Tall Tale (film)

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Tall Tale: The Unbelievable Adventures of Pecos Bill is a movie produced by Disney in the early nineties. It features Nick Stahl as a young boy in the late 1800s who meets folk heroes Pecos Bill, Paul Bunyan, and John Henry.

After his father is shot for refusing to sell the deed to his land in Paradise Valley to an evil coal-mining magnate, Daniel Hackett (Stahl) goes on the run trying to keep the deed from falling into the mining company's hands. He is saved from two outlaws by Badass cowboy Pecos Bill (Patrick Swayze). After explaining the situation, Pecos offers to help Daniel, but not before seeking out the help of his old friend, legenday lumberjack Paul Bunyan (Oliver Platt). The trio heads to Liberty City, where they encounter John Henry (Roger Aaron Brown), the steel-driving man. The group continues to battle there way back to Paradise Valley against the mining company's hired guns. All the way, Daniel learns about courage and what it means to be a real man.


Tropes used in Tall Tale (film) include:
  • Achilles in His Tent: Paul Bunyan has become a recluse after the logging industry was modernized.
  • All Just a Dream: Right before a shoot-out with the Big Bad and his mooks, Daniel loses consciousness and wakes up back in his bed. Subverted, when he learns that the coal company has already begun mining, and Pecos, Bunyan, and Henry show up to help stop them.
  • Arc Words/Phrase Catcher: "The Code of the East/North/South/West"

"Respect the land! Defend the defenseless! And don't ever spit in-front of women or children!" *Spit*

I am a ring-tailed roarer! I can draw faster, shoot straighter, ride harder, and drink longer than any man alive! I'm the rip-snortingest cowboy that ever rode north, south, east, or west of the Rio Grande! I'm Pecos Bill! Yee-haw!

Tough Guy: You're from Texas?
Pecos: I do have that honor, sir!
Tough Guy: I though I spelled something funny in here!! [laughs along with his gang]]
Pecos: Mister, are you insulting the great state of Texas?
Tough Guy: You mean the "great state of two-bit whores"?
Pecos: Mister, you can insult me, and you can insult my friends. Hell, you can even insult my mother, or my horse. But mister don't you ever insult the great state of Texas!