The Devil and Max Devlin: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
m (trope=>work)
No edit summary
 
(3 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{work}}
{{work}}
'''The Devil And Max Devlin''' is a 1981 Disney film starring [[Bill Cosby]] as the Devil and Elliott Gould as Max Devlin.
''[[The Devil and Max Devlin]]'' is a 1981 Disney film starring [[Bill Cosby]] as the Devil and Elliott Gould as Max Devlin.


----
----
{{tropelist}}
=== This film contains examples of: ===
* [[Even Evil Has Standards]]: Because Max wants the children to live out their natural lives, Barney's demand that he take their souls now pushes him to pull a [[Heel Face Turn]].
* [[Even Evil Has Standards]]: Because Max wants the children to live out their natural lives, Barney's demand that he take their souls now pushes him to pull a [[Heel Face Turn]].
* [[Faustian Bargain]]: Barney Satin offers to restore Max Devlin to life if he gave him the souls of three children within a month.
* [[Faustian Bargain]]: Barney Satin offers to restore Max Devlin to life if he gave him the souls of three children within a month.
Line 13: Line 13:
[[Category:Films of the 1980s]]
[[Category:Films of the 1980s]]
[[Category:The Devil and Max Devlin]]
[[Category:The Devil and Max Devlin]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Devil and Max Devlin, The}}
[[Category:Film]]

Latest revision as of 01:07, 5 October 2020

The Devil and Max Devlin is a 1981 Disney film starring Bill Cosby as the Devil and Elliott Gould as Max Devlin.


Tropes used in The Devil and Max Devlin include:
  • Even Evil Has Standards: Because Max wants the children to live out their natural lives, Barney's demand that he take their souls now pushes him to pull a Heel Face Turn.
  • Faustian Bargain: Barney Satin offers to restore Max Devlin to life if he gave him the souls of three children within a month.
  • Heroic Sacrifice: Max burns the kids' contracts, yelling to the Devil that he'll never take them! NEVER! Subverted a few scenes later when, as he says his final goodbyes to the youths he had gotten to know through the contracts, he passes a mirror by chance and finds out that Redemption Earns Life.
  • Redemption Earns Life: As Max found out by chance when he passes by a mirror and sees his own reflection, realizing that he actually beat the Devil by choosing to preserve the kids' souls over his own and that his selfless sacrifice deemed him unworthy of hell. He doesn't forget to thank God for His wonderful mercy during a concert held by one of the youths at the end of the film.
  • Sadistic Choice: "Throw the contracts into the fire, and eternal damnation is YOURS!"