The Song of Roland/YMMV: Difference between revisions
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** Except, of course, Marsile's previous murder of Charles' ambassadors, his plotting the treachery against Roland, and Baligant's planned invasion of Charles' kingdom and the whole West. |
** Except, of course, Marsile's previous murder of Charles' ambassadors, his plotting the treachery against Roland, and Baligant's planned invasion of Charles' kingdom and the whole West. |
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* [[Fridge Logic]]: Charlemagne is described as 200 years old. His sister's son Roland can't be more than 30. How exactly does that work? |
* [[Fridge Logic]]: Charlemagne is described as 200 years old. His sister's son Roland can't be more than 30. How exactly does that work? |
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* [[Marty Stu]]: There exists another ''chanson de geste'' called ''[ |
* [[Marty Stu]]: There exists another ''chanson de geste'' called ''[[wikipedia:Galiens li Restorés|Galiens li Restores]]'' ("Galien the Restituted") about a [[Remember the New Guy|son]] Oliver had with [[Special Snowflake Syndrome|a princess of Constantinople]], [[Mary Tzu|whose presence at Roncevaux helps Roland and Oliver rout the Saracens]] and who later becomes Emperor of Constantinople. |
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* [[Narm]]: Having the hero die not from getting killed in battle but from blowing a horn hard enough that his skull bursts is a little hard for modern audiences to take seriously. |
* [[Narm]]: Having the hero die not from getting killed in battle but from blowing a horn hard enough that his skull bursts is a little hard for modern audiences to take seriously. |
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* [[Unintentionally Sympathetic]]: The Saracens are liable to come off this way to a modern audience, especially Baligant and his men, who played no part in Marsile's treachery. YMMV, of course. |
* [[Unintentionally Sympathetic]]: The Saracens are liable to come off this way to a modern audience, especially Baligant and his men, who played no part in Marsile's treachery. YMMV, of course. |
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{{reflist}} |
{{reflist}} |
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[[Category:The Song |
[[Category:The Song of Roland]] |
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[[Category:YMMV]] |
[[Category:YMMV]] |
Revision as of 10:51, 3 March 2014
- Designated Hero and Designated Villain: Excepting one or two members of Marsile's forces, the Saracens don't really do anything evil over the course of the story; their behaviour is in fact, nearly identical to that of Charles' forces.
- Except, of course, Marsile's previous murder of Charles' ambassadors, his plotting the treachery against Roland, and Baligant's planned invasion of Charles' kingdom and the whole West.
- Fridge Logic: Charlemagne is described as 200 years old. His sister's son Roland can't be more than 30. How exactly does that work?
- Marty Stu: There exists another chanson de geste called Galiens li Restores ("Galien the Restituted") about a son Oliver had with a princess of Constantinople, whose presence at Roncevaux helps Roland and Oliver rout the Saracens and who later becomes Emperor of Constantinople.
- Narm: Having the hero die not from getting killed in battle but from blowing a horn hard enough that his skull bursts is a little hard for modern audiences to take seriously.
- Unintentionally Sympathetic: The Saracens are liable to come off this way to a modern audience, especially Baligant and his men, who played no part in Marsile's treachery. YMMV, of course.
- Values Dissonance: In surprising example of a clash between early mediæval and later mediæval values, Archbishop Turpin tells Roland that a knight who is not brave, "is not worth 4 cents, and ought to be in a monastery, praying every day for our sins" -- because all bishops think more highly of knights than monks, right?
- Woolseyism: The Swedish translation by Frans G. Bengtsson changes the assonances to a complex rhyme scheme and adds some Scenery Porn not in the original. Some people consider it an improvement.