...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!
Miracle on 34th Street
- 380 statements
- 74 feature instances
- 59 referencing feature instances
Miracle on 34th Street | type |
TVTItem | |
Miracle on 34th Street | label |
Miracle on 34th Street | |
Miracle on 34th Street | page |
MiracleonThirtyFourthStreet | |
Miracle on 34th Street | comment |
Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_content_3'); })That other famous heartwarming Christmas movie from The '40s, after It's a Wonderful Life.It's December in New York, and Macy's hires a quiet but charming old man named Kris Kringle to be their Department Store Santa. Thing is, Kris clearly sees himself as far more than just some seasonal employee: he tells customers where to find a better price on a toy (even if it means sending them to competing stores), converses with immigrant children in their own languages, and even claims to be the real Santa Claus! R. H. Macy is incensed — until he sees how much goodwill his store is building with its customer base. Everyone soon becomes content to let Kris have his harmless fantasies; everyone, that is, except the store's resentful psychologist, who attempts to get him committed to a mental asylum. Things come to a head in a big showy trial, where the defense decides to argue that Kris is not insane even though he claims to be Santa Claus — because he is Santa Claus.Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_content_2'); })An important subplot revolves around Doris, the store PR manager who hired Kris, and her young daughter Susan. Susan has never believed in Santa Claus because her bitter divorced mother doesn't want her to indulge in fantasies, but meeting Kris causes both of them to start wondering. There's also a romance subplot between Doris and Fred, Kris's defense attorney.The original film version, released in 1947, was directed by George Seaton and starred Edmund Gwenn as Kris Kringle, Maureen O'Hara as Doris Walker, Natalie Wood as her daughter Susan, and John Payne as lawyer Fred Gailey. It was a box office success, won three Academy Awards (for Gwenn's supporting role, Seaton's screenplay, and Valentine Davies' original story), and is shown on television around Christmas each and every year.Due to the success of the original film, the story has been adapted three times for television and once as a Broadway musical (Here's Love). The most notable television version was produced in 1973 and starred Sebastian Cabot as Kris, Jane Alexander as Mrs. Walker, David Hartman as the lawyer boyfriend, and Roddy McDowall as the psychologist Dr. Sawyer, with a lot of smaller roles being filled by 1970s TV mainstays such as Tom Bosley playing the judge. There was also a theatrically-released remake in 1994, written by John Hughes; Richard Attenborough was cast as Kris Kringle, with Elizabeth Perkins as Dorey Walker, Mara Wilson as Susan, and Dylan McDermott as the lawyer boyfriend.Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_content_1'); }) | |
Miracle on 34th Street | fetched |
2018-11-06T08:40:24Z | |
Miracle on 34th Street | parsed |
2020-06-24T03:32:38Z | |
Miracle on 34th Street | processingComment |
Dropped link to JustInTime: Not a Feature - IGNORE | |
Miracle on 34th Street | processingComment |
Dropped link to ThemeTune: Not a Feature - IGNORE | |
Miracle on 34th Street | isPartOf |
DBTropes | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_14beeefd | type |
Darker and Edgier | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_14beeefd | comment |
Darker and Edgier: In this version, rather than the psychiatrist with a grudge taking Kris down, the rival store hired the old Santa - the one Kris replaced after he was fired for public drunkenness - to goad him into attacking him. One of the tactics the man uses is accusing Kris of pedophilia. On the other hand, the trial plot is played more idealistically than the original, with a more blatant Black and White Morality. The satire of using the innocence of Christmas for guilt trips or to serve more cynical or selfish ends is underplayed greatly in favour of the court and public genuinely believing in Kris. The ending is also less comedically bittersweet than the original, with Fred and Doris being given the house as a gift from Kris rather than being exasperated into buying it themselves out of guilt. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_14beeefd | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_14beeefd | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_14beeefd | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_19ebe383 | type |
Never Trust a Trailer | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_19ebe383 | comment |
Never Trust a Trailer: Famously, the film's original trailer reveals nothing about the actual film — not even that Santa Claus is a major character! Because the movie came out during the summer box office season, in hopes of making more money, the advertisers had to make sure not to include any out-of-season Christmas imagery. Promotional posters from the time also barely show Kris at all, appearing to portray the film as a simple romantic comedy. One can only wonder what 1947 audiences thought when they actually saw the final movie, but it famously paid off because the film was such a smashing success it actually ran through Christmas. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_19ebe383 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_19ebe383 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_19ebe383 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_1d7d1b93 | type |
Remake Cameo | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_1d7d1b93 | comment |
Remake Cameo: Alvin Greenman, who played the character of Alfred in the original film, appears in a scene as a hotel doorman. His character doesn't actually appear in this remake. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_1d7d1b93 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_1d7d1b93 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_1d7d1b93 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_20860a0e | type |
Punch-Clock Villain | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_20860a0e | comment |
Punch-Clock Villain: The ending of the film implies that Landbergh's lackeys are these (or else that they did a Heel–Face Turn) when they reveal their "I Believe" buttons to each other, indicating their support of Kris. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_20860a0e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_20860a0e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_20860a0e | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_23c68854 | type |
Mall Santa | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_23c68854 | comment |
