Toy Soldiers (film): Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
m (Dai-Guard moved page Toy Soldiers (Film) to Toy Soldiers (film): Use lowercase namespaces)
m (Mass update links)
Line 4: Line 4:
Cali and his men take students and teachers hostage at the Regis School, also known as "The Reject School", thinking that taking the son of a federal judge hostage would be a good plan for getting Cali's father released. However, the student has already been taken away by federal marshals. Cali and his men continue to negotiate with the Americans while the students work on a brave plan for rescuing the hostages before the school is blown up.
Cali and his men take students and teachers hostage at the Regis School, also known as "The Reject School", thinking that taking the son of a federal judge hostage would be a good plan for getting Cali's father released. However, the student has already been taken away by federal marshals. Cali and his men continue to negotiate with the Americans while the students work on a brave plan for rescuing the hostages before the school is blown up.


[[R Lee Ermey]] plays a minor role as an Army general.
[[R. Lee Ermey]] plays a minor role as an Army general.


Not to be confused with the [[Toy Soldiers (Video Game)|Xbox Live Arcade game of the same name made Signal Studios.]]
Not to be confused with the [[Toy Soldiers (video game)|Xbox Live Arcade game of the same name made Signal Studios.]]
----
----
=== This movie contains examples of the following tropes: ===
=== This movie contains examples of the following tropes: ===
Line 12: Line 12:
* [[Chekhov's Gun]]: The remote controlled airplane, with the [[MacGuffin|control chip]].
* [[Chekhov's Gun]]: The remote controlled airplane, with the [[MacGuffin|control chip]].
* [[Contrived Coincidence]]: The remote controlled airplane's control chip evidently shares a common feature with {{spoiler|that of the detonator for the explosives.}}
* [[Contrived Coincidence]]: The remote controlled airplane's control chip evidently shares a common feature with {{spoiler|that of the detonator for the explosives.}}
* [[Retroactive Recognition]]: This film starred Sean Astin years before [[Lord of the Rings (Film)|he would help Frodo Baggins take the One Ring to Mordor]].
* [[Retroactive Recognition]]: This film starred Sean Astin years before [[The Lord of the Rings (film)|he would help Frodo Baggins take the One Ring to Mordor]].
* [[Surprise Vehicle]]: Two terrorists don't see or hear an attack helicopter that is only a few feet away. They see it and hear it only when it [[Rule of Perception|rises to the same height as they are]].
* [[Surprise Vehicle]]: Two terrorists don't see or hear an attack helicopter that is only a few feet away. They see it and hear it only when it [[Rule of Perception|rises to the same height as they are]].



Revision as of 22:58, 15 April 2014

Toy Soldiers is a movie released in 1991, starring Louis Gossett Jr., Sean Astin, Wil Wheaton, and Keith Coogan. The story begins with Luis Cali, the son of a Colombian drug lord, attempting to bargain for the release of his father who is in prison. Cali's negotiations are too late and his father is transferred to the United States.

Cali and his men take students and teachers hostage at the Regis School, also known as "The Reject School", thinking that taking the son of a federal judge hostage would be a good plan for getting Cali's father released. However, the student has already been taken away by federal marshals. Cali and his men continue to negotiate with the Americans while the students work on a brave plan for rescuing the hostages before the school is blown up.

R. Lee Ermey plays a minor role as an Army general.

Not to be confused with the Xbox Live Arcade game of the same name made Signal Studios.


This movie contains examples of the following tropes: