The Roaring Twenties (film): Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
(update links)
(tropelist, fix quote markup)
Line 2: Line 2:
[[File:The_Roaring_Twenties_4564.jpg|frame]]
[[File:The_Roaring_Twenties_4564.jpg|frame]]


{{quote|[[Unintentional Period Piece|Today]], [[World War II|while the earth shakes beneath the heels of marching troop]]s, while a great portion of the world trembles before the threats of [[Nazi Germany|acquisitive power-mad men]], we of America have little time to remember an astounding era in our own recent history. An [[The Roaring Twenties|era]] which will grow more and more incredible [[Society Marches On|with each passing generation]] until someday people will say [[The Greatest Story Never Told|it never could have happened at all]].}}
{{quote|[[Unintentional Period Piece|Today]], [[World War II|while the earth shakes beneath the heels of marching troop]]s, while a great portion of the world trembles before the threats of [[Nazi Germany|acquisitive power-mad men]], we of America have little time to remember an astounding era in our own recent history. An [[The Roaring Twenties|era]] which will grow more and more incredible [[Society Marches On|with each passing generation]] until someday people will say [[The Greatest Story Never Told|it never could have happened at all]].
|''Opening narration''}}

{{quote|--''Opening narration''}}


1939 Warner Brothers gangster movie starring [[James Cagney]] and [[Humphrey Bogart]].
1939 Warner Brothers gangster movie starring [[James Cagney]] and [[Humphrey Bogart]].
Line 12: Line 11:
Considered by many to be ''the'' definitive gangster picture. Not to be confused with the [[The Roaring Twenties|era]] of the same name.
Considered by many to be ''the'' definitive gangster picture. Not to be confused with the [[The Roaring Twenties|era]] of the same name.


{{tropelist}}
== This film contains examples of the following tropes ==

* [[All Love Is Unrequited]]: Panama is in love with Eddie, Eddie is in love with Jean, Jean is in love with {{spoiler|Lloyd}}
* [[All Love Is Unrequited]]: Panama is in love with Eddie, Eddie is in love with Jean, Jean is in love with {{spoiler|Lloyd}}
* [[All Girls Want Bad Boys]]: {{spoiler|Subverted.}}
* [[All Girls Want Bad Boys]]: {{spoiler|Subverted.}}

Revision as of 20:26, 10 June 2020

Today, while the earth shakes beneath the heels of marching troops, while a great portion of the world trembles before the threats of acquisitive power-mad men, we of America have little time to remember an astounding era in our own recent history. An era which will grow more and more incredible with each passing generation until someday people will say it never could have happened at all.

Opening narration

1939 Warner Brothers gangster movie starring James Cagney and Humphrey Bogart.

It opens during World War I, where three very different soldiers meet in a foxhole. One of them is Eddie Bartlett, a simple mechanic from a city that is probably New York. He returns home only to find that his job has been given away. As he struggles to earn money as a cab driver, a mix up results in his arrest. To thank him for keeping his mouth shut, speakeasy owner Panama Smith bails him out of jail, and the two go into business with each other.

Considered by many to be the definitive gangster picture. Not to be confused with the era of the same name.

Tropes used in The Roaring Twenties (film) include: