The Elephant Man: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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{{tropelist}}


Tropes present in the film:

* [[Bittersweet Ending]]: {{spoiler|Merrick dies. But he dies on the happiest day of his life, and dies doing what he wants to do: to sleep like he's normal.}} It does not count as a [[Downer Ending]].
* [[Bittersweet Ending]]: {{spoiler|Merrick dies. But he dies on the happiest day of his life, and dies doing what he wants to do: to sleep like he's normal.}} It does not count as a [[Downer Ending]].
* [[Body Horror]]: Sort of. Merrick's physical anomalies become ever less-repellent as his agreeable personality is revealed.
* [[Body Horror]]: Sort of. Merrick's physical anomalies become ever less-repellent as his agreeable personality is revealed.

Revision as of 19:50, 4 January 2015

Mrs. Kendel: Why, Mr. Merrick, you're not an elephant man at all.
Merrick: Oh no?
Mrs. Kendel: Oh no... no... you're a Romeo.

The Very Loosely Based on a True Story saga of Joseph Merrick, the Elephant Man.

Basically, one of the saddest films ever, and one of David Lynch's few non-"omgwhaththehellisthisaaaaaaaaaI'mscared" movies, depicting Joseph (here called John, and played by John Hurt) Merrick's struggle to leave an abusive circus sideshow, while meeting Dr. Frederick Treves (Anthony Hopkins), who takes him out of that place and gets him into the London Hospital, where he - being an educated and kind person but still with the outward appearance of a freak - becomes the focus of London's attention, raising the question: is Merrick just moving from one circus to another?


Tropes used in The Elephant Man include:

"Why did I do it? Am I a good man or a bad man?"