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Ed Wood

 Ed Wood
type
TVTItem
 Ed Wood
label
Ed Wood
 Ed Wood
page
EdWood
 Ed Wood
comment
Ed Wood is a 1994 biopic directed by Tim Burton about the career of Edward D Wood Jr., generally acknowledged as being the worst film director in the history of Hollywood. It focuses on a brief period in Wood's life, going from his early days of putting on terrible plays, to the completion of his magnum opus Plan 9 from Outer Space.Often described as "the kind of biopic Ed Wood would make about himself," the film is notable for depicting cinema's most famously bad director as a highly sympathetic character, helped immensely through Johnny Depp's portrayal of Wood as a wide-eyed, endearingly optimistic naif. Wood's experiences also echo those of most artists, and the film depicts Wood struggling to retain his artistic vision (as myopic as it is) despite interference from various, unlikely financial backers. It also deals with Wood coming to terms with his own closet transvestism.This film is also notable for its depiction of the friendship between Wood and fading horror star Bela Lugosi, memorably played by Martin Landau. Landau would go on to win the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor for his performance.The film was written by Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski, and was the first of their three "anti-great man" movies, followed by The People vs. Larry Flynt and Man on the Moon (about Andy Kaufman).Compare The Disaster Artist, a similarly comedic biopic about a similarly inept director.
 Ed Wood
fetched
2024-02-09T03:31:36Z
 Ed Wood
parsed
2024-02-09T03:31:36Z
 Ed Wood
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 Ed Wood
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 Ed Wood
isPartOf
DBTropes
 Ed Wood
sameAs
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ed_Wood_%28film%29
 Ed Wood
sameAs
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ed_Wood_(film)
 Ed Wood / int_11ec1fd5
type
Off-the-Shelf FX
 Ed Wood / int_11ec1fd5
comment
Off-the-Shelf FX: Among other things, the infamous flying saucers from Plan 9.
 Ed Wood / int_11ec1fd5
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1.0
 Ed Wood / int_11ec1fd5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
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Ed Wood / int_11ec1fd5
 Ed Wood / int_14b85a5f
type
Fat Idiot
 Ed Wood / int_14b85a5f
comment
Fat Idiot: Although the real-life Tor Johnson may not have been similar to the lumbering mooks he played in Wood's movies, this film portrays him as particularly dimwitted. (In fact, Johnson was already an accomplished bit actor before Wood met him, and had lost his Swedish accent long ago).
 Ed Wood / int_14b85a5f
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1.0
 Ed Wood / int_14b85a5f
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1.0
 Ed Wood
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Ed Wood / int_14b85a5f
 Ed Wood / int_1849f58e
type
Comedic Work, Serious Scene
 Ed Wood / int_1849f58e
comment
Comedic Work, Serious Scene: This is less of a straight biopic and more of a comedy about making a B-movie. After learning his friend Bela Lugosi has died, Ed mourns him by watching and rewatching the last few minutes Ed filmed of him outside his house for Plan 9 from Outer Space. It's a very poignant moment, especially when Ed asks the projectionist to run the film again.
 Ed Wood / int_1849f58e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_1849f58e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
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Ed Wood / int_1849f58e
 Ed Wood / int_191a3673
type
Graceful Loser
 Ed Wood / int_191a3673
comment
Graceful Loser: No degree of failure can undermine Wood's artistic ambition.
 Ed Wood / int_191a3673
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_191a3673
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_191a3673
 Ed Wood / int_1ea7d12a
type
MST3K Mantra
 Ed Wood / int_1ea7d12a
comment
MST3K Mantra: Wood attempts to invoke this in regard to the artistic flaws of his films. It falls flat since there's something of a difference between telling audiences not to worry about minor plot holes or technical problems, and telling them to overlook obviously fake sets/props and unexplained day/night transitions.invoked
 Ed Wood / int_1ea7d12a
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1.0
 Ed Wood / int_1ea7d12a
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Ed Wood / int_1ea7d12a
 Ed Wood / int_22a60f6a
type
Nepotism
 Ed Wood / int_22a60f6a
comment
Nepotism: The meatpacker whom Ed gets to produce Bride of the Monster puts his son in the lead role.
 Ed Wood / int_22a60f6a
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1.0
 Ed Wood / int_22a60f6a
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1.0
 Ed Wood
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Ed Wood / int_22a60f6a
 Ed Wood / int_23ff95fb
type
Brutal Honesty
 Ed Wood / int_23ff95fb
comment
Brutal Honesty: Ed of all people has a few moments in the movies. Always to reveal the shortcuts or desperation in his moviemaking process.
 Ed Wood / int_23ff95fb
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_23ff95fb
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1.0
 Ed Wood
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Ed Wood / int_23ff95fb
 Ed Wood / int_28f852ea
type
Wholesome Crossdresser
 Ed Wood / int_28f852ea
comment
Wholesome Crossdresser: Johnny Depp as Ed Wood in an angora sweater. Not many people are going to have a problem with that.
 Ed Wood / int_28f852ea
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_28f852ea
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1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_28f852ea
 Ed Wood / int_2f2f8418
type
Artistic License – Film Production
 Ed Wood / int_2f2f8418
comment
Artistic License – Film Production: Subverted, as he does do all those "simple mistakes". Except that he is shown shooting scenes out of order. He must have been awake that day in film school.
 Ed Wood / int_2f2f8418
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-0.3
 Ed Wood / int_2f2f8418
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1.0
 Ed Wood
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Ed Wood / int_2f2f8418
 Ed Wood / int_3149c4b0
type
It Will Never Catch On
 Ed Wood / int_3149c4b0
comment
It Will Never Catch On: The Baptist producers suggest that since graverobbing is immoral, he should change the name of the film to Plan 9 From Outer Space. Wood's response? "That's ridiculous."note Obviously, he changes his mind on the subject.
 Ed Wood / int_3149c4b0
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1.0
 Ed Wood / int_3149c4b0
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1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_3149c4b0
 Ed Wood / int_32821ceb
type
The Unintelligible
 Ed Wood / int_32821ceb
comment
The Unintelligible: George "The Animal" Steele had to work with a voice coach to imitate Tor Johnson's voice (although the strange, booming voice he ended up using is somewhat removed from the genuine article). Tor's combination of Swedish accent and jowelly enunciation means he practically mangles every line that Ed Wood writes. Not that comprehension is a particularly great loss.
 Ed Wood / int_32821ceb
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1.0
 Ed Wood / int_32821ceb
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1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_32821ceb
 Ed Wood / int_33d5b7f2
type
Adapted Out
 Ed Wood / int_33d5b7f2
comment
Adapted Out: The movie makes no mention of Alex Gordon, who co-wrote Bride of the Monster with Wood. Nor does it mention Jailbait, a thriller also co-written with Gordon that Wood made between Glen or Glenda and Bride of the Monster and was also the film debut of the late Steve Reeves, the ruggedly handsome champion bodybuilder who went on to become a B-movie cult icon thanks to his portrayal of the mythical demigod hero Hercules in Hercules (1958) and Hercules Unchained (which helped kick off the sword and sandal boom in Italy in the late 50s and early 60s). Wood's first wife, Norma McCarty (who he was actually married to during filming of Plan 9 from Outer Space) did appear in earlier drafts of the script, but her subplot was cut from the final version. Only two policemen appear in Plan 9 (Paul Marco and Conrad Brooks), and leaves out, among others, Lieutenant "Reckless Gun Usage" Harper (played by Duke Moore.)
 Ed Wood / int_33d5b7f2
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1.0
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Ed Wood / int_33d5b7f2
 Ed Wood / int_36c64123
type
Gentle Giant
 Ed Wood / int_36c64123
comment
Gentle Giant: Tor Johnson is pretty imposing but comes off as a sweet guy, especially when he asks Bunny what happened to his operation.
 Ed Wood / int_36c64123
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_36c64123
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1.0
 Ed Wood
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Ed Wood / int_36c64123
 Ed Wood / int_3862ebb9
type
When Props Attack
 Ed Wood / int_3862ebb9
comment
When Props Attack: The notorious rubber octopus incident from the filming of Bride of the Monster is dramatised within the film.
 Ed Wood / int_3862ebb9
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1.0
 Ed Wood / int_3862ebb9
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1.0
 Ed Wood
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Ed Wood / int_3862ebb9
 Ed Wood / int_3c0a4666
type
Noodle Incident
 Ed Wood / int_3c0a4666
comment
Noodle Incident: Bunny describing his disastrous trip to Mexico and the mariachi band he brought back with him: "If it hadn't been for these men... I don't know... how I would've... survived."
 Ed Wood / int_3c0a4666
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1.0
 Ed Wood / int_3c0a4666
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1.0
 Ed Wood
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Ed Wood / int_3c0a4666
 Ed Wood / int_3e74b72e
type
The Pollyanna
 Ed Wood / int_3e74b72e
comment
The Pollyanna: Ed Wood, again.
 Ed Wood / int_3e74b72e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_3e74b72e
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1.0
 Ed Wood
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Ed Wood / int_3e74b72e
 Ed Wood / int_3ed17fe0
type
Wide-Eyed Idealist
 Ed Wood / int_3ed17fe0
comment
Wide-Eyed Idealist: Ed is this all over.
 Ed Wood / int_3ed17fe0
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1.0
 Ed Wood / int_3ed17fe0
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1.0
 Ed Wood
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Ed Wood / int_3ed17fe0
 Ed Wood / int_415b3315
type
Stylistic Suck
 Ed Wood / int_415b3315
comment
Stylistic Suck: Again, this was pretty much inevitable.
 Ed Wood / int_415b3315
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_415b3315
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1.0
 Ed Wood
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Ed Wood / int_415b3315
 Ed Wood / int_48c99e19
type
Death by Adaptation
 Ed Wood / int_48c99e19
comment
Death by Adaptation: Or separation rather; Bela's wife Lillian was quite alive when Ed offered Bela work. In real life, Bela turned down Ed's $500 offer, but Lillian influenced him to accept the role in Glen or Glenda for $1000.
 Ed Wood / int_48c99e19
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_48c99e19
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1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_48c99e19
 Ed Wood / int_4a3e547f
type
Leaning on the Fourth Wall
 Ed Wood / int_4a3e547f
comment
Leaning on the Fourth Wall: On the scene when Loretta wants Ed to choose a dress, he can't decide, so she says to choose which one, the red or the green. Ed asks the director of photography to choose the red or the green dress, but he says he can't see the colors. And not because the movie is in black and white, but because he's colorblind.note  Bill Thompson, Ed Wood's real director of photography, actually was colorblind, and only shot films in black and white. The look on Wood's face is priceless.
 Ed Wood / int_4a3e547f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_4a3e547f
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1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_4a3e547f
 Ed Wood / int_4ae72307
type
Be Yourself
 Ed Wood / int_4ae72307
comment
Be Yourself: The point of the film is basically "love what you do, do what you love". Yeah, Ed may be bad at making films, but it's a passion he undeniably loves doing and, even with all the setbacks, he still plows on.
 Ed Wood / int_4ae72307
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_4ae72307
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_4ae72307
 Ed Wood / int_4e7f703c
type
Wham Shot
 Ed Wood / int_4e7f703c
comment
Wham Shot: When Bela Lugosi actually dies.
 Ed Wood / int_4e7f703c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_4e7f703c
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1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_4e7f703c
 Ed Wood / int_5313c266
type
Bookends
 Ed Wood / int_5313c266
comment
Book Ends: The film begins and ends with Criswell.
 Ed Wood / int_5313c266
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_5313c266
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_5313c266
 Ed Wood / int_545cade8
type
Production Posse
 Ed Wood / int_545cade8
comment
invokedProduction Posse: Each new Ed Wood film is made with more or less the same cast and an unchanging crew.
 Ed Wood / int_545cade8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_545cade8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_545cade8
 Ed Wood / int_561dab6b
type
Mistaken for Gay
 Ed Wood / int_561dab6b
comment
Mistaken for Gay: A Running Gag. Each time Ed Wood's transvestism is brought up, he has to explain that he is not "a fruit" and "loves ladies". Truth in Film: transvestism is not homosexuality, the point Wood tried to get across in Glen or Glenda.
 Ed Wood / int_561dab6b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_561dab6b
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1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_561dab6b
 Ed Wood / int_56515a39
type
Artistic License – History
 Ed Wood / int_56515a39
comment
Artistic License – History: Tim Burton made it clear in interviews that the film is not meant to be a historically accurate biopic of Ed Wood, but rather a film that Ed Wood would make about himself. Despite how Martin Landau portrays him, Bela Lugosi was NOT prone to fits of swearing, especially in front of women. And this is something Bela Lugosi's family took umbrage with. The same could probably be said regarding his opinion of Boris Karloff. It's said that Lugosi occasionally became jealous of Karloff's greater success, but the two were at worst friendly rivals who enjoyed working together. In the movie, Lugosi's funeral is only attended by Wood and his cohorts. In reality, it was attended by the likes of Karloff, Vincent Price and Peter Lorre (apparently, Tim Burton either didn't know, or forgot, that Price and Lorre are known for an Urban Legend where they discuss staking Lugosi's corpse just in case). Also, the movie leaves out the fact that Frank Sinatra quietly paid for his funeral and skips the burning of Lugosi's body (something he had specified in his will), instead showing his coffin going into the ground during his burial (in real life, he would've gone into the ground in an urn). At least Burton got the detail about him being dressed as Dracula right. Sinatra also sent Lugosi money in hospital so he could finish his recovery treatment. In the movie, Lugosi is forced to leave the hospital early because his insurance doesn't cover the treatment. Paul Marco and Bunny Breckenridge are both present from the opening of the film, with Wood meeting Criswell around the halfway point. In reality, it was Criswell who introduced Paul to Ed, and in turn introduced Wood to Bunny - his roommate at the time.
 Ed Wood / int_56515a39
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_56515a39
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1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_56515a39
 Ed Wood / int_5ad80bf8
type
It's All My Fault
 Ed Wood / int_5ad80bf8
comment
It's All My Fault: Bela confesses that he turned down Frankenstein because the role wasn't "sexy" enough; Ed callously ignores him and just tells him to start acting.
 Ed Wood / int_5ad80bf8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_5ad80bf8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_5ad80bf8
 Ed Wood / int_5bc2106
type
Your Costume Needs Work
 Ed Wood / int_5bc2106
comment
Your Costume Needs Work: A weird version, as a rehab nurse is startled by Bela, saying he looks like that Dracula guy.
 Ed Wood / int_5bc2106
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_5bc2106
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_5bc2106
 Ed Wood / int_5c219298
type
Phony Psychic
 Ed Wood / int_5c219298
comment
Phony Psychic: Criswell.
 Ed Wood / int_5c219298
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_5c219298
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_5c219298
 Ed Wood / int_5ec796eb
type
Associated Composer
 Ed Wood / int_5ec796eb
comment
Associated Composer: Averted. This is one of only three Tim Burton films that Danny Elfman did not score, the others being Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street and Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children. Howard Shore used music from Wood's films, especially Glen or Glenda (which provides Wood's Leitmotif). note Elfman was going through a minor Creator Breakdown at the time, as he was attempting to juggle his exploding film scoring career while still fronting Oingo Boingo. He left the band shortly thereafter to score films full-time and immediately reunited with Burton for Mars Attacks!. Sweeney Todd is self-explanatory as it came with its own score.
 Ed Wood / int_5ec796eb
featureApplicability
-1.0
 Ed Wood / int_5ec796eb
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_5ec796eb
 Ed Wood / int_6b05b601
type
Jerkass Has a Point
 Ed Wood / int_6b05b601
comment
Jerkass Has a Point: Vampira is portrayed as something of a snob, but one can't help but see her point about not wanting to feature in an Ed Wood film.
 Ed Wood / int_6b05b601
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_6b05b601
featureConfidence
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 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_6b05b601
 Ed Wood / int_70506bc7
type
Going Cold Turkey
 Ed Wood / int_70506bc7
comment
Going Cold Turkey: Morphine withdrawal is not pretty.
 Ed Wood / int_70506bc7
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_70506bc7
featureConfidence
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 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_70506bc7
 Ed Wood / int_738d1a0f
type
Because You Were Nice to Me
 Ed Wood / int_738d1a0f
comment
Because You Were Nice to Me: Bela and Ed Wood's friendship started with Bela being flattered by Ed's enthusiasm and admiration for him as an actor. What cemented it was despite how bad Ed's films are, he was willing to do it to at least help Bela get work.
 Ed Wood / int_738d1a0f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_738d1a0f
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 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_738d1a0f
 Ed Wood / int_7464705c
type
Arc Words
 Ed Wood / int_7464705c
comment
Arc Words: "Gives/gave me the willies"- Vampira says it to describe Bela when presenting White Zombie, and later a nurse tells Bela this (not realizing who he is) when he commits himself for drug addiction.
 Ed Wood / int_7464705c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_7464705c
featureConfidence
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 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_7464705c
 Ed Wood / int_7b3ebb57
type
Buxom Beauty Standard
 Ed Wood / int_7b3ebb57
comment
Buxom Beauty Standard: Bela on Vampira:
 Ed Wood / int_7b3ebb57
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_7b3ebb57
featureConfidence
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 Ed Wood
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Ed Wood / int_7b3ebb57
 Ed Wood / int_7d34f23a
type
Reckless Gun Usage
 Ed Wood / int_7d34f23a
comment
Only two policemen appear in Plan 9 (Paul Marco and Conrad Brooks), and leaves out, among others, Lieutenant "Reckless Gun Usage" Harper (played by Duke Moore.)
 Ed Wood / int_7d34f23a
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1.0
 Ed Wood / int_7d34f23a
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 Ed Wood
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Ed Wood / int_7d34f23a
 Ed Wood / int_814356cb
type
White-Dwarf Starlet
 Ed Wood / int_814356cb
comment
White-Dwarf Starlet: Well, White Dwarf Star: Bela Lugosi.
 Ed Wood / int_814356cb
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_814356cb
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_814356cb
 Ed Wood / int_823c6e3e
type
Large Ham
 Ed Wood / int_823c6e3e
comment
Large Ham: Bela Lugosi is just as hammy when played by Martin Landau as he was in Ed Wood's real films, especially the "POOOOL DE STREEENK!!! POOOOL DE STREEEENK!!!" monologue in Glen or Glenda.
 Ed Wood / int_823c6e3e
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1.0
 Ed Wood / int_823c6e3e
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 Ed Wood
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Ed Wood / int_823c6e3e
 Ed Wood / int_86f2d483
type
Frying Pan of Doom
 Ed Wood / int_86f2d483
comment
Frying Pan of Doom: After Ed has given the leading actress role to Loretta King for his next movie Bride of the Monster, Dolores throws dishes and glasses at him. She even throws a frying pan on Ed's head for giving her as the role for the file clerk.
 Ed Wood / int_86f2d483
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1.0
 Ed Wood / int_86f2d483
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Ed Wood / int_86f2d483
 Ed Wood / int_875615dd
type
Truth in Television
 Ed Wood / int_875615dd
comment
Truth in Television: The colorblind stagehand being asked his opinion on the two dresses is intended to be a Medium Awareness gag about the film's black-and-white photography, but in the early days of black-and-white studio films, colorblind people were hired to determine how colored objects appeared in greyscale.
 Ed Wood / int_875615dd
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_875615dd
featureConfidence
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 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_875615dd
 Ed Wood / int_8ace85ef
type
Audience Surrogate
 Ed Wood / int_8ace85ef
comment
Audience Surrogate: The Baptists that finance Plan 9 from Outer Space are the most as they are baffled by Ed's directing ineptitude, bad casting, and point out blatant leaps in logic that everyone will notice.
 Ed Wood / int_8ace85ef
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_8ace85ef
featureConfidence
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 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_8ace85ef
 Ed Wood / int_8ad43dc9
type
Ragtag Bunch of Misfits
 Ed Wood / int_8ad43dc9
comment
Ragtag Bunch of Misfits: Wood's ersatz family of actors and crew become this as they go to sometimes ridiculous lengths to get their movies made, whether it's undertaking a group baptism or even going on a stealth mission at night to steal a prop octopus.
 Ed Wood / int_8ad43dc9
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_8ad43dc9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_8ad43dc9
 Ed Wood / int_8b4f491c
type
Villainy-Free Villain
 Ed Wood / int_8b4f491c
comment
Villainy-Free Villain: In the DVD Commentary, even Burton himself points out that though the Baptist producers are antagonists in the film their point of view is entirely sympathetic and justifiable: They're justly concerned that Wood is spending their money making...well, Plan 9.
 Ed Wood / int_8b4f491c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_8b4f491c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_8b4f491c
 Ed Wood / int_8c1ac7c4
type
High Hopes, Zero Talent
 Ed Wood / int_8c1ac7c4
comment
High Hopes, Zero Talent: The writers described Ed Wood as "a man with all the drive and ambition of Orson Welles, but none of the talent".
 Ed Wood / int_8c1ac7c4
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1.0
 Ed Wood / int_8c1ac7c4
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1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_8c1ac7c4
 Ed Wood / int_9182ea54
type
Crazy Cat Lady
 Ed Wood / int_9182ea54
comment
Crazy Dog Guy: Bela's "children of the night" are his many pet dogs. (...though in real life, Bela owned large, frightening, wolfhounds—-Rule of Funny?)
 Ed Wood / int_9182ea54
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_9182ea54
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 Ed Wood
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Ed Wood / int_9182ea54
 Ed Wood / int_98a19d7f
type
Money, Dear Boy
 Ed Wood / int_98a19d7f
comment
Money, Dear Boy: In-Universe, Bela Lugosi's motivation for starring in Ed Wood's flicks goes from earning a quick buck to rediscovering the sheer joy of acting.
 Ed Wood / int_98a19d7f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_98a19d7f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_98a19d7f
 Ed Wood / int_9d12bbc1
type
Foreshadowing
 Ed Wood / int_9d12bbc1
comment
Foreshadowing: Early in the movie, notice Ed Wood has movie posters of Dracula (1931) and Citizen Kane in his apartment. Ed ends up meeting both Bela Lugosi and Orson Welles.
 Ed Wood / int_9d12bbc1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_9d12bbc1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_9d12bbc1
 Ed Wood / int_9dfb8296
type
This Is Gonna Suck
 Ed Wood / int_9dfb8296
comment
This Is Gonna Suck: Bela, when informed he'll have to wrestle with a rubber octopus that won't even move on its own.
 Ed Wood / int_9dfb8296
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_9dfb8296
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_9dfb8296
 Ed Wood / int_a2492aff
type
Dogged Nice Guy
 Ed Wood / int_a2492aff
comment
Dogged Nice Guy: Ed towards movies.
 Ed Wood / int_a2492aff
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_a2492aff
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_a2492aff
 Ed Wood / int_a319c0d6
type
Dungeonmaster's Girlfriend
 Ed Wood / int_a319c0d6
comment
Dungeonmaster's Girlfriend: Orson Welles and Ed Wood commiserate over this, among other trials of the independent filmmaker, in a (sadly, probably apocryphal) classic scene.
 Ed Wood / int_a319c0d6
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_a319c0d6
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_a319c0d6
 Ed Wood / int_aac4eeae
type
Same Language Dub
 Ed Wood / int_aac4eeae
comment
Same Language Dub: Maurice LaMarche, who is well-known for his Orson Welles impression (including Pinky and the Brain), dubbed over Vincent D'Onofrio's dialogue, purportedly because Burton was dissatisfied with D'Onofrio (who certainly looked the part, but apparently didn't sound it). As a result, this is probably LaMarche's straightest-ever performance of Welles. D'Onofrio, meanwhile, shared Burton's dissatisfaction with his performance and would later release a short film (in which he does voice Welles) in order to improve on it.
 Ed Wood / int_aac4eeae
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_aac4eeae
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_aac4eeae
 Ed Wood / int_aebae11c
type
Viewers Are Morons
 Ed Wood / int_aebae11c
comment
Viewers Are Morons: Subverted; while Wood shows a blatant disregard for things like visual continuity and set quality, and justifies this by saying that no-one really pays attention to the smaller details, he does so because he's projecting his own way of watching films onto the audiences, rather than considering them to be... well, morons.
 Ed Wood / int_aebae11c
featureApplicability
-0.3
 Ed Wood / int_aebae11c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_aebae11c
 Ed Wood / int_b032e4ed
type
Ms. Fanservice
 Ed Wood / int_b032e4ed
comment
Ms. Fanservice: Lisa Marie as Vampira. Somewhat invoked in-movie by Bela's reaction to seeing her on TV.
 Ed Wood / int_b032e4ed
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_b032e4ed
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_b032e4ed
 Ed Wood / int_b3d5d61
type
Real-Person Cameo
 Ed Wood / int_b3d5d61
comment
Real-Person Cameo: Conrad Brooks, an actor in Ed's company played in the movie by Brent Hinkley, himself appears as a bartender when Wood meets Orson Welles. Gregory Walcott, the lead of Plan 9 from Outer Space, shows up as a potential backer of Bride of the Monster in the second go-round of fundraising.
 Ed Wood / int_b3d5d61
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_b3d5d61
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_b3d5d61
 Ed Wood / int_b6de94d1
type
Executive Meddling
 Ed Wood / int_b6de94d1
comment
Executive Meddling: In-universe: Ed Wood has to give in to the demands (sometimes reasonable, sometimes stupid) of whoever gives him the money for his pictures. Discussed and lampshaded during his meeting with Orson Welles, who suffers from the same problem.
 Ed Wood / int_b6de94d1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_b6de94d1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_b6de94d1
 Ed Wood / int_b707726f
type
Hypocritical Humor
 Ed Wood / int_b707726f
comment
Hypocritical Humor: Before Bela arrives to shoot Glen or Glenda, Wood tells the rest of the team to try not to be star-struck and just treat him like a normal guy. Once Bela actually enters, Ed gleefully shouts his name and races over. During his conversation with Orson Welles, Ed rants that "And they always want to cast their buddies—it doesn't even matter if they're right for the part!" That, despite the fact that he's been casting out of his own social circle for his entire career. Bela has a low opinion of Boris Karloff's talent because of his portrayal of Frankenstein's monster. Bela had himself played the monster at least once.
 Ed Wood / int_b707726f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_b707726f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_b707726f
 Ed Wood / int_b77808f2
type
"Where Are They Now?" Epilogue
 Ed Wood / int_b77808f2
comment
"Where Are They Now?" Epilogue
 Ed Wood / int_b77808f2
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_b77808f2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_b77808f2
 Ed Wood / int_ba5bbda5
type
Mirror Character
 Ed Wood / int_ba5bbda5
comment
Mirror Character: When Ed meets Orson Welles, it turns out that the two share similar problems with Executive Meddling, unreliable funding, Nepotism-driven casting decisions and people who think they know best.
 Ed Wood / int_ba5bbda5
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_ba5bbda5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_ba5bbda5
 Ed Wood / int_bc00493f
type
Precision F-Strike
 Ed Wood / int_bc00493f
comment
Precision F-Strike: See "Berserk Button" above.
 Ed Wood / int_bc00493f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_bc00493f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_bc00493f
 Ed Wood / int_bc74ef27
type
Berserk Button
 Ed Wood / int_bc74ef27
comment
Berserk Button: Don't call Bela "Karloff's Sidekick". In fact, don't mention Boris Karloff at all. Ed does not like Executive Meddling. invoked
 Ed Wood / int_bc74ef27
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_bc74ef27
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_bc74ef27
 Ed Wood / int_c313d43a
type
True Companions
 Ed Wood / int_c313d43a
comment
True Companions: By the end of the film you wonder whether Ed Wood's cast and crew stick with him because they genuinely believe in his vision, or because for them it's almost as if they are some deranged form of extended family.
 Ed Wood / int_c313d43a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_c313d43a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_c313d43a
 Ed Wood / int_c39a5ef0
type
Willing Suspension of Disbelief
 Ed Wood / int_c39a5ef0
comment
Willing Suspension of Disbelief: Sorry, Ed, this doesn't excuse things like your low production values being painfully obvious onscreen or Plot Holes such as it being daytime one minute and the middle of the night the next.
 Ed Wood / int_c39a5ef0
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_c39a5ef0
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_c39a5ef0
 Ed Wood / int_c5249b29
type
Nice Guy
 Ed Wood / int_c5249b29
comment
Nice Guy: Ed is extremely generous and goodhearted, desperately trying to help his idol get back into the limelight.
 Ed Wood / int_c5249b29
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_c5249b29
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_c5249b29
 Ed Wood / int_c772e7c5
type
Rags to Riches
 Ed Wood / int_c772e7c5
comment
Rags to Riches: Subverted; Ed and crew are in poverty and Ed always expects riches to come out of his movies, but anyone who has watched his terrible (albeit amusing) movies knows that riches would never come. That doesn't stop Ed from being perpetually hopeful and upbeat throughout the movie.
 Ed Wood / int_c772e7c5
featureApplicability
-0.3
 Ed Wood / int_c772e7c5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_c772e7c5
 Ed Wood / int_caa28b82
type
Cloudcuckoolander
 Ed Wood / int_caa28b82
comment
Cloudcuckoolander: Ed Wood, through and through.
 Ed Wood / int_caa28b82
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_caa28b82
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_caa28b82
 Ed Wood / int_cbde3dfd
type
Took the Bad Film Seriously
 Ed Wood / int_cbde3dfd
comment
Took the Bad Film Seriously: In-universe: Ed Wood is unshakably convinced that his creations are fine cinema.
 Ed Wood / int_cbde3dfd
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_cbde3dfd
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_cbde3dfd
 Ed Wood / int_ce6555f0
type
Lighter and Softer
 Ed Wood / int_ce6555f0
comment
Lighter and Softer: Closer with Tim Burton's earlier comedy films than his more recent Batman films. At least part of this is because of the backlash he received from how borderline nihilistic Batman Returns was.
 Ed Wood / int_ce6555f0
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_ce6555f0
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_ce6555f0
 Ed Wood / int_d028ca10
type
Deliberately Monochrome
 Ed Wood / int_d028ca10
comment
Deliberately Monochrome: As a tribute to Ed Wood's movies. This creative decision met a lot of resistance from the studio suits.
 Ed Wood / int_d028ca10
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_d028ca10
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_d028ca10
 Ed Wood / int_d0f63e83
type
Magnetic Hero
 Ed Wood / int_d0f63e83
comment
Magnetic Hero: Despite his films being bad, Ed attracted a close-knit crew willing to stand by him - bordering on Manipulative Bastard.
 Ed Wood / int_d0f63e83
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_d0f63e83
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_d0f63e83
 Ed Wood / int_de7b7cbf
type
Drugs Are Bad
 Ed Wood / int_de7b7cbf
comment
Drugs Are Bad: Lugosi's drug addiction.
 Ed Wood / int_de7b7cbf
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_de7b7cbf
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_de7b7cbf
 Ed Wood / int_df4b69d6
type
Uncomfortable Elevator Moment
 Ed Wood / int_df4b69d6
comment
Uncomfortable Elevator Moment: Ed listening to Bela fixing himself a heroin snack in his kitchen.
 Ed Wood / int_df4b69d6
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_df4b69d6
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_df4b69d6
 Ed Wood / int_dfe57573
type
Historical In-Joke
 Ed Wood / int_dfe57573
comment
Historical In-Joke / Genius Bonus: Welles complaining about having to cast Charlton Heston as a Mexican is a reference to Touch of Evil, though its kind of anachronistic since Welles never had issues with the casting (none of the Mexican characters are played by Mexicans) and he was not a film-maker who went for Method Acting detail anyway. In addition, it was Welles who made the choice to change the character's nationality when Heston had already been cast.
 Ed Wood / int_dfe57573
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_dfe57573
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_dfe57573
 Ed Wood / int_e0b6edec
type
OnlySaneWoman
 Ed Wood / int_e0b6edec
comment
Only Sane Woman: Dolores, in a relative sense. Most so at the wrap party for Bride of the Monster when she finally calls everyone out, storms off, and tells Ed she's leaving him.
 Ed Wood / int_e0b6edec
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_e0b6edec
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_e0b6edec
 Ed Wood / int_e16217f8
type
Historical Villain Upgrade
 Ed Wood / int_e16217f8
comment
Historical Villain Upgrade: Dolores Fuller comes off the worst in the movie. In real life, she lived with Ed out of wedlock (scandalous even in Hollywood back in the '50s) and adored Bela Lugosi (she was of Hungarian descent herself), cooking him goulash the way he liked it. She only left Ed because his alcoholism and transvestism were obviously not going to get better and wound up with a more successful entertainment career than the rest of his posse. His last words to Wood? "Ed-die, take good care of Do-lor-es." (They had broken up by that time.)
 Ed Wood / int_e16217f8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_e16217f8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_e16217f8
 Ed Wood / int_e4b69188
type
Very Loosely Based on a True Story
 Ed Wood / int_e4b69188
comment
Very Loosely Based on a True Story: Various facts are manipulated throughout, with Wood's alcoholism and porno-making only brought up in the "Where Are They Now?" Epilogue. But fans of Wood still like this film on the grounds that, well, it comes across as the biopic he would have filmed about himself. The film also implies that Bela didn't have the resources to get over his drug addiction and dies penniless and alone. In reality, Frank Sinatra helped finance his drug treatment and Bela married a woman who gave him emotional support during his stint at the hospital. Lugosi was very successful under Wood in another arena that wasn't shown in the film: Wood produced a popular Vegas stage show called The Bela Lugosi Revue. It had a scheduled limited run of 8 weeks; Lugosi doggedly worked three shows a day. Unfortunately, the Revue's true intention — to get Bela more film roles — didn't work out. Depp's performance as Ed Wood — in terms of voice, mannerisms, and overall personality — has very little in common with the real Ed Wood. Burton told Depp to base his performance on Andy Hardy or Ronald Reagan, rather than studying actual footage of the man himself. Compare the parts of the film meant to represent Glen or Glenda with the actual film and it's pretty much night and day.
 Ed Wood / int_e4b69188
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_e4b69188
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_e4b69188
 Ed Wood / int_e54482ee
type
Keet
 Ed Wood / int_e54482ee
comment
Keet: Ed Wood. On the DVD Commentary, the writers theorize that Ed not only didn't know his movies were bad but didn't even care. He just had so much fun making them.
 Ed Wood / int_e54482ee
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_e54482ee
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_e54482ee
 Ed Wood / int_e55c5f35
type
Happily Ever Before
 Ed Wood / int_e55c5f35
comment
Happily Ever Before: It ends at the premiere of Wood's "masterpiece" Plan 9, thus not cutting into his decay into exploitation, porn, and alcoholism.
 Ed Wood / int_e55c5f35
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_e55c5f35
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_e55c5f35
 Ed Wood / int_e567510d
type
Determinator
 Ed Wood / int_e567510d
comment
Determinator: Wood is, if nothing else, a man of unparalleled drive and ambition, not letting anything up to and including complete lack of budget, dead actors, reluctant sponsors, or sheer lack of talent get in his way of portraying his artistic vision completely faithfully.
 Ed Wood / int_e567510d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_e567510d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_e567510d
 Ed Wood / int_e572b14b
type
No Budget
 Ed Wood / int_e572b14b
comment
invokedNo Budget: Par for the course for Ed's movies.
 Ed Wood / int_e572b14b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_e572b14b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_e572b14b
 Ed Wood / int_e91cc721
type
In the Style of
 Ed Wood / int_e91cc721
comment
In the Style of: Howard Shore's score recreates many of the musical cues from Ed Wood's films, such as the sweeping music from Glen or Glenda.
 Ed Wood / int_e91cc721
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_e91cc721
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_e91cc721
 Ed Wood / int_e9e35e8f
type
Exact Words
 Ed Wood / int_e9e35e8f
comment
Exact Words: When Ed tells Loretta King about his new movie project, she remarks that $ 60 000 to produce it "seems very reasonable". Because she then asks him if she can play the female lead, Ed thinks they have an unspoken agreement that she can, and will, pay for the entire production. He is wrong.
 Ed Wood / int_e9e35e8f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_e9e35e8f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_e9e35e8f
 Ed Wood / int_f0e85546
type
Unbuilt Trope
 Ed Wood / int_f0e85546
comment
Unbuilt Trope: Bela Lugosi was the first celebrity to publicly announce that he admitted himself to rehabilitation for substance abuse. By 1994, however, tabloid stories of drugged-up celebrities getting clean were so common that the truncated "rehab" entered the public vernacular, while "rehabilitation" more often referred to people recovering from severe injuries. Because there were concerns about whether modern audiences would know the difference between the two, the film compromises by having Bela start to say "The first celebrity to be admitted to rehab-," before cutting himself off with a coughing fit.
 Ed Wood / int_f0e85546
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_f0e85546
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_f0e85546
 Ed Wood / int_f19e8a55
type
Bad "Bad Acting"
 Ed Wood / int_f19e8a55
comment
Bad "Bad Acting": This being a film about the life and work of Ed Wood, you can expect plenty of this. The supreme irony, of course, being the critical acclaim heaped on the cast, most notably Martin Landau who would win the Best Supporting Actor Academy Award for playing Bela Lugosi - an honor the real Lugosi, never mind anyone else associated with Ed Wood's films in the 1950s - never attained.
 Ed Wood / int_f19e8a55
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_f19e8a55
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_f19e8a55
 Ed Wood / int_f237981e
type
The Alleged Car
 Ed Wood / int_f237981e
comment
The Alleged Car: Wood's car, complete with dieseling effects at shutdown.
 Ed Wood / int_f237981e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_f237981e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_f237981e
 Ed Wood / int_f3d84bc4
type
Giftedly Bad
 Ed Wood / int_f3d84bc4
comment
Giftedly Bad: The Movie of the trope.
 Ed Wood / int_f3d84bc4
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_f3d84bc4
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_f3d84bc4
 Ed Wood / int_f4d8c86f
type
Colorblind Confusion
 Ed Wood / int_f4d8c86f
comment
Color Blind Confusion: The film has Ed being forced by Loretta to choose between a red and a green dress, but when he can't decide asks the director of photography to choose one or the other, only for him to reply that he can't tell them apart. Doubles as both a Breaking the Fourth Wall joke as the movie is Deliberately Monochrome and a reference to Wood's real-life director of photography Bill Thompson, who was actually color blind.
 Ed Wood / int_f4d8c86f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_f4d8c86f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Ed Wood / int_f4d8c86f
 Ed Wood / int_f9f2c33
type
Running Gag
 Ed Wood / int_f9f2c33
comment
Running Gag: Ed assuring people that Bela Lugosi is still alive after people initially assumes he was dead. Though it ultimately turns serious when it happens again after Lugosi actually dies. Lugosi's apparent jealousy of Boris Karloff. As the movie progresses, Ed's car sounds more and more like it will break down at any moment.
 Ed Wood / int_f9f2c33
featureApplicability
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 Ed Wood / int_f9f2c33
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 Ed Wood
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Ed Wood / int_f9f2c33
 Ed Wood / int_name
type
ItemName
 Ed Wood / int_name
comment
 Ed Wood / int_name
featureApplicability
1.0
 Ed Wood / int_name
featureConfidence
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 Ed Wood
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Ed Wood / int_name
 Ed Wood / int_name
itemName
Ed Wood

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

 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Acclaimed Flop / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Artistic License – Film Production / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Be Yourself / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Because You Were Nice to Me / int_80d4b7e6
 BelaLugosi
seeAlso
Ed Wood
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Biopic / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Colorblind Confusion / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Comedic Work, Serious Scene / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Comfort Food / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Credits-Brand Products / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Deliberately Monochrome / int_80d4b7e6
 EdWood
seeAlso
Ed Wood
 EightSeconds
seeAlso
Ed Wood
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
False Teeth Tomfoolery / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Fat Idiot / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Films of 1990–1994 / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
First Girl Wins / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Frying Pan of Doom / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Genre Relaunch / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Giftedly Bad / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Go Out with a Smile / int_80d4b7e6
 HowardShore
seeAlso
Ed Wood
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
I Do Not Drink Wine / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Leaning on the Fourth Wall / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Louis Cypher / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Mood Dissonance / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Newhart Phonecall / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Phrase Catcher / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Protagonist Title / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Public Domain Soundtrack / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Rags to Riches / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Random Smoking Scene / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Rewind, Replay, Repeat / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Starring a Star as a Star / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Stock Footage / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Suddenly Shouting / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
The '50s / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Theremin / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Uncomfortable Elevator Moment / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Viewers Are Morons / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
When Props Attack / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Wholesome Crossdresser / int_80d4b7e6
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Your Costume Needs Work / int_80d4b7e6
 edwood
sameAs
Ed Wood
 Ed Wood
hasFeature
Happily Ever Before / int_80d4b7e6