The Serpent and the Rainbow: Difference between revisions

m
Mass update links
m (remove unneccessary quote box template)
m (Mass update links)
Line 10:
Meanwhile, [[Complete Monster|Haitian dictator Dargent Peytraud]] notices Dr. Alan's investigations, and seeks to intimidate him into leaving the country. Alan stands up to the man, only to have his dreams haunted by visions of Peytraud, and the living dead.
 
{{tropelist}}
----
=== This film provides examples of: ===
 
* [[Badass Boast]]: After purchasing a vial of zombie powder from Mozart, Dennis Alan loudly calls him an idiot, says "You want to know what I think of your powders?", pours the entire vial into a drink, then chugs the mixture. Before leaving, he hisses: "It's piss." {{spoiler|He actually used slight of hand to switch the real vial out for one of his own; ultimately, it was a move meant to psyche out Celine enough to give him the real powder}}.
Line 18 ⟶ 17:
* [[Evil Sorcerer]]: Peytraud.
* [[Groin Attack]]: With a [[Nail Em|nail]]. "I want to hear you ''scream!''"
* [[Hollywood Voodoo]]: At least, in the sense that it the religion was highly sensationalized ([[Very Loosely Based Onon a True Story|see below]]).
* [[Ironic Echo]]: "I want to hear you ''scream!''"
* [[Just Think of the Potential]]: Dr. Alan is working for a pharmaceutical company that believes the zombie powder can be used as a safe anesthetic; something that might prevent patients from dying on the operating table as the result of anesthetic shock.
* [[MasochistsMasochist's Meal]]: A woman, apparently under the influence of possession, [[Soft Glass|eats part of a wine glass]].
* [[Mind Over Matter]]: As part of the climax, {{spoiler|Dennis Alan gains telekinesis}}.
* [[Nightmare Sequence]]: Dennis Alan suffers through this more and more frequently as the movie continues, eventually having to cope with waking [[Hallucinations]].
Line 29 ⟶ 28:
* [[Scary Black Man]]: Peytraud.
* [[Secret Police]]: the Tonton Macoute.
* [[Very Loosely Based Onon a True Story]]: The film was inspired by a book of the same name, by a Botanist who went to Haiti to scientifically analyse the substances used in Voodoo rituals and investigate the legends of powerful Houngans who could re-animate the dead as zombie slaves. {{spoiler|Turns out the truth is somewhere in the middle. Zombies are real, but they're not actually dead, it's just a combination of fugu poison, oxygen deprivation-induced brain damage from being buried alive for a while and a healthy dose of the power of suggestion.}}
** In fact, the author, Harvard ethnobotanist Wade Davis, was extremely unhappy with the film, because it ended up [[They Just Didn't Care|presenting voodoo in the sensationalist]] [[Black Magic]] sideshow light that he notably avoided in the book. There are several passages in the book in which he condemns the way [[Hilarious in Hindsight|Hollywood has demonized ''vodoun'' religion in film]].
* [[Your Soul Is Mine]]: Haitian dictator Dargent Peytraud keeps a collection of them.