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Fury (1936)

 Fury (1936)
type
TVTItem
 Fury (1936)
label
Fury (1936)
 Fury (1936)
page
Fury1936
 Fury (1936)
comment
A 1936 legal drama directed by Fritz Lang, starring Sylvia Sidney and Spencer Tracy.Joe Wilson (Tracy) is the hardworking owner of a gas station who sets out on a drive to meet up with his fiancée, Katherine Grant (Sidney). On the way he is stopped and arrested, on suspicion of being party to a kidnapping that is making newspaper headlines. Through increasingly distorted word of mouth, the residents of the ignorant little town of Strand, where Joe is being held, whip themselves up into a frenzy, form a lynch mob, and burn down the jail with Joe inside of it.Or so they think. Turns out one of the townspeople threw a stick of dynamite which actually wound up blowing open the bars of Joe's cell. 22 people of the town, who were caught on camera, wind up going on trial for Joe's murder, and a vengeful Joe stays in hiding rather than reveal himself and save the would-be lynchers from conviction.Inspired by the real-life kidnapping and murder of San Jose department store heir Brooke Hart, and the subsequent lynching by mob of the persons held to be responsible for the crime. Fritz Lang's first Hollywood film (he had fled from Those Wacky Nazis in 1933, making a pit stop in France). Listed on the National Film Registry.No connection to the 2014 war film starring Brad Pitt.
 Fury (1936)
fetched
2024-03-07T13:16:39Z
 Fury (1936)
parsed
2024-03-07T13:16:39Z
 Fury (1936)
isPartOf
DBTropes
 Fury (1936) / int_1439161f
type
Heroic BSoD
 Fury (1936) / int_1439161f
comment
Heroic BSoD: Katherine slips into catatonia after watching Joe (apparently) die.
 Fury (1936) / int_1439161f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fury (1936) / int_1439161f
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1.0
 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_1439161f
 Fury (1936) / int_1616e13
type
Ripped from the Headlines
 Fury (1936) / int_1616e13
comment
Ripped from the Headlines: The script was based upon the 1933 kidnapping and murder of Brooke Hart, the son of the owner of Hart's Department Store in San Jose, California. The two kidnapping suspects were pulled from jail by a group of vigilantes, who dragged them across the street to St. James Park and lynched both of them. The story also inspired several later films, including Cy Enfield's Try and Get Me!
 Fury (1936) / int_1616e13
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1.0
 Fury (1936) / int_1616e13
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 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_1616e13
 Fury (1936) / int_1a2a363
type
Guilt by Coincidence
 Fury (1936) / int_1a2a363
comment
Guilt by Coincidence: Joe drives a car similar to the kidnappers' car, Joe likes peanuts and peanut dust was found at the crime scene, and Joe acquired one $5 bill from the ransom (apparently via change). This is all it takes for the people of Strand to lynch him.
 Fury (1936) / int_1a2a363
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 Fury (1936) / int_1a2a363
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 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_1a2a363
 Fury (1936) / int_22cf536c
type
Chekhov's Gun
 Fury (1936) / int_22cf536c
comment
Chekhov's Gun: Joe's ripped coat which Katherine mends using a blue thread. Later she sees the coat on his brother and starts to wonder. Katherine's ring to Joe, which turns up again in court as evidence. Joe's inability to correctly spell "memento" backfires later as the same error appears on the anonymous Cut-and-Paste Note, finally convincing Katherine that he's alive.
 Fury (1936) / int_22cf536c
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Fury (1936) / int_22cf536c
 Fury (1936) / int_29155db1
type
Spinning Clock Hands
 Fury (1936) / int_29155db1
comment
Spinning Clock Hands: During the trial, we see a shot of a clock with the clock hands spinning, indicating hours of hearing taking place.
 Fury (1936) / int_29155db1
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1.0
 Fury (1936) / int_29155db1
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 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_29155db1
 Fury (1936) / int_2d047747
type
Gossip Evolution
 Fury (1936) / int_2d047747
comment
Gossip Evolution: The scanty evidence against Joe is magnified by the Gossipy Hens and everyone else in town until it becomes an iron-clad case.
 Fury (1936) / int_2d047747
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1.0
 Fury (1936) / int_2d047747
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Fury (1936) / int_2d047747
 Fury (1936) / int_3e084baf
type
Only Bad Guys Call Their Lawyers
 Fury (1936) / int_3e084baf
comment
Only Bad Guys Call Their Lawyers: During the Gossip Evolution, patrons at a bar discuss Joe's case:
 Fury (1936) / int_3e084baf
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 Fury (1936) / int_3e084baf
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 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_3e084baf
 Fury (1936) / int_403b6f3
type
Fainting
 Fury (1936) / int_403b6f3
comment
Fainting: Twice, first by Katherine as the jail burns, and later by a woman of Strand as things start looking bad in court.
 Fury (1936) / int_403b6f3
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 Fury (1936) / int_403b6f3
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 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_403b6f3
 Fury (1936) / int_4f995f60
type
Train-Station Goodbye
 Fury (1936) / int_4f995f60
comment
Train-Station Goodbye: Couldn't be played straighter than when Joe sees Katherine off.
 Fury (1936) / int_4f995f60
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1.0
 Fury (1936) / int_4f995f60
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 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_4f995f60
 Fury (1936) / int_5501256b
type
Reports of My Death Were Greatly Exaggerated
 Fury (1936) / int_5501256b
comment
Reports of My Death Were Greatly Exaggerated: Exploited. Joe is presumed dead but actually escaped the blaze. However, he stays in hiding in order to get the townspeople sentenced to death for his murder.
 Fury (1936) / int_5501256b
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1.0
 Fury (1936) / int_5501256b
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 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_5501256b
 Fury (1936) / int_56515a39
type
Artistic License – History
 Fury (1936) / int_56515a39
comment
Artistic License – History: In the original case, the two men lynched by the mob are agreed to have been the actual culprits. For the sake of the film, the incident is fictionalized and the accused is made innocent. Fritz Lang, who wanted to explore the idea of capital punishment, felt that this was a weakness since according to him you can only make a convincing case against the death penalty by stating that even the guilty shouldn't be executed.
 Fury (1936) / int_56515a39
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 Fury (1936) / int_56515a39
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 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_56515a39
 Fury (1936) / int_5f252b8b
type
One Phone Call
 Fury (1936) / int_5f252b8b
comment
One Phone Call: Defied. Joe wants to call Katherine but is denied any phone call because the sheriff fears Joe could be using the call to warn his partners in crime.
 Fury (1936) / int_5f252b8b
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1.0
 Fury (1936) / int_5f252b8b
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 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_5f252b8b
 Fury (1936) / int_617f0563
type
Heel–Face Turn
 Fury (1936) / int_617f0563
comment
Heel–Face Turn: Joe. In the trial over his murder, the townspeople are found guilty, but before they can hang for the crime, Joe has a change of heart and shows up in the courtroom as the sentences are being read and saves them from execution.
 Fury (1936) / int_617f0563
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1.0
 Fury (1936) / int_617f0563
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1.0
 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_617f0563
 Fury (1936) / int_62434fe2
type
Sanity Slippage
 Fury (1936) / int_62434fe2
comment
Sanity Slippage: Joe undergoes one in the third act, caused by the guilt that is weighing heavily upon him. He starts hearing Katherine's voice when watching the shop window, he sees the number 22 on the calendar at the bar and can't help but think of the 22 accused. After he leaves the bar and walks along the street, he sees some of the faces of the mob in a store window. Frightened, he begins running down the empty road as if he's being chased, the camera follows him, only showing the audience what seems to be following Joe - nothing, only his conscience.
 Fury (1936) / int_62434fe2
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 Fury (1936) / int_62434fe2
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 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_62434fe2
 Fury (1936) / int_7012424f
type
Stealth Hi/Bye
 Fury (1936) / int_7012424f
comment
Stealth Hi/Bye: The barber's customer who disappears behind his back after some joking about a Dangerously Close Shave.
 Fury (1936) / int_7012424f
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1.0
 Fury (1936) / int_7012424f
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 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_7012424f
 Fury (1936) / int_77bc8a56
type
Unable to Support a Wife
 Fury (1936) / int_77bc8a56
comment
Unable to Support a Wife: Joe can't, which is why Katherine leaves town to find a better job. Joe makes good with the gas station and sets out to reunite with Katherine, only to be tragically interrupted.
 Fury (1936) / int_77bc8a56
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1.0
 Fury (1936) / int_77bc8a56
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 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_77bc8a56
 Fury (1936) / int_80a7d3e2
type
Convicted by Public Opinion
 Fury (1936) / int_80a7d3e2
comment
Convicted by Public Opinion: Joe gets arrested because "it seems he knows more than he lets on" about a kidnapping. Gossip Evolution inflates it into everyone "knowing" he's the kidnapper, forming a lynch mob and burning down his prison.
 Fury (1936) / int_80a7d3e2
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1.0
 Fury (1936) / int_80a7d3e2
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 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_80a7d3e2
 Fury (1936) / int_84764598
type
Dramatic Thunder
 Fury (1936) / int_84764598
comment
Dramatic Thunder: When Katherine and Joe finally meet again, there is a dramatic thunder rolling while she stands in the doorway. The scene ends with another thunder rolling as Joe proclaims that he doesn't need anybody.
 Fury (1936) / int_84764598
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 Fury (1936) / int_84764598
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 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_84764598
 Fury (1936) / int_900d51a0
type
One-Liner, Name... One-Liner
 Fury (1936) / int_900d51a0
comment
One-Liner, Name... One-Liner: Joe in his prison cell to his dog when the fire starts: "Looks bad, Rainbow. Looks bad."
 Fury (1936) / int_900d51a0
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 Fury (1936) / int_900d51a0
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 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_900d51a0
 Fury (1936) / int_92f674e5
type
Revenge
 Fury (1936) / int_92f674e5
comment
Revenge: Joe seeks to get the 22 filmed members of the mob hanged for "killing" him.
 Fury (1936) / int_92f674e5
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1.0
 Fury (1936) / int_92f674e5
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 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_92f674e5
 Fury (1936) / int_93168fb1
type
It's Quiet… Too Quiet
 Fury (1936) / int_93168fb1
comment
It's Quiet… Too Quiet: After they barred themselves up in the jailhouse, the sheriff gets suspicious of the silence outside. Cue the mob ramming the door.
 Fury (1936) / int_93168fb1
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 Fury (1936) / int_93168fb1
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 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_93168fb1
 Fury (1936) / int_986bd638
type
This Is a Work of Fiction
 Fury (1936) / int_986bd638
comment
This Is a Work of Fiction: There's a disclaimer after the open credits that characters and events are fictional.
 Fury (1936) / int_986bd638
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1.0
 Fury (1936) / int_986bd638
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 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_986bd638
 Fury (1936) / int_a18042f1
type
Left the Background Music On
 Fury (1936) / int_a18042f1
comment
Left the Background Music On: In a scene where Katherine is writing him a letter, a sappy '30s-style romantic soundtrack plays... until Katherine turns off the radio, apparently sick of it herself. Later, as the guilt-ridden Joe wanders the streets, he goes into an apparently busy bar only to discover that only the bartender is there; all the music and crowd noise was, again, coming from a radio that's promptly turned off.
 Fury (1936) / int_a18042f1
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1.0
 Fury (1936) / int_a18042f1
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 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_a18042f1
 Fury (1936) / int_aa368af0
type
Two Scenes, One Dialogue
 Fury (1936) / int_aa368af0
comment
Two Scenes, One Dialogue: The sheriff tells his nervous deputies that the National Guard has been summoned. Cut to a very quick scene in which the mustered Guardsmen are told they will be standing down. Cut to the governor saying "Why?", as his political boss says that sending the Guard into a town could be damaging. In real life, the governor actively supported the lynch mob, even saying he would pardon its members, and refused to send in the National Guard.
 Fury (1936) / int_aa368af0
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1.0
 Fury (1936) / int_aa368af0
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 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_aa368af0
 Fury (1936) / int_ad6593eb
type
Cut-and-Paste Note
 Fury (1936) / int_ad6593eb
comment
Cut-and-Paste Note: When the trial doesn't seem to be going well, Joe takes active measures to get a conviction. He makes this kind of note, and encloses his ring, in an attempt to "prove" he died in the fire.
 Fury (1936) / int_ad6593eb
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1.0
 Fury (1936) / int_ad6593eb
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 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_ad6593eb
 Fury (1936) / int_b5dded87
type
Gossipy Hens
 Fury (1936) / int_b5dded87
comment
Gossipy Hens: All the old biddies of Strand that gossip about Joe's arrest and wind up flaming the passions of the mob. Lampshaded when a shot of actual hens is inserted during the gossip montage.
 Fury (1936) / int_b5dded87
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1.0
 Fury (1936) / int_b5dded87
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 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_b5dded87
 Fury (1936) / int_beb9a361
type
Anti-Hero
 Fury (1936) / int_beb9a361
comment
Anti-Hero: Joe starts out as a good guy, but after the traumatic events of almost being burned alive by a raging mob, he becomes a case of He Who Fights Monsters, trying to get justice for the crimes committed against him, even if it means to forge evidence.
 Fury (1936) / int_beb9a361
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1.0
 Fury (1936) / int_beb9a361
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 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_beb9a361
 Fury (1936) / int_c5ccf60f
type
Internal Reveal
 Fury (1936) / int_c5ccf60f
comment
Internal Reveal: When Joe returns home, only Charlie and Tom (and the audience) know that he is still alive. Until Joe reveals himself to the world in the final courtroom scene.
 Fury (1936) / int_c5ccf60f
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1.0
 Fury (1936) / int_c5ccf60f
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 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_c5ccf60f
 Fury (1936) / int_da4d59ae
type
Memento MacGuffin
 Fury (1936) / int_da4d59ae
comment
Memento MacGuffin: The family ring Katherine hands to Joe during their Train-Station Goodbye. It later turns into a Chekhov's Gun in court.
 Fury (1936) / int_da4d59ae
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 Fury (1936) / int_da4d59ae
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 Fury (1936)
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Fury (1936) / int_da4d59ae
 Fury (1936) / int_dca70c44
type
Reasonable Authority Figure
 Fury (1936) / int_dca70c44
comment
Reasonable Authority Figure: The sheriff. He promises Joe a square deal and keeps his word when defending him against the angry mob. Later on he refuses to identify anyone among the mob, because he doesn't want them to be put to death.
 Fury (1936) / int_dca70c44
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1.0
 Fury (1936) / int_dca70c44
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Fury (1936) / int_dca70c44
 Fury (1936) / int_e529d5c3
type
Torches and Pitchforks
 Fury (1936) / int_e529d5c3
comment
Torches and Pitchforks: The angry mob that invades the jail, attempting to kill Joe. When the jailer throws the keys into the cells, the mob burns the jail down.
 Fury (1936) / int_e529d5c3
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 Fury (1936) / int_e529d5c3
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Fury (1936) / int_e529d5c3
 Fury (1936) / int_f1d3f0c9
type
Sesquipedalian Loquaciousness
 Fury (1936) / int_f1d3f0c9
comment
Sesquipedalian Loquaciousness
 Fury (1936) / int_f1d3f0c9
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 Fury (1936) / int_f1d3f0c9
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Fury (1936) / int_f1d3f0c9
 Fury (1936) / int_f373d5e
type
Powder Keg Crowd
 Fury (1936) / int_f373d5e
comment
Powder Keg Crowd: The angry mob at the jailhouse. A tomato thrown at the sheriff escalates the riot.
 Fury (1936) / int_f373d5e
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 Fury (1936) / int_f373d5e
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Fury (1936) / int_f373d5e
 Fury (1936) / int_f485d62d
type
Battering Ram
 Fury (1936) / int_f485d62d
comment
Battering Ram: The angry mob uses a large wooden beam to break open the door to the sheriff's quarters.
 Fury (1936) / int_f485d62d
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 Fury (1936) / int_f485d62d
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Fury (1936) / int_f485d62d
 Fury (1936) / int_f516f938
type
Never Found the Body
 Fury (1936) / int_f516f938
comment
Never Found the Body: Everyone apparently assumes Joe was burned to ash. He's still alive.
 Fury (1936) / int_f516f938
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 Fury (1936) / int_f516f938
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Fury (1936) / int_f516f938
 Fury (1936) / int_fe0de947
type
Moral Luck
 Fury (1936) / int_fe0de947
comment
Moral Luck: The entire second half of the plot revolves around the legal difference between an attempted murder and a successful one.
 Fury (1936) / int_fe0de947
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Fury (1936)

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

 Fury (1936)
hasFeature
Battering Ram / int_b8346c5b
 Fury (1936)
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Convicted by Public Opinion / int_b8346c5b
 Fury (1936)
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Cut-and-Paste Note / int_b8346c5b
 Fury (1936)
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Gossip Evolution / int_b8346c5b
 Fury (1936)
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Gossipy Hens / int_b8346c5b
 Fury (1936)
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Guilt by Coincidence / int_b8346c5b
 Fury (1936)
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Malicious Slander / int_b8346c5b
 Fury (1936)
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Moral Luck / int_b8346c5b
 Fury (1936)
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Only Bad Guys Call Their Lawyers / int_b8346c5b
 Fury (1936)
hasFeature
Powder Keg Crowd / int_b8346c5b
 Fury (1936)
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Spinning Clock Hands / int_b8346c5b
 Fury (1936)
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Stress-Induced Mental Voices / int_b8346c5b
 Fury (1936)
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Torches and Pitchforks / int_b8346c5b
 Fury (1936)
hasFeature
Train-Station Goodbye / int_b8346c5b
 Fury (1936)
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Unable to Support a Wife / int_b8346c5b