, Ben, released in 1972. The Michael Jackson song of the same name was written for this movie and plays over the end credits.

Another thing that may or may not be worthy of note is that the novel is set in England while all three movies are set in the USA.


This work contains examples of: