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Arthur (1981)

 Arthur (1981)
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 Arthur (1981)
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Arthur (1981)
 Arthur (1981)
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Arthur1981
 Arthur (1981)
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Arthur (1981) is the story of Idle Rich Arthur Bach (Dudley Moore), who comes from a wealthy family, and as such, he has never really had to grow up. He spends most of his time drinking and just generally enjoying himself. His father disapproves of his behavior, but is willing to continue to bankroll his son's activities as long as he goes through with the arranged marriage that he has set up for Arthur. The problem is, not only is Arthur not in love with his fiancee, he's just found love with a working-class girl (Liza Minnelli) from Queens. Hilarity Ensues as he tries to live his life his own way without getting cut off from the money.A box-office sensation, this Romantic Comedy was the biggest solo success of Dudley Moore's career, and Sir John Gielgud, one of the most respected stage actors of the 20th century, won an Academy Award for his role as Hobson, Arthur's valet. Burt Bacharach scored the film, and "Arthur's Theme (Best That You Can Do)" won the Best Original Song award and made it to Number One on the Billboard Hot 100. The film was followed by an unsuccessful sequel (Arthur 2: On the Rocks) in 1988, which picks up the story four years later.And while it has nothing to do with an entirely non-canonical animated series, it is the nearest thing we're ever likely to get to a P. G. Wodehouse adaptation in the top-ten grossers of the year department.Remade in 2011 with Russell Brand in the title role and a Denser and Wackier tone.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_10dcbe05
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Aw, Look! They Really Do Love Each Other
 Arthur (1981) / int_10dcbe05
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Aw, Look! They Really Do Love Each Other: Hobson is constantly sarcastic and dismissive towards Arthur, going so far as to curse him behind his back. But it's nothing compared to his ire for others who speak ill of his employer. And Arthur stays by Hobson's bed without touching a drop of alcohol until Hobson's death.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_1305f045
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Vanity License Plate
 Arthur (1981) / int_1305f045
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Vanity License Plate: Arthur's cars have them — ARTHUR for his Rolls-Royce and ARTHUR2 for his convertible. (His racecar has ARTHUR3 on its side.) The final shot of the film starts as a close-up on the Rolls-Royce's rear plate, pulling back as it pulls away from the church, also serving as a variation on Close on Title in the process. A similar shot ends up opening the sequel for bonus points.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_1694800f
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Manly Men Can Hunt
 Arthur (1981) / int_1694800f
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Manly Men Can Hunt: Burt Johnson is as macho as they come, as borne out by his first meeting with Arthur being in the former's trophy room. By comparison, amiable Arthur is not only intimidated by the setting but also winds up distracted by the stuffed-and-mounted moose head on one wall, noting "You must have hated this moose" (among other things). In the sequel, to reveal to Arthur that he's seized control of his family's fortune, Burt invites him to his private yacht, where he's busy skeet shooting as Arthur arrives.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_171ef47c
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Not-So-Harmless Villain
 Arthur (1981) / int_171ef47c
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Not-So-Harmless Villain: Arthur assumes that because Susan has a generally bland personality, she won't be too bothered when he jilts her at the altar. Susan proceeds to prove Arthur wrong in spectacular fashion.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_19da8a03
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Incurable Cough of Death
 Arthur (1981) / int_19da8a03
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Incurable Cough of Death: Comes just before The Reveal that Hobson, Arthur's valet, is dying.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_1b65dfad
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The Cameo
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The Cameo: Lawrence Tierney appears briefly as the man sitting next to a hung-over Arthur and demanding breakfast rolls at the diner.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_1b91335f
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Waiting for a Break
 Arthur (1981) / int_1b91335f
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Waiting for a Break: Linda is an aspiring actress working as a diner waitress to pay the bills. Her acting skills get her out of trouble on three occasions — first when she (with Arthur's help) convinces the security guard they're actually a couple, second when she convinces a guest at the engagement party that she was invited, and third when she and Arthur convince Susan that they are only alone in the stables to discuss a Healthcare Motivation sob story.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_1bb7211b
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The Hyena
 Arthur (1981) / int_1bb7211b
comment
The Hyena: Arthur's cackling laugh is heard before he's seen as the movie begins. He laughs as punctuation to his jokes, he laughs after he tumbles out of his car at the Plaza, he laughs in his sleep...
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 Arthur (1981) / int_20779065
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Marry Them All
 Arthur (1981) / int_20779065
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Marry Them All: Grandma Martha's solution? "Marry Susan and cheat with the nobody from Queens!"
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 Arthur (1981) / int_22cf50f9
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Chekhov's Gag
 Arthur (1981) / int_22cf50f9
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Chekhov's Gag: The story Burt tells an increasingly nervous Arthur about his killing a burglar with a knife when he was eleven sets up Burt grabbing a knife in the climax so he can kill Arthur and Linda.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_23781532
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Ironic Name
 Arthur (1981) / int_23781532
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Ironic Name: Bitterman the chauffeur, who's very friendly and personable. He even briefly pretends to be Linda's driver to impress her neighbor.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_23cc7485
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I Want Grandkids
 Arthur (1981) / int_23cc7485
comment
I Want Grandkids: Implied at the end by Martha. She announces that there will never be any working-class Bachs and notes that Arthur's children could become senators, even presidents, before revealing that she'll let him keep his fortune and marry Linda. In the original screenplay, Arthur and Linda bring up the issue of their children's fates and how that would reflect on the rest of the family to convince Martha to not cut him off.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_2504772e
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Walking Spoiler
 Arthur (1981) / int_2504772e
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Walking Spoiler: A really unconventional case with Arthur's valet Hobson, who dies at the end of the first film's second act. His appearance here is as a Spirit Advisor who may or may not be a hallucination.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_25524784
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No-Holds-Barred Beatdown
 Arthur (1981) / int_25524784
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The first indication that Arthur is undergoing a No-Holds-Barred Beatdown in the climax is that this echoes throughout the cathedral.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_25b4ad2f
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Surprisingly Happy Ending
 Arthur (1981) / int_25b4ad2f
comment
Surprisingly Happy Ending: The denouement of the first film looks to end on a slightly bittersweet note, as Arthur is all set to live the poor life with Linda and become a responsible working adult...but Martha won't have the "working" part and says he can have his inheritance no matter what.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_25ca1f
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Foolish Husband, Responsible Wife
 Arthur (1981) / int_25ca1f
comment
Foolish Husband, Responsible Wife: Arthur and Linda. Once they're cut off from their rightful fortune, they move into her father's apartment and she promptly gets a job as a waitress again. Arthur, however, doesn't even think of getting a job until (thanks to Burt) they have to move into an apartment of their own and Linda questions him about this. Of course, he knows as well as anyone that he is absolutely unqualified for any working-class job to begin with.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_27a42ebc
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Spiritual Successor
 Arthur (1981) / int_27a42ebc
comment
Spiritual Successor: It draws a lot of inspiration from P. G. Wodehouse's Jeeves and Wooster stories. Characters' names are changed so that the filmmakers can do their own thing with them. It also owes a debt to 1930s romantic comedies.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_2a6bf668
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Inadequate Inheritor
 Arthur (1981) / int_2a6bf668
comment
Inadequate Inheritor: Stanford regards Arthur (his only child and thus heir) to be this, and is determined to make him at least become respectable and responsible. The method of doing this is forcing Arthur into an arranged marriage by threatening to render him Riches to Rags if he objects. When Arthur becomes a runaway groom, however, his grandmother decides that rather than see a member of the clan become working class she'll let him keep his fortune and have children with the woman he loves, figuring they will be worthy heirs to the family legacy.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_2b2abf36
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Rich in Dollars, Poor in Sense
 Arthur (1981) / int_2b2abf36
comment
Rich in Dollars, Poor in Sense: Arthur has a vague-at-best understanding of working-class life, as seen at the end as he discusses the prospect of married life with Linda and enthusiastically ponders such activities as riding the subway, getting a job, and eating "cheap, disgusting food". This becomes a major theme in the sequel as he goes from Riches to Rags, though part of his struggle comes from the antagonist deliberately sabotaging his efforts to find work or a place to live.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_2b98ddb5
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Liquid Courage
 Arthur (1981) / int_2b98ddb5
comment
Liquid Courage: During his bath, Arthur tells Hobson that he doesn't intend to go to his imminent meeting with his humorless father Stanford sober. (The second film has a Call-Back to this under similar circumstances.) He also drinks (while driving!) when he goes to the Johnsons' mansion to meet Susan's father for the first time. This behavior is one of several suggestions that Arthur's alcoholism, while largely an outgrowth of his life-is-a-party outlook, is also rooted in personal unhappiness; see also Drowning My Sorrows.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_2d4a6d8c
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Sophisticated as Hell
 Arthur (1981) / int_2d4a6d8c
comment
Sophisticated as Hell: Martha. She buys one of the most famous paintings in the world and mentions that the dealer "jerked her around" on the price. (Said painting is Vermeer's "Woman with a Pearl Necklace"; Martha misidentifies it as "Woman Admiring Pearls".)
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 Arthur (1981) / int_2fef0c01
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Twisted Christmas
 Arthur (1981) / int_2fef0c01
comment
Twisted Christmas: Arthur and Linda lose their fortune just as the Christmas season's underway. Things go from bad to worse for them to the point that within days Arthur's homeless. Luckily, that's when the Spirit Advisor arrives and things begin turning around.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_304f9e0b
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Flowery Insults
 Arthur (1981) / int_304f9e0b
comment
Flowery Insults: Many of Hobson's sarcastic remarks are this, going over their targets' heads because of his eloquence and rich vocabulary:
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 Arthur (1981) / int_311bcac6
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Beard of Sorrow
 Arthur (1981) / int_311bcac6
comment
Beard of Sorrow: Arthur has stubble once he reaches his Darkest Hour.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_375e702b
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Brits Love Tea
 Arthur (1981) / int_375e702b
comment
Brits Love Tea: Subverted when Hobson visits Linda at her and her father's apartment. He asks Ralph for a cup of tea and two aspirin — but it's to get the dad out of the way so he can have a private conversation with her. When Ralph returns with the tea and pills, Hobson even says "I despise tea!" by way of shooing him again. (As for the aspirin, that's for Linda. Hobson's just told her to come to Arthur's engagement party and even left an appropriate outfit behind for her.)
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 Arthur (1981) / int_38bb862f
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Don't You Dare Pity Me!
 Arthur (1981) / int_38bb862f
comment
Earlier, as an especially drunk Arthur visits Linda shortly after he has gone through with his proposal to Susan, he offers her $100,000 to support her and her father. Appalled by the state he's in, she refuses to accept what she clearly sees as a pity payment at best, pointing out that having a lot of money clearly hasn't done him much good. (Aaaaaand cue the wail of despair from her eavesdropping father!)
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 Arthur (1981) / int_392372f9
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Actor Allusion
 Arthur (1981) / int_392372f9
comment
Actor Allusion: When Arthur remains by Hobson's bedside in the hospital, he offers to read some scenes from Hamlet to keep Hobson entertained. John Gielgud (Hobson) was one of the most highly regarded Shakesperean stage actors of the 1930s through the 1950s; Gielgud's interpretation of Hamlet was especially acclaimed. Also the scene with Arthur at the piano during the engagement party reception. Dudley Moore was an accomplished jazz pianist.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_3a234e46
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Runaway Bride
 Arthur (1981) / int_3a234e46
comment
Runaway Bride: Male version, with Arthur leaving Susan come the big day.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_3b113b7
type
Character Development
 Arthur (1981) / int_3b113b7
comment
Character Development: Arthur comes to realize he needs to start taking life more seriously and be less self-centered if he wants to find true happiness. Due to the specifics of the Surprisingly Happy Ending, he doesn't have to mature that much, but the sequel picks up where this film leaves off a few years later when he has to Earn Your Happy Ending.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_3f11ef74
type
Parental Substitute
 Arthur (1981) / int_3f11ef74
comment
Parental Substitute: Arthur's mother is never seen (an offhand mention in the sequel suggests she passed away some time ago), and he has a bad relationship with his father. Enter Hobson, who effectively raised Arthur. Even though he's frequently annoyed and frustrated by Arthur's antics, Hobson is the only person in his inner circle who genuinely loves him for who he is, and ultimately has a hand in Arthur and Linda getting together despite everything. Arthur even straight up refers to him as his father after he passes away.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_3f89452c
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Sad Clown
 Arthur (1981) / int_3f89452c
comment
Sad Clown: Even when things are at their worst for Arthur, he'll still crack jokes. In the sequel, when he's reduced to offering to wipe down car windows for money and encounters Bitterman chauffeuring Martha, he tells him "They said I'd never make it Bitterman, they said the city would eat me alive. But now look at me, I got my own pail and my own Squeegee sponge, I showed them ALL!"
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 Arthur (1981) / int_41271766
type
Happily Ever After
 Arthur (1981) / int_41271766
comment
Happily Ever After: The story ends on this note with Babies Ever After as a bonus — not only are Arthur and Linda able to adopt a baby at last, Linda is pregnant.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_4345806d
type
Black Comedy Burst
 Arthur (1981) / int_4345806d
comment
Black Comedy Burst: Twice. When Arthur is asking the prostitute Gloria about her life, she tells him that her mother died when she was six and her father raped her when she was twelve. Arthur replies to this with "So you had six relatively good years?" Realizing he's crossed a line, he promptly apologizes and then sardonically refers to his strained relationship with his father with "Listen, my father screwed me too..." Burt's clearly established as a Knight Templar Parent who's actually killed a man well before the climax, but even so, his actually attempting to murder both Arthur and Linda, who are terrified, with a cheese knife is a startling moment for a Romantic Comedy.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_43b154c9
type
Not Even Bothering with the Accent
 Arthur (1981) / int_43b154c9
comment
Not Even Bothering with the Accent: The English actor Dudley Moore plays Arthur, a New Yorker. Then again, Arthur's role model and father figure is his Quintessential British Gentleman Jeeves! (The role was intended for an American actor, but Moore felt he couldn't pull off an American accent.) It's also possible that Arthur's mother was English, too.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_44f5d199
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Pretty in Mink
 Arthur (1981) / int_44f5d199
comment
Pretty in Mink: Linda has a mink coat and Susan has a black fox wrap.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_46687a9d
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Follow Your Heart
 Arthur (1981) / int_46687a9d
comment
Follow Your Heart: The chorus of "Arthur's Theme", quoted at the top of this page, counts as this.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_46b3ec7c
type
Fun Personified
 Arthur (1981) / int_46b3ec7c
comment
Fun Personified: Arthur is determined to live life to the fullest and take others along for the ride, but has the misfortune of having a terminally humorless father who wants him to marry a woman who's just as straitlaced. Part of the reason he and Linda fall in love is that she appreciates his light-hearted qualities. Ironically, this is what paves the way for his Character Development into someone who takes life seriously to some degree when everyone else around him believes the Arranged Marriage is what will do it.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_487b1e5b
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Marry for Love
 Arthur (1981) / int_487b1e5b
comment
Marry for Love: Arthur states early on that he will gladly give up his fortune to do this...but at the time he's never been in love in his life, and he agrees to the Arranged Marriage as soon as his father reminds him of how much money he'd lose. Even after falling in love with Linda, it's hard for him to follow his heart, in part because everyone around him is reminding him he isn't fit for the poor life. But he ultimately decides he'd rather be poor and in love than rich and lonely.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_4dc13d51
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Grand Romantic Gesture
 Arthur (1981) / int_4dc13d51
comment
Grand Romantic Gesture: In the Happily Ever After denouement, Arthur performs one of these to herald his arrival at Linda's apartment by arranging to have the stoop surrounded with balloons, stuffed animals, and flowers.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_4e52a624
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Screw the Money, I Have Rules!
 Arthur (1981) / int_4e52a624
comment
Screw the Money, I Have Rules!: Arthur truly wants to Marry for Love rather than money from the beginning, but he's never truly been in love and when Stanford reminds him of how much money he'll be giving up if he doesn't marry Susan, he gives in to his demands. He meets Linda shortly after that though, and eventually chooses her over Susan. Grandma Martha then lets up and says that no grandson of hers would be poor, and they get to remain in the money after all — but he was willing to choose love over money. He even convinces Linda and Bitterman that he'll still give up the money before revealing the truth ("I'm not crazy!"). Earlier, as an especially drunk Arthur visits Linda shortly after he has gone through with his proposal to Susan, he offers her $100,000 to support her and her father. Appalled by the state he's in, she refuses to accept what she clearly sees as a pity payment at best, pointing out that having a lot of money clearly hasn't done him much good. (Aaaaaand cue the wail of despair from her eavesdropping father!)
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Arthur (1981) / int_4e52a624
 Arthur (1981) / int_5094d45e
type
Tabloid Melodrama
 Arthur (1981) / int_5094d45e
comment
Tabloid Melodrama: Arthur's antics have been this for the N.Y.C. press for quite some time. The hooker whom he doesn't choose but is paid anyway tells his driver Bitterman that "I've seen his face in the papers — that's Arthur Bach, isn't he?" The following day, Arthur's dalliance with Gloria at the Plaza Hotel warrants newspaper coverage as well, much to his father's disgust. A florist also recognizes Arthur from the papers, and Martha complains that every tryst her grandson has gets press attention. This is brought up again in the sequel, this time by adoption agent Mrs. Canby (who is concerned about his drinking).
 Arthur (1981) / int_5094d45e
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Arthur (1981) / int_5094d45e
 Arthur (1981) / int_51e0e476
type
Micro Monarchy
 Arthur (1981) / int_51e0e476
comment
Micro Monarchy: Discussed and Played for Laughs: At the Plaza Hotel restaurant, Arthur claims to some family members who are also dining there that his date is Princess Gloria, who comes from a country so small that "they just had the whole place carpeted."
 Arthur (1981) / int_51e0e476
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Arthur (1981) / int_51e0e476
 Arthur (1981) / int_52488c54
type
Drowning My Sorrows
 Arthur (1981) / int_52488c54
comment
Drowning My Sorrows: During his dinner date/proposal to Susan, as she tells him he must give up the bottle, Arthur explains that she should accept him as he is and notes "Everyone who drinks is not a 'poet'. Maybe some of us drink because we're not poets." Later after Hobson dies, and as he faces his wedding to Susan in just a few hours, he goes to a bar to do this, having abstained from alcohol entirely while he was taking care of his dearest friend.
 Arthur (1981) / int_52488c54
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Arthur (1981) / int_52488c54
 Arthur (1981) / int_53224e46
type
Bookends
 Arthur (1981) / int_53224e46
comment
Bookends: The movie starts and ends with Arthur being driven around New York City and/to Central Park in particular in his Rolls-Royce. At the beginning, it's at night and he's with a hooker he's picked up for a one-night stand; at the end, it's daytime and it's with Linda, who is now his fiance. Along with this, "Arthur's Theme (Best That You Can Do)" plays under both the opening and closing credits, and because the final shot is specifically focused on the Vanity License Plate of the Rolls as it starts, it allows the movie to both open and Close on Title!
 Arthur (1981) / int_53224e46
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 Arthur (1981) / int_53c5f30e
type
Happy Ending Override
 Arthur (1981) / int_53c5f30e
comment
Happy Ending Override: Downplayed; Arthur and Linda have spent four happy years together as the story begins — he's even cutting back on his drinking — but Burt's spent that time plotting to seize control of the Bach family fortune and cut them off from it. Luckily Earn Your Happy Ending is in play this time.
 Arthur (1981) / int_53c5f30e
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 Arthur (1981) / int_53e1ce4e
type
Please Wake Up
 Arthur (1981) / int_53e1ce4e
comment
Please Wake Up: Subverted. Arthur tells Hobson to wake up and stop pretending to die when he arrives to find him melodramatically dealing with a cold. After Hobson dies, Arthur, drunk, tells another wino, how Hobson went to sleep — and never woke up.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_53f8ebb4
type
The Driver
 Arthur (1981) / int_53f8ebb4
comment
The Driver: Bitterman, Arthur's personal chauffeur, who despite his name is very friendly and cares for Arthur almost as much as Hobson does.
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Arthur (1981) / int_53f8ebb4
 Arthur (1981) / int_55c2ae34
type
Sequel Gap
 Arthur (1981) / int_55c2ae34
comment
Sequel Gap: Seven years (four in-universe).
 Arthur (1981) / int_55c2ae34
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Arthur (1981) / int_55c2ae34
 Arthur (1981) / int_5ae357c1
type
Knight Templar Parent
 Arthur (1981) / int_5ae357c1
comment
Knight Templar Parent: Burt Johnson, being an extremely ruthless man by nature, does not want to see his daughter unhappy and warns Arthur that he's this upon their first meeting. When Arthur decides to be a runaway groom in the first movie's climax, Burt responds by beating Arthur up and then trying to murder him and Linda with a cheese knife; he is only stopped by Martha. In the sequel, the passing of four years hasn't quelled his fury any and he seizes control of the Bach family business, cuts Arthur and Linda off from their rightful fortune, and sabotages all of Arthur's attempts to find work — all to force him into a position where giving up Linda and marrying Susan at last is the only hope Arthur has to survive. When Arthur finally stands up to him, Burt again threatens to kill him — but Susan, realizing how much Arthur truly loves Linda, makes a Heel-Face Turn and even threatens to reveal to her mother that Daddy's been having an affair. In the face of his daughter's rebellion, Burt stands down and Arthur's fortunes are quickly restored.
 Arthur (1981) / int_5ae357c1
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 Arthur (1981) / int_5d09da4c
type
For Your Own Good
 Arthur (1981) / int_5d09da4c
comment
For Your Own Good: Arthur's family and Susan all believe that pushing him into an Arranged Marriage with her despite his objections will be good for him because it will finally force him to grow up, and because they know he can't survive in the real world as he is. Hobson, however, comes to realize that Arthur pursuing his interest in Linda holds more potential to change him in a positive way. In the sequel, Martha tells Arthur that not only can't she help him when he is cut off from the family fortune, his being reduced from Riches to Rags at last might be the best thing for him, as she always believed the Arranged Marriage was the best option. But when he approaches her again, asking for help in standing up to Burt, she's impressed enough by his determination to give him enough information about the villain's shady past for him to pick up a plan from there.
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Arthur (1981) / int_5d09da4c
 Arthur (1981) / int_5d7cfc66
type
The Jeeves
 Arthur (1981) / int_5d7cfc66
comment
The Jeeves: Hobson — very literally, and very directly, according to Word of God.
 Arthur (1981) / int_5d7cfc66
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Arthur (1981) / int_5d7cfc66
 Arthur (1981) / int_5e111c91
type
Uncle Pennybags
 Arthur (1981) / int_5e111c91
comment
Uncle Pennybags: Arthur can be playfully generous with his money — after he chooses to pick up Gloria in the opening scene, he tells Bitterman to pay the other hooker $100 because "she came in second."
 Arthur (1981) / int_5e111c91
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Arthur (1981) / int_5e111c91
 Arthur (1981) / int_5f3bb274
type
Late-Arrival Spoiler
 Arthur (1981) / int_5f3bb274
comment
Late-Arrival Spoiler: The core of the first film's ending — Arthur and Linda get together — tends to be officially spoiled because the premise of the sequel hinges on the villain doing everything he can to undo it, not to mention that this sort of Romantic Comedy tends to end happily in the first place. It's more pronounced in the DVD era because the two movies have been packaged together more than once (indeed, the only Blu-Ray edition contains both films). However, the specifics of the ending and the first film's major plot twist (Hobson is terminally ill and dies at the end of Act Two) are routinely concealed, which also preserves the identity of the Walking Spoiler character in the second film.
 Arthur (1981) / int_5f3bb274
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 Arthur (1981) / int_60547993
type
I Want My Beloved to Be Happy
 Arthur (1981) / int_60547993
comment
Linda and Susan's confrontation in the not-so-new apartment is effectively a dueling pair of these. Susan wins by pointing out she's not only the one with the money, but fertile, making her the superior choice for Arthur's continued happiness. Linda makes her I Want My Beloved to Be Happy decision after this.
 Arthur (1981) / int_60547993
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Arthur (1981) / int_60547993
 Arthur (1981) / int_617f0563
type
Heel–Face Turn
 Arthur (1981) / int_617f0563
comment
Heel–Face Turn: In the sequel, it's Susan Johnson who steps into the breach to secure Arthur's victory.
 Arthur (1981) / int_617f0563
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Arthur (1981) / int_617f0563
 Arthur (1981) / int_6b2b3b59
type
The Reveal
 Arthur (1981) / int_6b2b3b59
comment
The Reveal: Midway through the second act, it is revealed that Hobson is terminally ill, a detail that underscores a major character's actions and ultimately sets up the events of Act Three via his death.
 Arthur (1981) / int_6b2b3b59
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Arthur (1981) / int_6b2b3b59
 Arthur (1981) / int_6cb1745e
type
Streetwalker
 Arthur (1981) / int_6cb1745e
comment
Streetwalker: Arthur picks one of these up for a one-night stand in the opening sequence. Gloria's world-weary, admits to a dark past (to the point where Arthur joking about it and not getting the intended reaction is a rare time he realizes he's crossed a line), and clearly sees this evening as a (very profitable) job, but does seem to enjoy his company and sense of humor while it lasts.
 Arthur (1981) / int_6cb1745e
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Arthur (1981) / int_6cb1745e
 Arthur (1981) / int_6f33059b
type
Iconic Outfit
 Arthur (1981) / int_6f33059b
comment
Iconic Outfit: Arthur's tuxedo and top hat, waistcoat optional. The Glee performance of "Arthur's Theme" in the episode "What the World Needs Now" bears this out, with all of the guys dressed in this manner.
 Arthur (1981) / int_6f33059b
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Arthur (1981) / int_6f33059b
 Arthur (1981) / int_71efd47a
type
Laughing at Your Own Jokes
 Arthur (1981) / int_71efd47a
comment
Laughing at Your Own Jokes: This is one of Arthur's defining quirks, hand-in-hand with being The Hyena.
 Arthur (1981) / int_71efd47a
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 Arthur (1981) / int_71efd47a
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Arthur (1981) / int_71efd47a
 Arthur (1981) / int_746bfee8
type
Vanilla Edition
 Arthur (1981) / int_746bfee8
comment
Vanilla Edition: One of the very first DVD releases Warner Bros. put out, it wasn't even in its proper aspect ratio. The only widescreen edition available is the Blu-Ray, which packages it and its sequel together and was only brought out as a tie-in to the remake. Sadly justified as several of the principals had passed away or were too ill to participate in extras even in the late 1990s.
 Arthur (1981) / int_746bfee8
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Arthur (1981) / int_746bfee8
 Arthur (1981) / int_74ee1c2d
type
Out-of-Genre Experience
 Arthur (1981) / int_74ee1c2d
comment
Out-of-Genre Experience: A crucial stretch shades into Maybe Magic, Maybe Mundane fantasy with the appearance of the dead Hobson to Arthur — and only Arthur. He is either an actual Spirit Advisor or a hallucination resulting from Arthur's drinking, but either way he encourages his ward to pull himself together.
 Arthur (1981) / int_74ee1c2d
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 Arthur (1981) / int_7b5c69c8
type
Dirty Old Woman
 Arthur (1981) / int_7b5c69c8
comment
Dirty Old Woman: Martha, Arthur's grandmother, asking him "Is it wonderful, being promiscuous?" when he visits hernote as in "dammit, I was born too early and missed the Sexual Revolution" and explains his romantic travails to her, and she goes on to suggest he marry Susan and carry on an affair with Linda. In the sequel, in response to being told by her doctor that she needed exercise, she hires a terribly fit twenty-something male instructor...whom she watches go through a workout routine. She tells Arthur that she started with just twenty minutes a day of this but now can go a full hour, and she hasn't felt so good in years.
 Arthur (1981) / int_7b5c69c8
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 Arthur (1981) / int_7b5c69c8
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Arthur (1981) / int_7b5c69c8
 Arthur (1981) / int_7b6e47a5
type
Armor-Piercing Question
 Arthur (1981) / int_7b6e47a5
comment
Armor-Piercing Question: At the end of his rope, Arthur goes with Hobson's ghost(?) to the Johnsons' place to ask Susan's hand in marriage at last. When the doorman asks "Are you a friend of hers?" his companion points out that the question is this trope. Arthur realizes that he'd rather die lonely than live with Susan.
 Arthur (1981) / int_7b6e47a5
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Arthur (1981) / int_7b6e47a5
 Arthur (1981) / int_7d218606
type
Rapid-Fire Comedy
 Arthur (1981) / int_7d218606
comment
Rapid-Fire Comedy: Dudley Moore noted that unlike many screenplays he'd read, Arthur had ten laughs per page as opposed to one laugh every ten pages. This is largely because Arthur is constantly making jokes whenever he has a potentially receptive audience for them. And since he's often drunk, if he isn't cracking wise he's bumbling about (as in the extended sequence where he tries to visit Linda's apartment but ends up at the building next door). Combine him with Hobson's Servile Snarker tendencies and/or Linda's Deadpan Snarker nature, and it's a double or even triple act for the ages.
 Arthur (1981) / int_7d218606
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Arthur (1981) / int_7d218606
 Arthur (1981) / int_7d89315b
type
"The Reason You Suck" Speech
 Arthur (1981) / int_7d89315b
comment
"The Reason You Suck" Speech: Linda and Susan's confrontation in the not-so-new apartment is effectively a dueling pair of these. Susan wins by pointing out she's not only the one with the money, but fertile, making her the superior choice for Arthur's continued happiness. Linda makes her I Want My Beloved to Be Happy decision after this. Hobson delivers one to Arthur in the homeless shelter, pointing out that he's been dodging real responsibilities all his life but "parties don't last forever". However, this is followed by the character revealing what Arthur has Worth Living For as an incentive to pull himself together.
 Arthur (1981) / int_7d89315b
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Arthur (1981) / int_7d89315b
 Arthur (1981) / int_7edab847
type
Screwball Comedy
 Arthur (1981) / int_7edab847
comment
Screwball Comedy: One of the more successful attempts at "neo-screwball".
 Arthur (1981) / int_7edab847
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Arthur (1981) / int_7edab847
 Arthur (1981) / int_7eebe99c
type
The Alcoholic
 Arthur (1981) / int_7eebe99c
comment
The Alcoholic: As a functioning "funny drunk" who really doesn't want to give up the bottle, this trope is mostly Played for Laughs with the title character. In the British TV special An Audience with Dudley Moore, Moore stated that he didn't see Arthur as an alcoholic, but rather as someone who loves to drink for fun and who actually can stop if he wants to. This retrospective points out that this interpretation is supported by the film, as Arthur is often using booze specifically for Drowning My Sorrows or Liquid Courage and he forgoes drinking for an entire month just to take care of Hobson. But within just a few years of its release alcoholism and alcohol abuse in general became regarded as major public health issues in the U.S. and elsewhere, so Arthur 2: On the Rocks had to address this by having the character sober up as part of his Character Development. The unsuccessful stage musical adaptation of the early 1990s heavily reduced his drinking.
 Arthur (1981) / int_7eebe99c
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 Arthur (1981) / int_80621707
type
Arranged Marriage
 Arthur (1981) / int_80621707
comment
Arranged Marriage: One that Arthur's initially willing to go with just to keep his fortune — then he meets Linda.
 Arthur (1981) / int_80621707
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 Arthur (1981) / int_80621707
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Arthur (1981) / int_80621707
 Arthur (1981) / int_8183248
type
Never Mess with Granny
 Arthur (1981) / int_8183248
comment
Never Mess with Granny: Martha! "Don't SCREW with me, Burt!"
 Arthur (1981) / int_8183248
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 Arthur (1981) / int_8183248
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Arthur (1981) / int_8183248
 Arthur (1981) / int_82d57ef5
type
Boarding School
 Arthur (1981) / int_82d57ef5
comment
Boarding School: Arthur notes to Linda during one conversation that he was kicked out of multiple boarding schools for troublemaking. She theorizes that he just wanted to go home.
 Arthur (1981) / int_82d57ef5
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 Arthur (1981) / int_82d57ef5
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Arthur (1981) / int_82d57ef5
 Arthur (1981) / int_842426f3
type
Grande Dame
 Arthur (1981) / int_842426f3
comment
Grande Dame: Arthur's grandmother Martha, who is on the more intelligent and more ruthless end of the trope.
 Arthur (1981) / int_842426f3
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 Arthur (1981) / int_842426f3
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Arthur (1981) / int_842426f3
 Arthur (1981) / int_86b21114
type
Badass Boast
 Arthur (1981) / int_86b21114
comment
Badass Boast: "Don't SCREW with me, Burt!" Preceded by a slap.
 Arthur (1981) / int_86b21114
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 Arthur (1981) / int_86b21114
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Arthur (1981) / int_86b21114
 Arthur (1981) / int_87ab7f69
type
Sharp-Dressed Man
 Arthur (1981) / int_87ab7f69
comment
Sharp-Dressed Man: Arthur wears elegant suits most of the time, though he relaxes the standard to nice sweaters for more casual occasions (this comes after his saying that he doesn't wear sweaters...but at the time he's going on a shopping spree to spite his father over forcing his hand in the arranged marriage and buys a bunch of them as part of it). His Meet Cute with Linda takes place while he and Hobson are picking out clothes at the Fifth Avenue department store Bergdorf Goodman. The trope is more than justified given his wealth and status.
 Arthur (1981) / int_87ab7f69
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Arthur (1981) / int_87ab7f69
 Arthur (1981) / int_89ed9b94
type
Gentleman Snarker
 Arthur (1981) / int_89ed9b94
comment
Gentleman Snarker: Hobson always manages to say insulting things in the most polite and refined way possible.
 Arthur (1981) / int_89ed9b94
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 Arthur (1981) / int_89ed9b94
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Arthur (1981) / int_89ed9b94
 Arthur (1981) / int_8b68d9a7
type
Stalker with a Crush
 Arthur (1981) / int_8b68d9a7
comment
Stalker with a Crush: Susan's really intent on finally marrying Arthur, even though they haven't seen each other since the day they were to be wed and he never loved her to begin with. She still has the engagement ring...which she wears on a chain around her neck...and when she and her father learn where Arthur and Linda are now staying, goes down to the apartment to taunt Linda with the news that Daddy got him fired from the hardware store job and a The Reason You Suck speech. She'd probably be even worse about this if not for the fact that she's been in therapy during the sequel gap (telling Arthur that she's down to three visits a week).
 Arthur (1981) / int_8b68d9a7
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 Arthur (1981) / int_8b68d9a7
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Arthur (1981) / int_8b68d9a7
 Arthur (1981) / int_8cb1a369
type
Took a Level in Jerkass
 Arthur (1981) / int_8cb1a369
comment
Took a Level in Jerkass: Susan. In the first film, she's a Well-Intentioned Extremist at her worst and really doesn't have a hostile bone in her body. The sequel plays up Woman Scorned, even having her mock Linda for being barren when she's "as fertile as the Napa Valley." At the end, she does come to realize the depths of Arthur's love for Linda and makes a Heel-Face Turn that allows a happy ending.
 Arthur (1981) / int_8cb1a369
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 Arthur (1981) / int_8cb1a369
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Arthur (1981) / int_8cb1a369
 Arthur (1981) / int_8d4799d1
type
Savvy Guy, Energetic Girl
 Arthur (1981) / int_8d4799d1
comment
Savvy Guy, Energetic Girl: Gender-flipped: Linda is savvy while Arthur is energetic; she can keep him relatively grounded, he can give her a life full of fun. At the top of the sequel they have been Happily Married for four years.
 Arthur (1981) / int_8d4799d1
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 Arthur (1981) / int_8d4799d1
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 Arthur (1981)
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Arthur (1981) / int_8d4799d1
 Arthur (1981) / int_906d319
type
Bandage Wince
 Arthur (1981) / int_906d319
comment
Bandage Wince: After Arthur has endured a beating and near-murder at Burt's hands, and has come to from passing out, Linda attends to him with an After Action Patch Up. Being a Manchild, he doesn't take her efforts to clean his wounds well, but they can't help but laugh about it.
 Arthur (1981) / int_906d319
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 Arthur (1981) / int_906d319
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Arthur (1981) / int_906d319
 Arthur (1981) / int_9082d1e6
type
Rewritten Pop Version
 Arthur (1981) / int_9082d1e6
comment
Rewritten Pop Version: A variation. Peter Allen, who contributed the line "When you get caught between the moon and New York City" to the lyrics of "Arthur's Theme (Best That You Can Do)", was a performer as well as songwriter, and years after his death warranted his own Jukebox Musical, The Boy from Oz. By dropping the second verse (which is specifically about Arthur) and tweaking the lyrics of the first, the song was turned into a falling-in-love duet for Allen and...Liza Minnelli, who was his wife for a few years in The '60s / The '70s and went on to play Linda in this film. This version of the song is titled "Best That You Can Do".
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 Arthur (1981) / int_94e4c8ab
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Betty and Veronica
 Arthur (1981) / int_94e4c8ab
comment
Betty and Veronica: The Arranged Marriage variation on the trope is in play here: Susan is a rich, nice (at least superficially) but boring Betty, while Linda is a working-class, feisty, brunette Veronica.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_99244825
type
Screen-to-Stage Adaptation
 Arthur (1981) / int_99244825
comment
Screen-to-Stage Adaptation: A stage musical adaptation, Arthur — The Musical, arrived at the turn of The '90s and was intended for Broadway, but only saw two regional productions before disappearing save for the duet "The Memory of Tonight", which appears on the Unsung Musicals, Vol. 2 compilation as a studio recording. (Odd fun fact: two of the writers of this show were the couple who went on to create Friends.) Reviews and reports suggest that it was extremely faithful to the film's script, albeit with some Adaptation Expansion involving Linda's fledgling acting career (culminating in the first scene of Act Two seeing her in rehearsals for an Off-Off-Broadway musical about Attila the Hun), and Arthur's drinking significantly scaled back.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_9b178667
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Broke Episode
 Arthur (1981) / int_9b178667
comment
Broke Episode: The entire plot revolves around Arthur being forced to be a working class earner.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_9d174dc0
type
Hates Being Alone
 Arthur (1981) / int_9d174dc0
comment
Hates Being Alone: Arthur admits to this early on. Because his family and social circle don't share his lighthearted sensibilities, this trope factors into both his close friendship with Hobson and his freewheeling sex life. Falling in love with Linda and not being able to pursue her due to the Arranged Marriage planned for him only makes his inner ache all the greater, and then he learns Hobson is dying....
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 Arthur (1981) / int_a3026af9
type
Wedding Smashers
 Arthur (1981) / int_a3026af9
comment
Wedding Smashers: Just as Arthur and Susan's wedding ceremony is about to go on, Arthur tells her it's off, she calls for Burt, he beats Arthur up and almost murders him and Linda, and are only saved by Martha. The waiting audience in the chapel is stunned to see the bruised-and-bloody Arthur stumble up the aisle, announce that the wedding's off and he's poor now, and pass out.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_a39d6056
type
NiceToTheWaiter
 Arthur (1981) / int_a39d6056
comment
Nice to the Waiter: For someone who's never worked a day in his life, Arthur is kind and generous to his servants and pretty much anyone who does work (doormen, waiters, florists, hospital attendants, prostitutes...), having much more amiable relations with them than with his humorless peers and family members. This is most obvious in his best friend being his valet Hobson, who has long been his Parental Substitute.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_a3a7c41
type
Black Sheep
 Arthur (1981) / int_a3a7c41
comment
Black Sheep: Arthur is this to the otherwise respectable Bach family because he doesn't take life seriously, can really annoy others with his hijinks, is self-destructive in his pursuit of pleasure, and provides a lot of Tabloid Melodrama for the New York City press. The Arranged Marriage is intended to force him to become responsible and respectable at last. On the other hand, in this family being the black sheep also means having a sense of humor and not being ruthless.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_a3eae597
type
Award-Bait Song
 Arthur (1981) / int_a3eae597
comment
Award-Bait Song: "Arthur's Theme (Best That You Can Do)" plays several aspects of this trope straight (feel-good with soothing and mellow start, builds and builds starting with the second chorus, has a showboating saxophone — rather than guitar — solo for the bridge), but not others. It's very specific to the events of the movie, bookends it by being played under both sets of credits, and is cowritten/performed by Christopher Cross, who had just won five Grammy Awards a few months prior. The song and movie to this day are joined at the hip. Unlike a lot of '80s movie theme songs, it's had numerous cover versions by such performers as Andy Gibb, Barry Manilow, Dionne Warwick, Shirley Bassey, Ronan Keating, Alvin and the Chipmunks, and the cast of Glee. Cowriter Peter Allen, who famously only contributed the "When you get caught..." lyric, made it a staple of his concert act. It's also popular in Japan, where it's usually covered by female artists. Fitz and the Tantrums covered it for the 2011 remake. And by way of the Allen Jukebox Musical The Boy from Oz even Hugh Jackman has belted it out! The Arthur — The Album-only song "It's Only Love", a Stephen Bishop number that's a With Lyrics version of the score cue of the same title (which reappears in the sequel's score as the official "love theme"), fits this trope even more than "Arthur's Theme" does — it has a soothing and mellow start, a touching tone, isn't especially plot-specific, and has an electric guitar solo for the bridge, though it has a subdued finish. The sequel has "Love Is My Decision", performed and co-written by Chris de Burgh (who was coming off of "The Lady in Red" at the time). This one is a straight-up Silly Love Song, there's sparkly synth, and the wrap-up is BIG — but at the same time it's more film-specific because the first-person lyrics are clearly from the perspective of Arthur himself. The first verse even includes multiple call backs to the original "Arthur's Theme" in its lyrics.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_a6971841
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Dining in the Buff
 Arthur (1981) / int_a6971841
comment
Dining in the Buff: Arthur drinks a martini in the bath.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_a6c677c4
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Not Hyperbole
 Arthur (1981) / int_a6c677c4
comment
Not Hyperbole: Burt's menacing threats to Arthur over what will happen if he so much as dares to make Susan unhappy fall under this, culminating in Burt attempting to murder him and Linda.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_a7016efe
type
Lonely Rich Kid
 Arthur (1981) / int_a7016efe
comment
Lonely Rich Kid: Though he's not actually a kid — he's in his forties — Arthur fits the trope otherwise to the point that it's brought up in his theme song and the soundtrack album-only song "Poor Rich Boy".
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 Arthur (1981) / int_a82ff02f
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Meet Cute
 Arthur (1981) / int_a82ff02f
comment
Meet Cute: She's shoplifting a tie from Bergdorf Goodman for her father's birthday, he regards it as The Perfect Crime, becomes smitten with her, and decides to help her out when security catches her in the act. By the time they part ways he's passionately kissed her (ostensibly it's in the service of fooling the security guard, but...) and — once she's confirmed he's not married — she's given him her phone number.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_a8c50563
type
Bathtub Scene
 Arthur (1981) / int_a8c50563
comment
Bathtub Scene: A famous non-Fanservice example comes early on as Arthur takes a lavish bubble bath, playing up his Idle Rich Manchild nature and further establishing his relationship with Hobson. Photos from this scene turned up quite a bit in the print advertising campaign, including several posters. Not only does a similar scene appear in the sequel, but its specially shot teaser trailer was a unique clip in which Arthur addresses the audience from the tub!
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 Arthur (1981) / int_aa2cd0c9
type
Motifs
 Arthur (1981) / int_aa2cd0c9
comment
Motifs: Arthur is portrayed as the little boy for whom every day is Christmas, and there are many Christmas references as possible for a movie not set at that time of year. From there, the sequel is set during the Christmas season. (In the U.K. the first film was actually released at Christmastime, a few months after the U.S. run began.)
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 Arthur (1981) / int_ac308495
type
Personal Arcade
 Arthur (1981) / int_ac308495
comment
Personal Arcade: Arthur has a pinball machine in his bathroom and an arcade machine in his bedroom. (His big date with Linda includes a visit to an arcade, too.)
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 Arthur (1981) / int_ae3d6438
type
Deadpan Snarker
 Arthur (1981) / int_ae3d6438
comment
Deadpan Snarker: Hobson, so very much. Arthur and Linda also get in their shots.
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Arthur (1981) / int_ae3d6438
 Arthur (1981) / int_aec3d8b2
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Expository Theme Tune
 Arthur (1981) / int_aec3d8b2
comment
Expository Theme Tune: "Arthur's Theme (Best That You Can Do)" sums up the movie's plot and theme in its first verse and chorus, and the second verse is solely devoted to describing Arthur's personality.
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Arthur (1981) / int_aec3d8b2
 Arthur (1981) / int_b1961af1
type
Offscreen Crash
 Arthur (1981) / int_b1961af1
comment
Offscreen Crash: When Linda tells Arthur to leave her apartment, he obliges, but not without walking into her closet first. The first indication that Arthur is undergoing a No-Holds-Barred Beatdown in the climax is that this echoes throughout the cathedral.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_b1dde8fd
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Loophole Abuse
 Arthur (1981) / int_b1dde8fd
comment
Loophole Abuse: Martha's solution to Arthur's dilemma? Marry Susan and have an affair with Linda!
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Arthur (1981) / int_b1dde8fd
 Arthur (1981) / int_b406648
type
Singing in the Shower
 Arthur (1981) / int_b406648
comment
Singing in the Shower: Variation — Arthur cheerfully sings in the bathtub. In the first movie, it's "Santa Claus Is Coming to Town"; in the second, it's a pastiche of "My Girl" that's cheekily about how much he loves himself.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_b4a6fef1
type
Tough Room
 Arthur (1981) / int_b4a6fef1
comment
Tough Room: Arthur deals with this constantly when it comes to his jokes. He even drops the trope name during his visit with Burt at the latter's mansion, having failed to make him or the butler smile. "This is a tough room — I don't need to tell you that." "You", in this case, refers to a stuffed-and-mounted moose head on the wall he can't stop commenting on.note Arthur: (to Burt) Where is the rest of this moose?
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 Arthur (1981) / int_b5bd58a3
type
Rich Suitor, Poor Suitor
 Arthur (1981) / int_b5bd58a3
comment
Rich Suitor, Poor Suitor: Gender-flipped variant: Arthur is already rich but to stay that way he has to marry Susan, who is also wealthy. Too bad Linda is the woman he truly loves. At the end he chooses Linda knowing he'll lose his fortune, but Martha relents on cutting him off so no one in her family will be working class.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_b5c47a93
type
A Degree in Useless
 Arthur (1981) / int_b5c47a93
comment
A Degree in Useless: When Arthur and Linda are arguing about his getting a job, Linda points out that he went to Harvard and must have some marketable skill. He then reveals to her that his major was ballet.
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Arthur (1981) / int_b5c47a93
 Arthur (1981) / int_b871de85
type
Annoying Laugh
 Arthur (1981) / int_b871de85
comment
Annoying Laugh: Plenty of characters likely quickly grow tired of Arthur's cackling laugh. Too bad for them he's The Hyena, especially when he's trying to make them laugh with him. Works on a meta level too; when critic Scott Weinberg revisited the film for the podcast '80s All Over, he admitted that as much as he enjoyed Dudley Moore's performance, that laugh got on his nerves.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_bc00493f
type
Precision F-Strike
 Arthur (1981) / int_bc00493f
comment
Precision F-Strike: Hobson, and it's more notable because he's played by Sir John Gielgud. Arthur gets one in as well.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_bfc4b943
type
Video Full of Film Clips
 Arthur (1981) / int_bfc4b943
comment
Video Full of Film Clips: "Arthur's Theme" has one — one of the earliest examples of this trope and the first involving an Oscar-winning song.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_bff6c493
type
Crazy Homeless People
 Arthur (1981) / int_bff6c493
comment
Crazy Homeless People: At the homeless shelter, Arthur's late-night conversation with Spirit Advisor Hobson is interrupted by one of these, who is busy playing cards with his late uncle and wants quiet. Arthur's companion points out that Arthur's technically little different from him at the moment, suggesting this could be Arthur's ultimate fate if he doesn't pull himself through his Darkest Hour.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_c019a4c7
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Empty Bedroom Grieving
 Arthur (1981) / int_c019a4c7
comment
Empty Bedroom Grieving: Early on it's revealed that Arthur has the bedroom kept as it was in honor of Hobson. At the end, when Fairchild finally manages to display a sense of humor and plays a prank on Arthur, Arthur tells him to pack his things and vacate his quarters...so he can move into Hobson's room, symbolizing Arthur finding Fairchild a worthy successor to his dearest friend at last.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_c1901748
type
Healthcare Motivation
 Arthur (1981) / int_c1901748
comment
Healthcare Motivation: Used as a cover story. Arthur and Linda claim to Susan, when she catches them together at the engagement party, that rather than being lovers he is simply helping Linda financially because she has a terribly sick husband named Harold, who was a friend of his in prep school but lost all his money, and "their" child needs an operation on top of that. Susan falls for it. Upon Linda revealing to Susan at the wedding that she's Arthur's true love, the jilted bride asks "What about Harold?" Linda, realizing just how well Susan bought the lie, only manages to say "Oh, you poor thing..." before matters escalate thanks to Burt.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_c3286b8e
type
Uptown Girl
 Arthur (1981) / int_c3286b8e
comment
Uptown Girl: Arthur and Linda's relationship is a gender-flipped version that's complicated by outside forces. Interestingly, while in many takes on this trope the poor half either is intimidated by the wealth of the rich one or thinks it makes them an unworthy partner, Linda comes to see Arthur's wealth as something that's holding him back as a person; as they agree, it hasn't brought him true happiness.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_c3c18143
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Hope Spot
 Arthur (1981) / int_c3c18143
comment
Hope Spot: Subversion in the climax. The statute of limitations has passed on the crooked business deal Burt made that Arthur collects incriminating evidence about. But Arthur going to those lengths and then pleading with Burt to restore his and Linda's fortune when that doesn't work is enough to induce Susan's Heel-Face Turn.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_c856e477
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Seamless Spontaneous Lie
 Arthur (1981) / int_c856e477
comment
Seamless Spontaneous Lie: In the wake of witnessing her Refuge in Audacity (see above), Arthur helps Linda "explain" why she took the tie without paying for it with one of these. Later on, Linda (again with Arthur's help) comes up with two more of these in turn to explain her presence at the engagement party, first to one of the guests, and later to Susan. Justified in that Linda is an aspiring actress.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_c9020420
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Double Feature
 Arthur (1981) / int_c9020420
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Double Feature: In the U.K., this film was so popular that it was teamed up with Moore's previous hit 10 (1979) as a double bill late in the run (both being Orion releases).
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 Arthur (1981) / int_cbe687ab
type
Corrupt Corporate Executive
 Arthur (1981) / int_cbe687ab
comment
Corrupt Corporate Executive: How Burt Johnson became a Self-Made Man, more specifically a millionaire by the time he was 18. He puts his skills to "good" use in the sequel in service of destroying Arthur and Linda's happiness. It's also implied in the first film that the Bach family has tendencies towards this, as Arthur (who as the Black Sheep is disconnected from work much less corruption) points out to his father that "[Burt's] a criminal!" but Stanford replies that they all are in one way or another. This is furthered by Martha's later comments that the family is ruthless by nature.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_cf666827
type
If I Had a Nickel...
 Arthur (1981) / int_cf666827
comment
If I Had a Nickel...: When Gloria asks Arthur "How rich are you?", he replies "I wish I had a dime for every dime I have."
 Arthur (1981) / int_cf666827
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 Arthur (1981) / int_d013cd12
type
Lovable Rogue
 Arthur (1981) / int_d013cd12
comment
Lovable Rogue: When Arthur first meets Linda, she's in the process of being caught shoplifting; Arthur saves her by helping convince the security guard that they're a couple and he'll be paying for the tie, which turns out to be a birthday gift for her father. Later, when the lovers are caught together by Susan at the engagement party, they claim that Linda is married to a terribly sick man, and Arthur is helping them out financially.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_d34f8215
type
Coattail-Riding Relative
 Arthur (1981) / int_d34f8215
comment
Coattail-Riding Relative: Played for Laughs. Linda's unemployed father Ralph is thrilled to learn a millionaire is interested in her and takes the news of Arthur breaking off the relationship to go through with the Arranged Marriage to Susan much harder than Linda does. He's similarly upset upon overhearing that Linda will not accept the $100,000 dollars Arthur subsequently offers her.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_d39d4b71
type
The Perfect Crime
 Arthur (1981) / int_d39d4b71
comment
The Perfect Crime: Arthur regards Linda stealing the tie as this, or at least close to it, because (most) women don't wear ties. Hobson snarks that it would be this trope if she murdered the tie instead.
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 Arthur (1981) / int_d45c0b86
type
Refuge in Audacity
 Arthur (1981) / int_d45c0b86
comment
Refuge in Audacity: Linda Marolla steals a necktie at Bergdorf-Goodman's. The store detective witnesses the theft and follows her out into the street, where he confronts her. After making a snarky comment, she goes on the defensive, pretending she is some kind of official, pulling out a pad and pencil and demanding the detective's name and address. When this fails to intimidate the detective, she yells for someone to find her a cop, at which point Arthur — who has witnessed all of this and is enamored with her audacity (and by extension her) — steps in and saves her bacon.
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Arthur (1981) / int_d45c0b86
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type
Sarcasm Failure
 Arthur (1981) / int_d4689f3
comment
Sarcasm Failure
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1.0
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Arthur (1981) / int_d4689f3
 Arthur (1981) / int_d67e900a
type
Fallen-on-Hard-Times Job
 Arthur (1981) / int_d67e900a
comment
Fallen-on-Hard-Times Job: Arthur ends up in two of these — first as a hardware store clerk, and after he's forced out of that (though he isn't doing well in the one half-day he's there) a homeless car window washer.
 Arthur (1981) / int_d67e900a
featureApplicability
1.0
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1.0
 Arthur (1981)
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Arthur (1981) / int_d67e900a
 Arthur (1981) / int_d9e9ad7e
type
The Cavalry
 Arthur (1981) / int_d9e9ad7e
comment
The Cavalry: In the climax, Stanford and Martha Bach serve as this, the latter rescuing Arthur and Linda from being murdered by Burt. For bonus points the latter character goes on to promise Arthur that he won't lose his inheritance if he marries Linda.
 Arthur (1981) / int_d9e9ad7e
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1.0
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1.0
 Arthur (1981)
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Arthur (1981) / int_d9e9ad7e
 Arthur (1981) / int_dbe10fe5
type
SillyLoveSong
 Arthur (1981) / int_dbe10fe5
comment
The sequel has "Love Is My Decision", performed and co-written by Chris de Burgh (who was coming off of "The Lady in Red" at the time). This one is a straight-up Silly Love Song, there's sparkly synth, and the wrap-up is BIG — but at the same time it's more film-specific because the first-person lyrics are clearly from the perspective of Arthur himself. The first verse even includes multiple call backs to the original "Arthur's Theme" in its lyrics.
 Arthur (1981) / int_dbe10fe5
featureApplicability
1.0
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1.0
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
Arthur (1981) / int_dbe10fe5
 Arthur (1981) / int_deea2fb5
type
Idle Rich
 Arthur (1981) / int_deea2fb5
comment
Idle Rich: Arthur is very much this, which is why the threat of losing his inheritance is enough for him to initially agree to the Arranged Marriage with Susan. Susan herself is this thanks to her adoring father only wanting the best for her, only she's more responsible about it; the sequel gives her a high-end job as curator of the family's art gallery.
 Arthur (1981) / int_deea2fb5
featureApplicability
1.0
 Arthur (1981) / int_deea2fb5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
Arthur (1981) / int_deea2fb5
 Arthur (1981) / int_e040c8f
type
Romantic Comedy
 Arthur (1981) / int_e040c8f
comment
Romantic Comedy: An example told from the male half's point of view.
 Arthur (1981) / int_e040c8f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Arthur (1981) / int_e040c8f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
Arthur (1981) / int_e040c8f
 Arthur (1981) / int_e150c4c7
type
Manchild
 Arthur (1981) / int_e150c4c7
comment
Manchild: Arthur, because he never had to grow up, is this. While he uses his money to enjoy very adult pleasures, he also has a giant model train set in his bedroom, a Personal Arcade, and otherwise. Hobson often speaks to/disciplines him as one would a child. In the waiting room outside Stanford Bach's office, Hobson gives him a magazine to look at ("There are many pictures"), reminds him to sit up straight, and promises that they'll get ice cream once the meeting is done. Even the theme song brings it up: "Arthur, he does as he pleases/All of his life, his master's toys/And deep in his heart/He's just, he's just a boy".
 Arthur (1981) / int_e150c4c7
featureApplicability
1.0
 Arthur (1981) / int_e150c4c7
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1.0
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
Arthur (1981) / int_e150c4c7
 Arthur (1981) / int_e2decfff
type
With Lyrics
 Arthur (1981) / int_e2decfff
comment
With Lyrics: Arthur — The Album has two songs that are this to cues from the Burt Bacharach underscore: Ambrosia's "Poor Rich Boy" ("Money") and Stephen Bishop's "It's Only Love".
 Arthur (1981) / int_e2decfff
featureApplicability
1.0
 Arthur (1981) / int_e2decfff
featureConfidence
1.0
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
Arthur (1981) / int_e2decfff
 Arthur (1981) / int_e596f27b
type
Star-Crossed Lovers
 Arthur (1981) / int_e596f27b
comment
Star-Crossed Lovers: Between the two films, Arthur and Linda are put through quite a bit even by the standards of a "love or money" story, but come through.
 Arthur (1981) / int_e596f27b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Arthur (1981) / int_e596f27b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
Arthur (1981) / int_e596f27b
 Arthur (1981) / int_e5e6640b
type
Flanderization
 Arthur (1981) / int_e5e6640b
comment
Flanderization: Arthur's childish pursuits are given more screen time; his bathroom full of remote control toys, a toy basketball hoop, and a model train sets an excellent example of this compared to the corresponding scenes in the first film. Before, while he certainly had toys lying about and a small Personal Arcade, he preferred to spend his days playing tennis and racing cars and his nights having one-night stands. To be fair he's now a married man who adores his wife, and she keeps him from driving when he's intoxicated, which is still most of the time. But no justification is given as to why he has seemingly become obsessed with getting everyone in his sight to laugh — during the opening credits he leans out of his car backseat's window to pester a rich older gentleman in the car alongside his. While the cars are moving. He also keeps playing pranks on his new, terminally humorless butler Fairchild, such as giving him trick soap. In the denouement, he even temporarily convinces him he's fired! Critic Drew McWeeny, in a bonus episode of the 80s All Over podcast, argues that Arthur 2 Arthur is one of the most punchable movie characters of the decade (and compares him to Axel Foley in Beverly Hills Cop 2 in this regard — both characters were likeable initially but succumbed to poor sequel characterization).
 Arthur (1981) / int_e5e6640b
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1.0
 Arthur (1981) / int_e5e6640b
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1.0
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
Arthur (1981) / int_e5e6640b
 Arthur (1981) / int_e6692d26
type
Breakfast in Bed
 Arthur (1981) / int_e6692d26
comment
Breakfast in Bed: When his butler, Hobson, falls terminally ill, Arthur makes a point of staying by his bedside and having extravagant breakfasts smuggled into his hospital room every morning. The food isn't what Hobson should be eating, but Arthur says he doesn't want his valet's last meal to be Jell-O.
 Arthur (1981) / int_e6692d26
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1.0
 Arthur (1981) / int_e6692d26
featureConfidence
1.0
 Arthur (1981)
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Arthur (1981) / int_e6692d26
 Arthur (1981) / int_e83f211c
type
O.O.C. Is Serious Business
 Arthur (1981) / int_e83f211c
comment
O.O.C. Is Serious Business: When Hobson suggests that Linda is a Gold Digger and that carrying on an affair with her would save Arthur a fortune in prostitutes, Arthur angrily tells him never to speak of her that way again and leaves Hobson's bedroom in a huff...then returns to apologize, noting that he's never told him off before. Hobson accepts the apology, but also realizes that Arthur's unusual behavior is an indication that he really is in love with Linda. He may even have made the insulting comments specifically to see what effect they would have on Arthur.
 Arthur (1981) / int_e83f211c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Arthur (1981) / int_e83f211c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Arthur (1981)
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Arthur (1981) / int_e83f211c
 Arthur (1981) / int_e94ff7e2
type
Financial Abuse
 Arthur (1981) / int_e94ff7e2
comment
Financial Abuse: Stanford and Martha intend to cut Arthur off from his inheritance if he doesn't marry a woman he doesn't love. While Arthur has never earned money in his life and is the family shame, that's still a cruel thing for a father to do to his son or a grandmother to their grandson (granted Martha ultimately relents). In the sequel, Burt goes much further with this trope by not only cutting Arthur and Linda off from the Bach family fortune to get Revenge upon them, but ensuring that Arthur can't earn a living no matter how hard he tries, leaving marriage to Susan his only option just to survive.
 Arthur (1981) / int_e94ff7e2
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1.0
 Arthur (1981) / int_e94ff7e2
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Arthur (1981) / int_e94ff7e2
 Arthur (1981) / int_ebb3c390
type
Crash-Into Hello
 Arthur (1981) / int_ebb3c390
comment
Crash-Into Hello: Subverted — Arthur thinks he's done this before realizing he's crashed into a hedge.
 Arthur (1981) / int_ebb3c390
featureApplicability
-0.3
 Arthur (1981) / int_ebb3c390
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1.0
 Arthur (1981)
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Arthur (1981) / int_ebb3c390
 Arthur (1981) / int_ed874c14
type
Self-Made Man
 Arthur (1981) / int_ed874c14
comment
Self-Made Man: Burt Johnson is this and proud of it, having gone from Rags to Riches through determination and ruthlessness. In his introductory scene he tells Arthur how he once confronted a robber, ultimately killing him with a knife. Burt was eleven at the time.
 Arthur (1981) / int_ed874c14
featureApplicability
1.0
 Arthur (1981) / int_ed874c14
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Arthur (1981) / int_ed874c14
 Arthur (1981) / int_ef20dac5
type
Servile Snarker
 Arthur (1981) / int_ef20dac5
comment
Servile Snarker: Arthur's valet, Hobson. Bitterman gets in his shots too.
 Arthur (1981) / int_ef20dac5
featureApplicability
1.0
 Arthur (1981) / int_ef20dac5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Arthur (1981)
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Arthur (1981) / int_ef20dac5
 Arthur (1981) / int_f43dc597
type
Worth Living For
 Arthur (1981) / int_f43dc597
comment
Worth Living For: After being delivered a "The Reason You Suck" Speech, Arthur asks Spirit Advisor Hobson what he has to live for now that he's in his Darkest Hour. The answer? "Your son", which reminds Arthur that he and Linda were striving to adopt a child when all the trouble began, and still had a chance even then. The denouement adds a twist to this: Arthur is cooing over said child at last — only to be informed it's a girl. Then Linda reveals she's pregnant.
 Arthur (1981) / int_f43dc597
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1.0
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Arthur (1981) / int_f43dc597
 Arthur (1981) / int_f4f3252e
type
Law of Inverse Fertility
 Arthur (1981) / int_f4f3252e
comment
Law of Inverse Fertility: Arthur and Linda are Happily Married and were trying to have children during the gap between films, but at the top of the film Linda has just been to a doctor's appointment and told she cannot bear them. They decide to adopt and make faster process than they're told to expect. Even with Burt's treachery imperiling their situation, Spirit Advisor Hobson tells Arthur that his impending son is Worth Living For. Just after Arthur comes back to Linda with his fortune restored, Mrs. Canby arrives with their adopted girl. Arthur is happy but admits that someone predicted he'd have a son...and then Linda reveals she's pregnant.
 Arthur (1981) / int_f4f3252e
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1.0
 Arthur (1981) / int_f4f3252e
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Arthur (1981) / int_f4f3252e
 Arthur (1981) / int_f5e4b663
type
Walk This Way
 Arthur (1981) / int_f5e4b663
comment
Walk This Way: The butler at the Johnsons' mansion uses the exact words to direct Arthur into Burt's trophy room. Arthur being Arthur, he obliges by mimicking his walk behind his back.
 Arthur (1981) / int_f5e4b663
featureApplicability
1.0
 Arthur (1981) / int_f5e4b663
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 Arthur (1981)
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Arthur (1981) / int_f5e4b663
 Arthur (1981) / int_f64a9cf7
type
Earn Your Happy Ending
 Arthur (1981) / int_f64a9cf7
comment
Earn Your Happy Ending: Arthur's character arc: Burt manages to seize control of Arthur's family's business and leaves him and Linda penniless. Then, while Linda is able to find work as a waitress again, Burt ensures first that the couple cannot stay with her father, and second that Arthur will never be able to hold down a legitimate job. The only hope he has of reclaiming his fortune is finally marrying Susan, but he cannot bear to do this. When Linda leaves him because I Want My Beloved to Be Happy, Arthur ends up homeless and the sway of his alcoholism now threatens to destroy him. But having hit rock bottom, he subsequently pulls himself together, ultimately impressing Susan Johnson enough to induce a Heel–Face Turn that saves the day.
 Arthur (1981) / int_f64a9cf7
featureApplicability
1.0
 Arthur (1981) / int_f64a9cf7
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Arthur (1981) / int_f64a9cf7
 Arthur (1981) / int_f6b2bfb7
type
Gold Digger
 Arthur (1981) / int_f6b2bfb7
comment
Gold Digger: Not Linda, but her father, who upon learning of Arthur's wealth does everything he can to be in Arthur's good graces.
 Arthur (1981) / int_f6b2bfb7
featureApplicability
1.0
 Arthur (1981) / int_f6b2bfb7
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Arthur (1981) / int_f6b2bfb7
 Arthur (1981) / int_f91d1d4f
type
Darkest Hour
 Arthur (1981) / int_f91d1d4f
comment
Darkest Hour: Arthur's arrives when Linda leaves him and returns to her father, and refuses to see him — not because she no longer loves him, but because she wants him to marry Susan and live a happy, comfortable life again. But he knows he could never be happy with Susan, and since he's now also homeless he's soon drunkenly wandering about the city and telling people about all he's lost. That's when Hobson appears to help turn him around.
 Arthur (1981) / int_f91d1d4f
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1.0
 Arthur (1981) / int_f91d1d4f
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 Arthur (1981)
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Arthur (1981) / int_f91d1d4f
 Arthur (1981) / int_fbc54605
type
Riches to Rags
 Arthur (1981) / int_fbc54605
comment
Riches to Rags: The prospect of this hangs over Arthur in the first film, and goes on to become the premise of the sequel.
 Arthur (1981) / int_fbc54605
featureApplicability
1.0
 Arthur (1981) / int_fbc54605
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Arthur (1981) / int_fbc54605
 Arthur (1981) / int_fd4f8299
type
Well-Intentioned Extremist
 Arthur (1981) / int_fd4f8299
comment
Well-Intentioned Extremist: Susan Johnson honestly believes she can change Arthur into a respectable, responsible person once they're married — it's I Can Change My Beloved way in advance, given that he does not reciprocate her affections.
 Arthur (1981) / int_fd4f8299
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Arthur (1981) / int_fd4f8299
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Arthur (1981)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 AFI's 100 Years… 100 Laughs
processingUnknown
Arthur (1981)
 AFI's 100 Years… 100 Songs
processingUnknown
Arthur (1981)
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
all lowercase letters / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Breakfast in Bed / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Broke Episode / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Child Marriage Veto / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Crash-Into Hello / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Dining in the Buff / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Dope Slap / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Empty Bedroom Grieving / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Epiphora / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Escapist Character / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
Follow Your Heart / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Full-Name Ultimatum / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
Fun Personified / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Gentleman Snarker / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Grande Dame / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
If I Had a Nickel... / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
Laughing at Your Own Jokes / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
Lonely Rich Kid / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
Money, Dear Boy / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
Never Mess with Granny / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
Not Even Bothering with the Accent / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
Old Retainer / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
Out of the Ghetto / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
Personal Arcade / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
Pop-Star Composer / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
Post-Victory Collapse / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Protagonist Title / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Rapid-Fire Comedy / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
Refrain from Assuming / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
Rhyming with Itself / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Rich in Dollars, Poor in Sense / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
Rich Suitor, Poor Suitor / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Romantic Comedy / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
Runaway Bride / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Runaway Fiancé / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Screen-to-Stage Adaptation / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Self-Made Man / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
Servile Snarker / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
Streetwalker / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Surprisingly Happy Ending / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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The Foreign Subtitle / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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The Perfect Crime / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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They Fight Crime! / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Tough Room / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Uncle Pennybags / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Upper-Class Twit / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Video Full of Film Clips / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Walk This Way / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
hasFeature
With Lyrics / int_be3298dd
 Arthur (1981)
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Working Title / int_be3298dd