Mall Santa: Played with, since Kris clearly believes himself to be Santa. The 1994 version also included a scene at a bar late in the Christmas season filled with drunk mall Santas off-shift. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_23c68854 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_23c68854 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_23c68854 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_259d5879 | type |
Anachronism Stew | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_259d5879 | comment |
Anachronism Stew: Several elements of this remake are taken completely from the original film but with no explanation for why they exist in the 1970s. Most notable is Dr. Sawyer, who is still in this version and is the "store shrink" decades after this position ceased to exist. The rivalry between Macy's and Gimbels had also died down by this time, as Gimbels was in severe financial straits by the 1970s and was sold off the year this movie aired. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_259d5879 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_259d5879 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_259d5879 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_294ed981 | type |
Bilingual Bonus | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_294ed981 | comment |
Bilingual Bonus: Kris's unsubtitled conversation with the Dutch orphan, for Dutch speakers. Included in full on the Heartwarming Moments page. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_294ed981 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_294ed981 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_294ed981 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_2af3a2d9 | type |
Smoking Gun | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_2af3a2d9 | comment |
Smoking Gun: Susan's mailed letter to Kris (as Santa Claus) draws the attention of the postal workers who sort it and come up with the scheme to save Kris. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_2af3a2d9 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_2af3a2d9 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_2af3a2d9 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_2eeb91b2 | type |
The Runt at the End | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_2eeb91b2 | comment |
The Runt at the End: At the climactic moment of the film, a parade of burly bailiffs stream into the courtroom each toting two large bags of mail; the parade ends with a smaller bailiff carrying a single bag. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_2eeb91b2 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_2eeb91b2 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_2eeb91b2 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_308ac24f | type |
Fantasy-Forbidding Father | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_308ac24f | comment |
Fantasy-Forbidding Father: Mother, in Doris's case. But her motivation is sympathetic: she wants Susan to be intelligent and level-headed so she can avoid the foolish mistakes Doris made when she was younger. Notably, while many adults criticize Doris' methods of shutting Susan off from fantasies and fairy tales, they do applaud her for raising such a smart child. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_308ac24f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_308ac24f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_308ac24f | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_3322dd48 | type |
Hollywood Law | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_3322dd48 | comment |
Hollywood Law: Shows up in some form in each adaptation. In 1947, since Fred was out of the room when the postal workers were talking to him, no judge would have let the prosecuting attorney present final arguments with the defense absent. In 1994, Bryan wouldn't need to prove that Kris isn't crazy to keep him from being committed. The Supreme Court ruled in 1975 that you can't involuntarily commit someone unless he's a danger to himself and others. The debate over the existence of Santa Claus would have been immediately ruled irrelevant as even if Santa was real, it didn't mean Kris wasn't a violent person that needed to be locked up. Notably, this fact blew up in Fred Gailey's face in the 1947 version, as Fred initially claimed that Kris couldn't be crazy because if he was Santa Claus, it made sense that he'd keep getting violent or confrontational when people kept insisting that he wasn't. The prosecutor finally calls his bluff by conceding the existence of Santa Claus but pointing out that it wasn't relevant if they couldn't prove Kris was Santa Claus. In reality, the only real legal basis for arguing to commit Kris in the 1994 version was his attack against the rival CEO's henchmen, but that would have been blown because of a line in the movie indicating that the pair had admitted to intentionally provoking a physical confrontation. The judge in 1994 version takes it a step further when he rules that no hard evidence is necessary to prove Kris himself is Santa, instead deciding that faith alone is enough because all money in the United States has "In God We Trust" stamped on it. He then declares on his own that he believes Kris is Santa Claus. This doesn't fly, because the government's endorsement of God does not endorse a specific person as being God, which the judge was being asked to do in the case of whether Santa was real and whether Kris was Santa and even whether Kris being Santa meant he wasn't a danger to himself or others. The film acknowledges that the case's logic is very weak and easily challenged, but nobody will stand up to it because of the terrible press they'd get. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_3322dd48 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_3322dd48 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_3322dd48 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_351e7cf9 | type |
Romanticism Versus Enlightenment | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_351e7cf9 | comment |
Romanticism Versus Enlightenment: All versions are on the side of Romanticism, of course. In particular, Susan and Mrs. Walker always start off on Team Enlightenment before their Character Development converts them to Team Romanticism. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_351e7cf9 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_351e7cf9 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_351e7cf9 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_35b241c0 | type |
Ooh, Me Accent's Slipping | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_35b241c0 | comment |
Ooh, Me Accent's Slipping: When Doris is angrily berating them for having Kris taken away, Maureen O'Hara's natural Irish accent can be heard. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_35b241c0 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_35b241c0 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_35b241c0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_372bc105 | type |
Sliding Scale of Idealism Versus Cynicism | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_372bc105 | comment |
Sliding Scale of Idealism vs. Cynicism: With a holiday twist. Besides Fred and Kris himself, most of the characters in the film are simply looking out for themselves. What's actually pretty brilliant is the fact that lots of cynical players and actors end up accidentally helping Kris out - the judge's desire to be re-elected, the postal workers' desire to get rid of the Santa letters, and the NYC newspapers' desire for a juicy story. Without all those people's utterly self-serving actions, Fred would have lost the case. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_372bc105 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_372bc105 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_372bc105 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_39d7acff | type |
Winning Over the Kids | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_39d7acff | comment |
Winning Over the Kids: Fred befriends Susan to help him get into Doris's good graces. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_39d7acff | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_39d7acff | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_39d7acff | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_440d1d0b | type |
Screw the Rules, I'm Doing What's Right! | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_440d1d0b | comment |
Screw the Rules, I'm Doing What's Right!: Though Fred genuinely believes Kris is the real deal and attempts to put up a legitimate case, he has nothing against using unprofessional guilt trips and manipulation of the sentimentality of Christmas to hinder prosecution (perhaps most blatantly his Courtroom Antic of using the opposing lawyer's own son to prevent him stating his claim). He ends up Hoist by His Own Petard by the ending, where he and Doris are left buying Susan's dream house thanks to Kris. On his first day, Kris is given a list of overstocked toys that the store wants him to "push" on indecisive children. His biggest concern with this request is where to throw the scraps of paper away after tearing it up, and once on the job he immediately starts directing parents to buy the toys their children want (and only to buy them at Macy's if they genuinely have the best offer). | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_440d1d0b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_440d1d0b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_440d1d0b | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_44f5d199 | type |
Pretty in Mink | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_44f5d199 | comment |
Pretty in Mink: Doris has a fur coat. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_44f5d199 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_44f5d199 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_44f5d199 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_4a8c4e5f | type |
Big "WHAT?!" | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_4a8c4e5f | comment |
Big "WHAT?!": Shellhammer's reaction when Doris informs him that she's fired Kris, right after Mr. Macy got done congratulating them on hiring him. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_4a8c4e5f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_4a8c4e5f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_4a8c4e5f | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_534bc834 | type |
Escalating War | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_534bc834 | comment |
Escalating War: Appropriately for a Christmas icon, Kris manipulates Gimbel's and Macy's into an Escalating War of goodwill. Kris's campaign of putting customer needs before profits (even sending parents to buy toys at competing stores as long as it's what they want) gets Macy's such good PR that Gimbel's decides to put it into practice in all their stores across the country. Macy's responds in kind. Flash forward and soon the two bitter rivals are shaking hands under Kris's guidance, and handing him large amounts of money to help him buy much-needed medical equipment for a home for the elderly. All so they can prove they're each more generous and benevolent than the other. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_534bc834 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_534bc834 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_534bc834 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_544b2bff | type |
Signature Item Clue | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_544b2bff | comment |
Signature Item Clue: At the end of the movie, Kris's cane is seen inside the house that Susan insists is her Christmas present, convincing Fred that Kris really is Santa Claus. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_544b2bff | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_544b2bff | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_544b2bff | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_56515a39 | type |
Artistic License – History | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_56515a39 | comment |
Artistic License – History: This movie, like the 1947 version, depicts a fictional R.H. Macy in the present. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_56515a39 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_56515a39 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_56515a39 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_56723175 | type |
Adaptation-Induced Plot Hole | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_56723175 | comment |
Adaptation Induced Plothole: This remake was close enough to the original to have to credit the original film's screenwriter, but sometimes it introduces plot points from the original version without explaining them at all. Susan makes Kris promise to get her a house without him even asking her to get him an unusual present. She also never explains why she wants it, though she eventually asks Kris if he can hook up Bill with her mother so they can share the house together. The little girl that doesn't speak English and is reached out to by Kris is now a child of Spanish-speaking parents. However, as even the film points out, a man who speaks Spanish in New York City (especially when the Spanish-speaking residents were sky-rocketing) isn't that unusual, whereas a man speaking Dutch in 1947's New York was. Susan's practical attitude and lack of imagination are never explained. Karen talks about the "Santa Syndrome" once, but the idea that she was deliberately shielding her daughter from fairy tales or fantasies for her own good is dropped. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_56723175 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_56723175 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_56723175 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_570f2124 | type |
Minor Injury Overreaction | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_570f2124 | comment |
Minor Injury Overreaction: All three films have a scene where Kris finally snaps and strikes out at the person who antagonized him. The antagonist then pretends to be far more seriously hurt than they really are to get Kris arrested and committed. All that really changes is the antagonist and the method of striking out: In 1947, Kris thumps Sawyer in the head with a cane. In 1973, Kris shoves a pie into Sawyer's face. And for some strange reason, despite there being witnesses that saw Sawyer needlessly provoke Kris and nobody in their right mind would suspect serious injury from a cream pie...they still believe Sawyer's crocodile tears. In 1994, the character of Sawyer is dropped altogether. Instead, Kris strikes Tony Falacchi, who was the drunken Santa at the beginning of the film. Wanting revenge against Kris for taking his job, Tony conspires with the agents of a rival store to get rid of Kris. He baits Kris into attacking him by accusing him of being a pedophile (yes, really). | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_570f2124 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_570f2124 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_570f2124 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_5a36f8bc | type |
Not His Sled | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_5a36f8bc | comment |
Not His Sled: The "proof" of Santa isn't hard proof at all, but instead a point that because the US Government endorses God on its money simply through faith in his existence, the judge is able to proclaim Kris is Santa through faith alone as well. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_5a36f8bc | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_5a36f8bc | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_5a36f8bc | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_5a3b8032 | type |
The Un-Reveal | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_5a3b8032 | comment |
The Unreveal: Surprisingly, the movies do not definitively answer whether or not Kris is really Santa Claus. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_5a3b8032 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_5a3b8032 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_5a3b8032 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_5ceb9939 | type |
Alcohol Hic | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_5ceb9939 | comment |
Alcohol Hic: The Santa that was originally supposed to be in the parade. He got this way under the excuse that he was using it to "keep warm". | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_5ceb9939 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_5ceb9939 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_5ceb9939 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_5f0546a2 | type |
The Scrounger | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_5f0546a2 | comment |
The Scrounger: Kris knows where to find anything. And not just toys — he delivers a rather expensive piece of medical equipment to a doctor who wanted it. Considering that both Mr. Macy and Mr. Gimbel had offered earlier to help Kris procure the medical equipment through their respective stores "at cost", this is not hard to believe. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_5f0546a2 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_5f0546a2 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_5f0546a2 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_6269a4b3 | type |
Psycho Psychologist | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_6269a4b3 | comment |
Psycho Psychologist: The Mr. Sawyer character of the 1947 and 1973 versions is a rather mild case compared to others in this category. In 1947, he's simply employed by Macy's to give employment tests, but envisions himself as a great psychiatrist and enjoys using that status to bully others. He quickly comes to hate Kris due to his passing the psychiatric exam and then turning it around on him, and later tries to have Kris committed both as revenge on him and also to prevent him from telling Mr. Macy about Sawyer's practicing psychiatry without a license on the premises. He gets his come-uppance when Macy just fires him anyway during the trial. In this version he's counterbalanced by the much-nicer and more level-headed Dr. Pierce, who, while an MD and not a Psychologist, specializes in Geriatrics and is an expert on senility and dementia. In 1973, Sawyer just thinks Kris is a fascinating case study and when his first exam doesn't go well, he plots to have Kris committed so he can have another chance to perform a psychiatric examination on him. Kris turns this around on him by deliberately failing the exam to force him into a public trial where he can prove his ideals to the world. Sawyer gets fired again. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_6269a4b3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_6269a4b3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_6269a4b3 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_62f9d08e | type |
Freeze-Frame Bonus | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_62f9d08e | comment |
Freeze-Frame Bonus: The card with Kris's employee details would probably be this in a modern film, but it's averted. The shot showing what's written on the card is held for a few seconds so that the audience can easily read it all, even though it is mostly gags that aren't necessary to the plot. Freeze framing was, of course, impossible for viewers in 1947. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_62f9d08e | featureApplicability |
-1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_62f9d08e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_62f9d08e | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_6f352846 | type |
Bags of Letters | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_6f352846 | comment |
Bags of Letters: Used to help Kris win his trial, and also used in every adaptation save the 1994 version due to the fame of the original sequence. The 1947 version of the scene is also a frequent target of parody. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_6f352846 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_6f352846 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_6f352846 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_7315fd38 | type |
Covers Always Lie | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_7315fd38 | comment |
Covers Always Lie: Early pressings of the Blu-Ray had covers promising a new, colorized version inside. The disc actually contains only the original black-and-white version, as well as some extra features. (20th Century Fox had previously sold colorized versions on VHS and DVD.) Despite the film taking place around the Christmas season, Fox executive Darryl Zanuck was pushing this film for a May release due to his belief that films got better box office grosses during the summer months. As a result, the posters for the film were mainly centered around the romance between Doris and Fred, which isn't even hinted at until near the end. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_7315fd38 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_7315fd38 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_7315fd38 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_7a555627 | type |
Honest Corporate Executive | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_7a555627 | comment |
Honest Corporate Executive: While Mr. Macy comes off as much more profit obsessed, he still behaves in the same way - once its pointed out to him that he can actually increase his profits through customer goodwill, he is enthusiastically behind it. He also supports Kris in much the same way. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_7a555627 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_7a555627 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_7a555627 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_7abd339f | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_7abd339f | comment |
On the other hand, the trial plot is played more idealistically than the original, with a more blatant Black and White Morality. The satire of using the innocence of Christmas for guilt trips or to serve more cynical or selfish ends is underplayed greatly in favour of the court and public genuinely believing in Kris. The ending is also less comedically bittersweet than the original, with Fred and Doris being given the house as a gift from Kris rather than being exasperated into buying it themselves out of guilt. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_7abd339f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_7abd339f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_7abd339f | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_7d89315b | type |
"The Reason You Suck" Speech | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_7d89315b | comment |
"The Reason You Suck" Speech: Right before smacking Sawyer, Kris delivers one to him after learning he intentionally forced a Guilt Complex on Alfred just for trying to be a Nice Guy. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_7d89315b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_7d89315b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_7d89315b | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_823c6e3e | type |
LargeHam | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_823c6e3e | comment |
Large Ham: David Doyle is cartoonishly over the top as Mr. Macy in this version. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_823c6e3e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_823c6e3e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_823c6e3e | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_83a55c8e | type |
Napoleon Delusion | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_83a55c8e | comment |
Napoleon Delusion: Kris is assumed by the other characters to be suffering this. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_83a55c8e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_83a55c8e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_83a55c8e | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_863fa679 | type |
What Happened to the Mouse? | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_863fa679 | comment |
What Happened to the Mouse?: The film never really addresses if Cole's financial situation was resolved or not. One good Christmas would hardly be enough to save it, and Kris not going to Bellevue wouldn't save the store. It would, at best, delay a hostile takeover from Shopper's Express. Although, the woman who first alerts store staff to their Santa sending parents elsewhere for toys does state that she will be shopping at Cole's for everything she needs from now on. Presumably, others feel the same kind of store loyalty. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_863fa679 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_863fa679 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_863fa679 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_8b9c057e | type |
Ethnic Menial Labor | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_8b9c057e | comment |
Ethnic Menial Labor: The beginning of the film briefly shows a black housekeeper named Cleo preparing the Thanksgiving dinner when Dorothy returns from the parade. Cleo was played by an uncredited Theresa Harris, who had a long career that included many roles as maids. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_8b9c057e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_8b9c057e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_8b9c057e | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_950bbfa7 | type |
Take a Third Option | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_950bbfa7 | comment |
Take a Third Option: Twist on this: Fred's Courtroom Antic has put the prosecutor in the position of admitting before an open court and his son that there is no Santa Claus. The prosecutor responds by basically saying, "Okay, maybe there is a Santa Claus, but that's not the point. The point is this man claims to be Santa Claus. So, prove to this court that he is." In so doing, he actually manages to steer the case back on point and put Fred on the defensive. And he almost wins. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_950bbfa7 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_950bbfa7 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_950bbfa7 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_978937d6 | type |
Brand X | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_978937d6 | comment |
Brand X: The department store is changed to the fictional "Cole's" in this version of the film as Macy's, which was already having financial troubles at the time of production, refused to have their name used in the film when they discovered that the store's financial problems were an important plot point. Likewise, because Gimbels closed their store in 1987, the rival department store was also fictional. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_978937d6 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_978937d6 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_978937d6 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_98aaf983 | type |
Comically Small Bribe | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_98aaf983 | comment |
Comically Small Bribe: Averted. To avoid any allegations he was bribed by the one dollar Susan had put into her Christmas card for him, he announces to the court the dollar will be returned. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_98aaf983 | featureApplicability |
-1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_98aaf983 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_98aaf983 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_99244825 | type |
Screen-to-Stage Adaptation | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_99244825 | comment |
Screen-to-Stage Adaptation: The story was musicalized in 1963 (by Meredith Willson, of The Music Man fame) as Here's Love. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_99244825 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_99244825 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_99244825 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_99e87707 | type |
When You Coming Home, Dad? | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_99e87707 | comment |
When You Coming Home, Mom?: In this version, Karen Walker is constantly berated for the amount of overtime she works and the lack of time she spends with her daughter. Quite a feat in a film created in the 1970s when working moms were increasingly common, especially compared to the 1940s. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_99e87707 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_99e87707 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_99e87707 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_9bb0dcc5 | type |
Saving the Orphanage | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_9bb0dcc5 | comment |
Saving the Orphanage: This version has saving Cole's as a subplot, whereas in the other versions Mr. Macy certainly wants a successful Christmas shopping season, but the store isn't actually in any kind of trouble. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_9bb0dcc5 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_9bb0dcc5 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_9bb0dcc5 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_9e9af83b | type |
Middle-Management Mook | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_9e9af83b | comment |
Middle-Management Mook: Landberg has a pair of flunkies to do his evil bidding of framing Kris. However, at the end of the film, its shown that they quietly had a change of heart when they both flash "I Believe" buttons at each other. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_9e9af83b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_9e9af83b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_9e9af83b | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_a65288e2 | type |
Ascended Extra | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_a65288e2 | comment |
Ascended Extra: While in the other versions, the drunk Santa the Kris replaces is a nameless comic relief that only appears in one scene, in this version he is promoted to the role of being a minor antagonist hired by Landbergh to stop Kris. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_a65288e2 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_a65288e2 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_a65288e2 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_ac06a60c | type |
Think of the Children! | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_ac06a60c | comment |
Think of the Children!: A mild example; when Doris first asks Kris to substitute for the drunken Santa whom she had just fired, he initially refused, then pauses and says, "The children mustn't be disappointed," before agreeing to become Macy's new Santa. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_ac06a60c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_ac06a60c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_ac06a60c | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_acf33d00 | type |
Nice Job Fixing It, Villain | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_acf33d00 | comment |
Nice Job Fixing It, Villain!: Mr. Sawyer's insistence that Macy's avoid bad publicity for committing Kris to the insane asylum gives Fred Gailey the idea to rally public opinion behind his client. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_acf33d00 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_acf33d00 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_acf33d00 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_ad1db87c | type |
Oh, Crap! | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_ad1db87c | comment |
Oh, Crap!: Doris has this reaction after Mr. Macy has heartily congratulated her on hiring Kris. She'd just gotten through firing him. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_ad1db87c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_ad1db87c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_ad1db87c | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_b327e120 | type |
Courtroom Antic | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_b327e120 | comment |
Courtroom Antic: Fred Gailey's work in the hearing such as arguing Kris is sane because he is the one and only Santa Claus (as legitimized by the post office sending him what would otherwise be dead letter mail; also Fred entering this evidence at the eleventh hour in a very disruptive fashion), putting the prosecutor's son on the stand to make him concede a legal point and of course the parade of mailbags at the end. Justified in that the Judge was worried about the political fallout from this hearing if he was forced to rule against Kris and was more than willing to give Gailey as much chance to legitimately win as he can. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_b327e120 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_b327e120 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_b327e120 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_b5b3599d | type |
Amoral Attorney | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_b5b3599d | comment |
Amoral Attorney: Unlike the original, the prosecutor in this film is in the pocket of Victor Landberg. Thus he spends all of his time openly belittling Kris, to the point where he causes Susan to have an outburst in the middle of the courtroom over his over the top nastiness. Although he curiously becomes a Punch-Clock Villain the instant everything is resolved, even somewhat nicely requesting Kris makes sure he stops by on Christmas Eve, suggesting that - much like Landberg's henchmen - he was merely doing what he was doing because he was employed to. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_b5b3599d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_b5b3599d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_b5b3599d | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_c129ee65 | type |
Kids Play Matchmaker | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_c129ee65 | comment |
Kids Play Matchmaker: Susan wants a father for Christmas and encourages Kris Kringle to help her get one. In the modern version, she is much more personally active in trying to set up her mother and the nice neighbor. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_c129ee65 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_c129ee65 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_c129ee65 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_c54d550d | type |
Novelization | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_c54d550d | comment |
Novelization: Adapted by Valentine Davies from his original story and published in conjunction with the 1947 film. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_c54d550d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_c54d550d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_c54d550d | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_c914e68d | type |
Cigar Chomper | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_c914e68d | comment |
Cigar Chomper: Charlie, Judge Harper's campaign manager, is never seen without a cigar in his mouth (though, as he points out to the guard in court, it isn't lit). | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_c914e68d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_c914e68d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_c914e68d | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_cb70651c | type |
Maybe Magic, Maybe Mundane | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_cb70651c | comment |
Maybe Magic, Maybe Mundane: None of the adaptations ever explicitly declare Kris to be Santa, though the 1947 and 1973 versions hint at some truth to it via The Stinger when Kris' cane appears in the new house that he shouldn't have ever been able to visit. The 1973 happy couple just laughs it off, but in 1947, Fred about has a heart attack. The 1994 version is much more leaning towards the "magic" than the "mundane", and also delivers a line from Kris to the prosecutor at the end of the trial that is basically an admission of it ( he asks if the prosecutor did anything about his TV antenna, since Kris tore his pants on it last Christmas.) The 1973 version also watches Kris go into some detail about some obviously obscure details about a certain character's childhood. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_cb70651c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_cb70651c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_cb70651c | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_cbe687ab | type |
Corrupt Corporate Executive | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_cbe687ab | comment |
Corrupt Corporate Executive: Unlike the original film and its remakes, in which Kris was really up against the cynicism of modern society, this movie drops that entirely and provides this type of character as a straight-forward villain. Here, the Lex Luthor-esque chief executive of Shopper's Express, Victor Landberg, wants nothing more than to buy out his rival Cole's and close them down and will stop at nothing to crush all who oppose him. This includes such evil acts as...giving children toys for free! Oh, and staging a ridiculously elaborate plan to have Kris framed for assault and committed. He even tries to buy the court off by bribing the prosecutor and implying that he tries to buy off the judge. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_cbe687ab | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_cbe687ab | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_cbe687ab | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_d08595d3 | type |
Broken Bird | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_d08595d3 | comment |
Broken Bird: Doris raises Susan without fairy tales or fantasies of any kind due to the heartbreak of her own failed marriage. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_d08595d3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_d08595d3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_d08595d3 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_d129e13e | type |
"Eureka!" Moment | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_d129e13e | comment |
Eureka Moment: When Bryan privately berates the Judge over how the case against Kris is going, and the likelihood Kris is going to be put into the asylum, Bryan holds up money declaring greed has destroyed the idea of Santa Claus. The judge coolly states his hands are bound by the law and would take an out if presented, but he cannot. When he walks away, Bryan notices the phrase "In God We Trust" placed upon the money and sees the legal out he can give the judge. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_d129e13e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_d129e13e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_d129e13e | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_d6e495b2 | type |
Undisclosed Funds | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_d6e495b2 | comment |
Undisclosed Funds: When Macy gives Kris a bonus, the amount is not mentioned, but Kris does a double-take and says, "Ooh, that's quite a lot of money!" Gimbel looks at the check and remarks, "I didn't think you were that generous." | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_d6e495b2 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_d6e495b2 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_d6e495b2 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_dc057cf3 | type |
Adaptation Name Change | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_dc057cf3 | comment |
Adaptation Name Change: Once again, the names changed up. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_dc057cf3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_dc057cf3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_dc057cf3 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_dca70c44 | type |
Reasonable Authority Figure | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_dca70c44 | comment |
Reasonable Authority Figure: Dr. Pierce, the geriatrician who runs the assisted-living home Kris stays in at the beginning of the movie. While he doesn't believe Kris to be Santa Claus, and is upfront about the fact that this belief is a delusion brought on by senility, he points out that this delusion doesn't make him dangerous or dysfunctional, and Kris is capable of holding down a job. Curiously, this is one of the bigger narrative hints that Kris might actually not be Santa (all other authority figures who say he's not are strawmen you're meant to disagree with) and he's absent from most other adaptations. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_dca70c44 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_dca70c44 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_dca70c44 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_dcbe8a6e | type |
Chekhov's Gunman | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_dcbe8a6e | comment |
Chekhov's Gunman: The elderly man with his grandson Kris meets crossing the street in the first five minutes of the movie would end up being the judge of Kris' trial. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_dcbe8a6e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_dcbe8a6e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_dcbe8a6e | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_e031b7ef | type |
Slave to PR | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_e031b7ef | comment |
Slave to PR: Complicates matters for several people at the public hearing over Kris' identity, since no one wants to claim Santa Claus doesn't exist, especially not in front of children. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_e031b7ef | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_e031b7ef | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_e031b7ef | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_e10d2a27 | type |
Yes, Virginia | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_e10d2a27 | comment |
Yes, Virginia: Susan's plot arc revolves around whether she can believe in Santa (as well as using her imagination). | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_e10d2a27 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_e10d2a27 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_e10d2a27 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_e1311c40 | type |
RomancingTheWidow | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_e1311c40 | comment |
Romancing the Widow: Or the divorcee at least. In the 1947 version, Fred Gailey admits he was spending so much time with Susan because he hoped being friendly to her would help him to meet her mother. Bill Schafner in 1973 doesn't have any ulterior motives in befriending Susan, but does start to romance her mother once they meet up. In 1994, although Bryan and Dorey are already dating before the movie begins, we do get evidence that this trope is still in effect - especially given Dorey's sudden cold shoulder when Bryan proposes marriage. All three films portray the romance as necessary for the divorcee to learn to love and believe in others again. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_e1311c40 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_e1311c40 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_e1311c40 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_e5fd8bc2 | type |
Hate Sink | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_e5fd8bc2 | comment |
Hate Sink: Mr. Sawyer. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_e5fd8bc2 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_e5fd8bc2 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_e5fd8bc2 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_e861b43d | type |
Puppet Shows | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_e861b43d | comment |
Puppet Shows: In 2010, the Macy's store in New York premiered a 30-minute marionette musical based on this movie. Interestingly, it added a Framing Device with an elderly Susan recalling her encounters with Kris, and addressed the Hollywood Law issue mentioned above by having the postal workers assist Fred in his final testimony. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_e861b43d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_e861b43d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_e861b43d | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_eb8ec7c8 | type |
Jerkass | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_eb8ec7c8 | comment |
Jerkass: Mr. Sawyer, the supposed psychologist. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_eb8ec7c8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_eb8ec7c8 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_eb8ec7c8 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_f165cf2c | type |
Last-Second Word Swap | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_f165cf2c | comment |
Last-Second Word Swap: Mr. Shellhammer comes up with the idea of getting his wife drunk to make her more receptive at taking in Kris as a boarder, and tells Doris he'll call when his wife is "plaster — er, feeling better." | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_f165cf2c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_f165cf2c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_f165cf2c | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_f2a5f7f2 | type |
Expospeak Gag | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_f2a5f7f2 | comment |
Expospeak Gag: A lot of the prosecution's case involves translating the Santa mythos into pompous-sounding legalese to attempt to discredit it. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_f2a5f7f2 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_f2a5f7f2 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_f2a5f7f2 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_f4edd0ac | type |
In Mysterious Ways | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_f4edd0ac | comment |
In Mysterious Ways: Santa's ways prove to be less mysterious than you'd think, if Kris is any indication. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_f4edd0ac | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_f4edd0ac | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_f4edd0ac | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_f8e010ce | type |
Evil Cannot Comprehend Good | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_f8e010ce | comment |
Evil Cannot Comprehend Good: Sawyer openly believes that the only reason Alfred likes playing Santa, or that Kris claims to be Santa, is because they are both delusional. As far as he's concerned, anyone who's that nice has be harboring a severe guilt complex. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_f8e010ce | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_f8e010ce | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_f8e010ce | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_fccd06b6 | type |
Beware the Nice Ones | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_fccd06b6 | comment |
Beware the Nice Ones: Kris is normally a very nice man... but Mr. Sawyer manages to provoke him into attacking him with his cane in the original. In 1973, this was diminished to a pie to the face. | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_fccd06b6 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_fccd06b6 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_fccd06b6 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_name | type |
ItemName | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_name | comment |
||
Miracle on 34th Street / int_name | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_name | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Miracle on 34th Street | hasFeature |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_name | |
Miracle on 34th Street / int_name | itemName |
Miracle on 34th Street |
The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.
Copyright of DBTropes.org wrapper 2009-2013 DFKI Knowledge Management. Imprint. - Thanks to Bakken&Baeck for hosting. Contact.
Copyright of data TVTropes.org contributors under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.
Copyright of data TVTropes.org contributors under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.