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On Guard

 On Guard
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 On Guard
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On Guard
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On Guard (French title Le Bossu, literally The Hunchback) is a 1997 French swashbuckler film. It is an adaptation of Paul Féval's novel Le Bossu, directed by Philippe de Broca.In France in the year 1700, a skilled and eager swordsman named Lagardère (Daniel Auteuil) challenges Duke Philippe de Nevers (Vincent Perez) to a sparring session in order to learn his secret lethal trick known as the "Botte de Nevers". Nevers agrees and quickly wins. Nevers then learns that he has a child by Blanche de Caylus, a fact previously concealed by his cousin and would-be heir, the wicked Count of Gonzague (Fabrice Luchini), who's deeply jealous of him and has an unrequited love for Blanche.That night Nevers escapes an assassination attempt by Gonzague's men, who paid a naive Lagardère to join them. Lagardère refuses to kill Nevers, and the latter spares his life, hiring him as trusted companion on the road to Caylus for his marriage instead, teaching him his lethal trick along the way. Gonzague has all the Caylus wedding's guests slaughtered and stabs Nevers in the back, leaving Nevers' baby girl Aurore orphan and heir to his wealth, and it's up to Lagardère to raise and protect her and avenge Nevers, which will take sixteen years.Two other notable theatrical film versions of the novel were made, one in 1944 starring Pierre Blanchar and one in 1959, Le Bossu, starring Jean Marais. Television saw a two-part miniseries in 2003, titled Lagardère and starring Bruno Wolkowitch.
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2024-02-15T00:30:11Z
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2024-02-15T00:30:12Z
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Dropped link to HistoricalDomainCharacter: Not a Feature - IGNORE
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DBTropes
 On Guard / int_121b3725
type
Age Lift
 On Guard / int_121b3725
comment
Age Lift: At the beginning in 1699, all the characters looks older than their age from the novel, but the most egregious case is the Regent Philippe d'Orléans — he was 25 in 1699, while his actor Philippe Noiret was 67.
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On Guard / int_121b3725
 On Guard / int_1235f055
type
Dirty Coward
 On Guard / int_1235f055
comment
Dirty Coward: Gonzague is a Non-Action Big Bad and a such does everything he can to avoid direct confrontation with Lagardère when he is eventually cornered. When faced with no other choice, he takes Aurore as Human Shield with a knife on her throat and fights dirty against Lagardère, not being a fencer.
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 On Guard / int_132d93f1
type
Human Shield
 On Guard / int_132d93f1
comment
Gonzague doesn't used Aurore as a Human Shield in the novel's climax when he's eventually cornered.
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On Guard / int_132d93f1
 On Guard / int_15b2cab3
type
Tempting Fate
 On Guard / int_15b2cab3
comment
Tempting Fate: Nevers lies out in stark terms exactly what Gonzague's motive for murder is early in the movie:
 On Guard / int_15b2cab3
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On Guard / int_15b2cab3
 On Guard / int_17a606bd
type
Master Swordsman
 On Guard / int_17a606bd
comment
Master Swordsman: Nevers is one of the best swordsmen in the kingdom when the story starts (hence why his cousin prefers stabbing him In the Back, seeing how useless his mooks are against him), and Lagardère wants to learn from him. Lagardère himself has become this through Cocardasse's teachings, and needs only a few more tricks, the Botte de Nevers especially.
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On Guard / int_17a606bd
 On Guard / int_1843bf38
type
Visionary Villain
 On Guard / int_1843bf38
comment
Visionary Villain: Gonzague sees himself as this: other than Blanche's love, his main obsession throughout the film are the French territories on the Mississippi river, which he constantly needles his cousins Nevers and the Duke of Orléans to develop (through him). Unfortunately, he isn't nearly as good at it as he thinks and constantly skims money off the top to support his lifestyle. This has left him nearly bankrupt, and having to resort to market manipulations to boost his fortune... which allows Lagardère, who by now has infiltrated his inner circle, to reroute all the stocks he's buying to Aurore, leaving him completely bankrupt and her with a fortune. However, Gonzague way of bouncing back from the brink of bankrupcy is - while based on a scam - a solid, well-executed plan. It's just that he's Out-Gambitted by Lagardère. He is, after all, based on John Law of the infamous Mississippi bubble.
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 On Guard / int_19769f50
type
Defeat Means Friendship
 On Guard / int_19769f50
comment
Defeat Means Friendship: Lagardère was part of a bunch of hired swords send to assassinate Nevers. Since he's more interested in the duke's fencing technique rather than the payment for the job and Nevers recognises him from earlier once he easily overpowers Lagardère, he offers him a new deal. Rather than trying to kill him, Lagardère will escort him to his wife-to-be and maybe learn something on the way. Not only the men bond quickly over their short stint together, Lagardère shows Undying Loyalty by spending sixteen years on avenging Nevers.
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 On Guard / int_1b70ccc6
type
The Cynic
 On Guard / int_1b70ccc6
comment
The Cynic: Gonzague is oozing with misanthropic remarks about nobility, common people, investors into his company...
 On Guard / int_1b70ccc6
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 On Guard / int_1b73fada
type
The Dandy
 On Guard / int_1b73fada
comment
The Dandy: Nevers chases both fashion trends and ladies, although that doesn't make him any less manly nor badass.
 On Guard / int_1b73fada
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On Guard / int_1b73fada
 On Guard / int_1d2400e9
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Green-Eyed Monster
 On Guard / int_1d2400e9
comment
Green-Eyed Monster: Gonzague envies Nevers his title, his wealth, his looks and the affection of Blanche (along with Blanche herself), never stopping to scheme against his cousin, as he's the direct inheritor of all his possessions unless Aurore is legally made his heir.
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On Guard / int_1d2400e9
 On Guard / int_1daa7fce
type
In the Back
 On Guard / int_1daa7fce
comment
For all that you can say against Gonzague, he's very good at averting this. The second he has a shot at his cousin, he kills him, even if it means stabbing him In the Back. Later in the movie, when his men have cornered Lagardère, his chief henchman demands permission to duel him to the death himself. Instead, Gonzague simply grabs the henchman's pistol and shoots Lagardère at point blank range. It ultimately doesn't kill him, but not for lack of trying.
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On Guard / int_1daa7fce
 On Guard / int_1dfd19f9
type
Papa Wolf
 On Guard / int_1dfd19f9
comment
Papa Wolf: Lagardère grows very protective towards Aurore (his de facto adoptive daughter), as he swore to protect her to her dying father. He also displays shades of Love-Obstructing Parents, as he's against her engagement with just about anyone, and especially a lowly member of the acting troupe they travel with.
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 On Guard / int_23a1e2a9
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Adaptation Deviation
 On Guard / int_23a1e2a9
comment
Adaptation Deviation: Lagardère doesn't have a sparring session with Nevers at the fencing school in the novel. In the novel, the Regent Philippe d'Orléans doesn't visit the fencing school of Cocardasse and Passepoil, nor does he comically trip in an ill-advised sparring session against Lagardère (which doesn't occur). Lagardère's origin here, having been found as a baby in the ruins of the Castle of Lagardère (hinting at noble origins), being raised by Cocardasse and Passepoil and growing up as a Street Performer. None of it is from the novel. He gets knighted by Nevers here, while in the novel he's clearly been a noble since birth and the ruin of his family is never mentionned. If one's to take the sequel and prequel novels written by Paul Féval's son as canon, Lagardère was indeed orphaned — his parents were killed on the orders of the Duke of Mantua, but he was found and raised by a village's priest in it and met Cocardasse and Passepoil later. In the film, Lagardère mentions that he was briefly a soldier and killed his colonel in a Duel to the Death as a result of seducing the colonel's wife. None of this is from the novel. There's only one Assassination Attempt on Nevers in the novel (and it succeeds), there are two in this film. In the novel, it's Cocardasse and Passepoil who are recruited by Gonzague for the Assassination Attempt on Nevers, not Lagardère himself. Rather Lagardère learns about the conspiracy from them and jumps in to help Nevers. Also, he doesn't duel Nevers in the novel, nor does he end up at the mercy of Nevers, who nearly kills him in the film. Lagardère and Nevers have never been friends in the novel, rather Nevers is a Worthy Opponent Lagardère wanted to fight in a duel to learn his secret fencing trick at first, before becoming his avenger right upon his murder, while in the film they gradually become friends on the way to Caylus. Lagardère never accompanies Nevers to Caylus in the novel also. In the novel and previous adaptations, Gonzague is a guest at the castle of the Marquess of Caylus. Here, he's not invited and leads his men (with his face covered) when they commit the massacre at the wedding. There's no wedding party in the novel, and no ensuing massacre either. The old Marquess of Caylus gets a Death by Adaptation here. Upon escaping, Lagardère briefly contemplates giving Aurore away to good people who would raise her before firmly becoming her Parental Substitute himself once they're sheltered by the Commedia dell'Arte troupe. At no point in the novel does such a thought occur to him. Lagardère and Aurore don't hide in an Italian Commedia dell'Arte theatre troupe for sixteen years in the novel nor do they become actors in it, they go to Spain (which is the case in the 1959 version). They never go to Spain in this version. Aurore getting the Adaptational Badass treatment by learning the Botte de Nevers fencing trick. Gonzague doesn't used Aurore as a Human Shield in the novel's climax when he's eventually cornered.
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 On Guard / int_2ae29c0d
type
The Dreaded
 On Guard / int_2ae29c0d
comment
The Dreaded: When Gonzague orders his first hunchback secretary to summon Peyrolles, the hunchback pronounces his name in fear and shudders a bit before going away
 On Guard / int_2ae29c0d
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On Guard / int_2ae29c0d
 On Guard / int_2b5ab7c1
type
Analogy Backfire
 On Guard / int_2b5ab7c1
comment
Analogy Backfire: When all else fails and it looks like the court is about to let Lagardère kill him, Gonzague appeals to his cousin the Regent to save him, invoking their blood ties. The Regent isn't impressed:note Gonzague's plea might work better if it hadn't just been established that he himself had murdered their cousin
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On Guard / int_2b5ab7c1
 On Guard / int_2d394bcb
type
Commedia dell'Arte
 On Guard / int_2d394bcb
comment
Lagardère and Aurore don't hide in an Italian Commedia dell'Arte theatre troupe for sixteen years in the novel nor do they become actors in it, they go to Spain (which is the case in the 1959 version). They never go to Spain in this version.
 On Guard / int_2d394bcb
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 On Guard / int_2dddd99d
type
False Flag Operation
 On Guard / int_2dddd99d
comment
False Flag Operation: When Peyrolles kills Gonzague's first hunchback, he makes sure to plant the tip of his sword between the hunchback's eyes so as to make Gonzague think someone (Lagardère) performed the Botte de Nevers to kill him.
 On Guard / int_2dddd99d
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On Guard / int_2dddd99d
 On Guard / int_33981caf
type
Street Urchin
 On Guard / int_33981caf
comment
Street Urchin: This version of Lagardère wasn't noble by birth, he grew up in the streets.
 On Guard / int_33981caf
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 On Guard / int_33c2b1e2
type
Best Served Cold
 On Guard / int_33c2b1e2
comment
Best Served Cold: It takes sixteen years to Lagardère to avenge Nevers, clear his own name and give Nevers' stolen wealth and titles back to Aurore. Granted, much of it is just because he waited till Aurore had significantly grown up.
 On Guard / int_33c2b1e2
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 On Guard / int_33d5b7f2
type
Adapted Out
 On Guard / int_33d5b7f2
comment
Adapted Out: Like in the 1959 film, some of the novel's historical domain characters are absent, including Cardinal Guillaume Dubois and Tsar Peter the Great.
 On Guard / int_33d5b7f2
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On Guard / int_33d5b7f2
 On Guard / int_362bdb30
type
Out-Gambitted
 On Guard / int_362bdb30
comment
However, Gonzague way of bouncing back from the brink of bankrupcy is - while based on a scam - a solid, well-executed plan. It's just that he's Out-Gambitted by Lagardère. He is, after all, based on John Law of the infamous Mississippi bubble.
 On Guard / int_362bdb30
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On Guard / int_362bdb30
 On Guard / int_384986f4
type
We Will Meet Again
 On Guard / int_384986f4
comment
We Will Meet Again: Lagardère, to a masked Gonzague:
 On Guard / int_384986f4
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On Guard / int_384986f4
 On Guard / int_3a6cebbd
type
Circus Brat
 On Guard / int_3a6cebbd
comment
Lagardère, who was orphaned at birth, grew up as a Circus Brat, and when we meet him is working as a sometimes hired thug. This causes some friction in his initial contacts with the nobility: he has no table manners as Nevers understands the term, and can't bring himself to lose a fencing match even when his uncles warn him that it's not his place to beat the Regent of France. He adapts pretty quickly, however, especially once he's responsible for Nevers' orphaned daughter: he makes it his mission in life to restore her to her proper status, tries to raise her as a lady, and doesn't want her marrying a commoner.
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 On Guard / int_3c0a4666
type
Noodle Incident
 On Guard / int_3c0a4666
comment
In the film, Lagardère mentions that he was briefly a soldier and killed his colonel in a Duel to the Death as a result of seducing the colonel's wife. None of this is from the novel.
 On Guard / int_3c0a4666
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 On Guard / int_3f11ef74
type
Parental Substitute
 On Guard / int_3f11ef74
comment
Upon escaping, Lagardère briefly contemplates giving Aurore away to good people who would raise her before firmly becoming her Parental Substitute himself once they're sheltered by the Commedia dell'Arte troupe. At no point in the novel does such a thought occur to him.
 On Guard / int_3f11ef74
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On Guard / int_3f11ef74
 On Guard / int_403b6f3
type
Fainting
 On Guard / int_403b6f3
comment
Fainting: During the first Assassination Attempt on Nevers, Lagardère (who recognizes him and drops any intent to kill unlike the other mooks) reveals himself to Nevers and they fight. Nevers rapidly neutralizes him with his botte, pointing the tip of his sword between Lagardère's eyes and interrogating him. Lagardère ends up fainting, though Nevers spares his life upon realizing he's capable of Undying Loyalty.
 On Guard / int_403b6f3
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On Guard / int_403b6f3
 On Guard / int_4604fd4d
type
Worthy Opponent
 On Guard / int_4604fd4d
comment
Lagardère and Nevers have never been friends in the novel, rather Nevers is a Worthy Opponent Lagardère wanted to fight in a duel to learn his secret fencing trick at first, before becoming his avenger right upon his murder, while in the film they gradually become friends on the way to Caylus. Lagardère never accompanies Nevers to Caylus in the novel also.
 On Guard / int_4604fd4d
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On Guard / int_4604fd4d
 On Guard / int_48c99e19
type
Death by Adaptation
 On Guard / int_48c99e19
comment
Death by Adaptation: The old Marquess of Caylus and pretty much the whole Caylus household bar the Marquess' daughter aren't killed in the novel (there's no wedding party in the novel).
 On Guard / int_48c99e19
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On Guard / int_48c99e19
 On Guard / int_48d87e94
type
Planet of Steves
 On Guard / int_48d87e94
comment
Planet of Steves: There's not less than three Philippes in the film — the Duke of Nevers, Gonzague and the Regent d'Orléans.
 On Guard / int_48d87e94
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On Guard / int_48d87e94
 On Guard / int_48da1453
type
Gender Reveal
 On Guard / int_48da1453
comment
Gender Reveal: Lagardère initially thinks Nevers' baby is a boy (Nevers didn't have time to tell him anything other than "Take care of my child" before dying) initially, only to find out it's a girl when changing her diapers.
 On Guard / int_48da1453
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On Guard / int_48da1453
 On Guard / int_49fb5ccb
type
Combat Pragmatist
 On Guard / int_49fb5ccb
comment
Combat Pragmatist: Aside his iconic, flashy moves, Nevers isn't above fighting dirty or throwing a dagger at a guy he can't reach with his sword. Lagardère doesn't really care about being stylish or honourable - he goes for a kill or quick "win" during training duels. Even if the latter means offending the Duke of Orléans in the process. Louis-Joseph is a big, strong guy. He punches, kicks and throws people around when fighting. Gonzague as well (see Why Don't You Just Shoot Him? below). Probably the best way for him as he has no real fighting experience or ability.
 On Guard / int_49fb5ccb
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On Guard / int_49fb5ccb
 On Guard / int_4db42cf3
type
Male Frontal Nudity
 On Guard / int_4db42cf3
comment
Male Frontal Nudity: There's a scene at the showers of the fencing school at the beginning when Gonzague leaves the school, with several men being completely naked and their genitals being visible.
 On Guard / int_4db42cf3
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 On Guard / int_5037b961
type
Et Tu, Brute?
 On Guard / int_5037b961
comment
Et Tu, Brute?: Upon being stabbed by his cousin Gonzague, Philippe de Nevers lets a "You!" Exclamation out and calls him a traitor.
 On Guard / int_5037b961
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On Guard / int_5037b961
 On Guard / int_50d71a78
type
Dual Wielding
 On Guard / int_50d71a78
comment
Dual Wielding: During the first Assassination Attempt on him, Nevers grabs a dead mook's sword in addition to his own and fights with both of them with deadly efficiency.
 On Guard / int_50d71a78
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 On Guard / int_53136954
type
Book Dumb
 On Guard / int_53136954
comment
Book Dumb: Nevers actually never bothered to learn how to read, and asks Lagardère to read him the letter Blanche de Caylus sent him. Then Lagardère's slow reading of the letter indicates he hasn't fully mastered the written French language.
 On Guard / int_53136954
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 On Guard / int_53f5119f
type
The Dragon
 On Guard / int_53f5119f
comment
Gonzague is always assisted by a hunchback (working as his head accountant) and his dragon is suffering from unspecified deformity, making him look like a burn victim. This is how eventually Lagardère gets close to him - after the first hunchback gets accidently killed, Gonzague organizes a casting for replacement.
 On Guard / int_53f5119f
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 On Guard / int_62434fe2
type
Sanity Slippage
 On Guard / int_62434fe2
comment
Sanity Slippage: Gonzague's Smug Snake facade slowly comes apart over the last third of the movie as the setbacks keep piling up. The last straw comes in front of the royal court, when Lagardère challenges him to a duel and he takes refuge in the laws prohibiting duels, only for the Regent to suspend the law and accept "the judgment of God." Gonzague panics, begs, and finally grabs a hostage, none of which does him any good.
 On Guard / int_62434fe2
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 On Guard / int_637b6123
type
Sickening "Crunch!"
 On Guard / int_637b6123
comment
Sickening "Crunch!": Whenever the Botte de Nevers is performed, it involves cracking (if not breaking) the opponent's arm, with an audible cracking sound.
 On Guard / int_637b6123
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On Guard / int_637b6123
 On Guard / int_663f35c0
type
Only One Name
 On Guard / int_663f35c0
comment
Only One Name: Lagardère is a noble in pretty much all of the other versions of Le Bossu (the minor nobility title of Chevalier, translating as "Knight") and has a full name in them, Henri de Lagardère. Here he is just called "Lagardère", as he is not a noble when the story starts.
 On Guard / int_663f35c0
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On Guard / int_663f35c0
 On Guard / int_675056e4
type
Signature Move
 On Guard / int_675056e4
comment
Signature Move: The Botte de Nevers fencing trick, which results in the enemy being impaled on the forehead between the eyes if well executed. Nevers passes it onto Lagardère, who later teaches it to Aurore.
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 On Guard
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On Guard / int_675056e4
 On Guard / int_6beacd8c
type
Badass and Baby
 On Guard / int_6beacd8c
comment
Badass and Baby: When fighting alongside Nevers, Lagardère carries baby Aurore for a moment.
 On Guard / int_6beacd8c
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_6beacd8c
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_6beacd8c
 On Guard / int_6fbe85e6
type
Adaptation Personality Change
 On Guard / int_6fbe85e6
comment
Adaptation Personality Change: Lagardère is made more impetuous at the start of the film than he is at the start of the novel.
 On Guard / int_6fbe85e6
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_6fbe85e6
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_6fbe85e6
 On Guard / int_71bd62b9
type
Calling Your Attacks
 On Guard / int_71bd62b9
comment
Calling Your Attacks: Rare, justified example. Aurore is by no means a trained fencer, so when she's facing Louis-Joseph, she recites from memory every step of the lethal technique she was taught, further adding to the confusion of her opponent.
 On Guard / int_71bd62b9
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_71bd62b9
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_71bd62b9
 On Guard / int_736d791f
type
Adaptational Badass
 On Guard / int_736d791f
comment
Adaptational Badass: Aurore never fights in the novel, while here Lagardère teaches her some fencing. While she's far from being a perfect fencer in the film, when she has to defend herself from Louis-Joseph she shockingly manages to pull off the Botte de Nevers trick on him.
 On Guard / int_736d791f
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_736d791f
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_736d791f
 On Guard / int_73f8d546
type
Working-Class Hero
 On Guard / int_73f8d546
comment
Working-Class Hero: Lagardère, who was orphaned at birth, grew up as a Circus Brat, and when we meet him is working as a sometimes hired thug. This causes some friction in his initial contacts with the nobility: he has no table manners as Nevers understands the term, and can't bring himself to lose a fencing match even when his uncles warn him that it's not his place to beat the Regent of France. He adapts pretty quickly, however, especially once he's responsible for Nevers' orphaned daughter: he makes it his mission in life to restore her to her proper status, tries to raise her as a lady, and doesn't want her marrying a commoner. Once he's been knighted, a third of the way through the movie, he's no longer this trope. However, he's still forced to live as one for sixteen years in order to stay under Gonzague's radar.
 On Guard / int_73f8d546
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_73f8d546
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_73f8d546
 On Guard / int_790b1e6
type
Nasty Party
 On Guard / int_790b1e6
comment
Nasty Party: The guests of Nevers' and Blanche's wedding (including Blanche's father) are all slaughtered by Gonzague and his men.
 On Guard / int_790b1e6
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_790b1e6
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_790b1e6
 On Guard / int_7cc8d769
type
Sore Loser
 On Guard / int_7cc8d769
comment
Sore Loser: The Duke of Orléans visits the fencing school of Cocardasse and Passepoil where Lagardère trains at the beginning and gets offered a new sword by Nevers. He insists on duelling someone, and Lagardère volunteers. The Duke is older and Lagardère makes sure not to hurt him, but then he charges foolishly, slips and collapses on the ground, causing some hilarity among the fencing pupils. The Duke gets up and gets annoyed, and insists that he slipped because of a "macaroon". In a less comical vein, Gonzague. The entire plot stems from his anger at Nevers for having been chosen by Blanche over himself. Clearly, murder and usurpation were the sensible response.
 On Guard / int_7cc8d769
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_7cc8d769
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_7cc8d769
 On Guard / int_7cf2f728
type
Boomerang Bigot
 On Guard / int_7cf2f728
comment
Boomerang Bigot: A minor example. Aurore, now a teenager, seems to be getting close to one of the boys in the group of traveling performers she's grown up with. This troubles Lagardère greatly, who says in no uncertain terms that he doesn't want her marrying "a street performer" - the exact term he'd used earlier to describe himself in his younger years.
 On Guard / int_7cf2f728
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_7cf2f728
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_7cf2f728
 On Guard / int_86b21114
type
Badass Boast
 On Guard / int_86b21114
comment
Badass Boast: As in all of the book's adaptations, Lagardère throws one to Gonzague: "Si tu ne viens pas à Lagardère, Lagardère ira à toi!" ("If you don't come to Lagardère, Lagardère will come to you!").
 On Guard / int_86b21114
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_86b21114
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_86b21114
 On Guard / int_895ec17
type
Only in It for the Money
 On Guard / int_895ec17
comment
Only in It for the Money: What Nevers thinks Gonzague is. It's not entirely true - Gonzague has pettier and arguably more important motivations, like his jealousy towards his cousins - but money's never far from his mind, and it's his main professional activity. Nevers averts this, believing that people of their rank should be men of action and above such crude concerns, and doesn't think much of his cousin for thinking otherwise: Lagardère accepts to become a hired sword at the beginning, only to throw it all out of the window once he recognizes the target as Nevers.
 On Guard / int_895ec17
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_895ec17
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_895ec17
 On Guard / int_90d44f44
type
Karmic Death
 On Guard / int_90d44f44
comment
Karmic Death: Considering all the crimes he committed against the Nevers family, it's fitting that Gonzague perishes by the very personal fencing trick of the cousin he murdered.
 On Guard / int_90d44f44
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_90d44f44
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_90d44f44
 On Guard / int_9ba281f0
type
Knighting
 On Guard / int_9ba281f0
comment
Knighting: Nevers knights Lagardère shortly before they arrive in Caylus.
 On Guard / int_9ba281f0
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_9ba281f0
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_9ba281f0
 On Guard / int_a21d8982
type
Assassination Attempt
 On Guard / int_a21d8982
comment
In the novel, it's Cocardasse and Passepoil who are recruited by Gonzague for the Assassination Attempt on Nevers, not Lagardère himself. Rather Lagardère learns about the conspiracy from them and jumps in to help Nevers. Also, he doesn't duel Nevers in the novel, nor does he end up at the mercy of Nevers, who nearly kills him in the film.
 On Guard / int_a21d8982
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_a21d8982
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_a21d8982
 On Guard / int_a53be897
type
The Cavalier Years
 On Guard / int_a53be897
comment
The Cavalier Years: The film is set at the very beginning of the 18th century, which saw the end of King Louis XIV's reign and Philippe d'Orléans' Regency.
 On Guard / int_a53be897
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_a53be897
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_a53be897
 On Guard / int_aa07ca54
type
Obfuscating Disability
 On Guard / int_aa07ca54
comment
Obfuscating Disability: As in all versions, upon returning to Paris with Aurore, Lagardère disguises himself as a hideous hunchback to gain Gonzague's trust and successfully infiltrate his household, hence the title — according to a superstitious belief in France at the time, touching a hunchback's back is supposed to make you lucky. Daniel Auteuil's face makeup was far less complex than that of Jean Marais in the 1959 version, consisting simply in a fake nose and a wig, necessitating much less time to prepare for the filming.
 On Guard / int_aa07ca54
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_aa07ca54
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_aa07ca54
 On Guard / int_abe4d7b
type
Blue Blood
 On Guard / int_abe4d7b
comment
Lagardère's origin here, having been found as a baby in the ruins of the Castle of Lagardère (hinting at noble origins), being raised by Cocardasse and Passepoil and growing up as a Street Performer. None of it is from the novel. He gets knighted by Nevers here, while in the novel he's clearly been a noble since birth and the ruin of his family is never mentionned. If one's to take the sequel and prequel novels written by Paul Féval's son as canon, Lagardère was indeed orphaned — his parents were killed on the orders of the Duke of Mantua, but he was found and raised by a village's priest in it and met Cocardasse and Passepoil later.
 On Guard / int_abe4d7b
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_abe4d7b
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_abe4d7b
 On Guard / int_ac344349
type
Three-Month-Old Newborn
 On Guard / int_ac344349
comment
Three-Month-Old Newborn: Newborn Aurore clearly isn't played by a newborn, particularly visible when Lagardère shows her a flower.
 On Guard / int_ac344349
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_ac344349
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_ac344349
 On Guard / int_ad94c7a0
type
Scars Are Forever
 On Guard / int_ad94c7a0
comment
Scars are Forever: While Lagardère never saw the face of Nevers' killer, he branded his left hand. Not only Gonzague wears a glove on that hand for the rest of the story to conceal the mark, it is eventually used as a proof he's the killer of Nevers in the end.
 On Guard / int_ad94c7a0
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_ad94c7a0
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_ad94c7a0
 On Guard / int_aed65980
type
All for Nothing
 On Guard / int_aed65980
comment
All for Nothing: Gonzague wants Nevers' wife, has him killed, and becomes her guardian, only to find that she has no interest in him or anyone but her dead husband, even after sixteen years. He wants Nevers' fortune, and inherits it after his murder, but ends up mismanaging it through corruption to the point that he's nearly broke (and, once Lagardère gives him a little push, completely broke). He wants Nevers' status and respect at the Royal Court of France, but when it's discovered that he gained these through murder and usurpation, the Regent turns against him and effectively signs his death warrant.
 On Guard / int_aed65980
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_aed65980
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_aed65980
 On Guard / int_b36ae36a
type
Collector of the Strange
 On Guard / int_b36ae36a
comment
Collector of the Strange: Gonzague is always assisted by a hunchback (working as his head accountant) and his dragon is suffering from unspecified deformity, making him look like a burn victim. This is how eventually Lagardère gets close to him - after the first hunchback gets accidently killed, Gonzague organizes a casting for replacement. Justified by French superstitions in this era. Touching a hunchback's hump was supposed to bring good luck, which is why we see so many contracts being signed on his back.
 On Guard / int_b36ae36a
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_b36ae36a
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_b36ae36a
 On Guard / int_b4b2a42a
type
Widowed at the Wedding
 On Guard / int_b4b2a42a
comment
Widowed at the Wedding: Blanche de Caylus, as Philippe de Nevers gets killed the very morning after their wedding.
 On Guard / int_b4b2a42a
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_b4b2a42a
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_b4b2a42a
 On Guard / int_b59f6070
type
Confusion Fu
 On Guard / int_b59f6070
comment
Confusion Fu: Aurore fights a little randomly when she's pitted against Gonzague's best swordsman Louis-Joseph. It eventually works in her favor, as she is suddenly in a situation that allows her to perform the lethal trick from her father that Lagardère taught her.
 On Guard / int_b59f6070
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_b59f6070
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_b59f6070
 On Guard / int_b61b755f
type
Tomboy
 On Guard / int_b61b755f
comment
Tomboy: Aurore, by her own admission.
 On Guard / int_b61b755f
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_b61b755f
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_b61b755f
 On Guard / int_b7c53a22
type
Blood Knight
 On Guard / int_b7c53a22
comment
Blood Knight: At the beginning, one of the fencing trainees of Cocardasse and Passepoil gets needlessly violent in his sparring against another trainee as if he wanted to kill him, prompting Passepoil to confiscate his sword and tell him "We learn to survive here sir, if you want to kill go outside!".
 On Guard / int_b7c53a22
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_b7c53a22
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_b7c53a22
 On Guard / int_ba72eebb
type
Waif-Fu
 On Guard / int_ba72eebb
comment
Waif-Fu: Subverted. When Aurore faces Louis-Joseph, he constantly takes advantage of being bigger, heavier and stronger than her, quite literally throwing her around and easily keeping her at distance.
 On Guard / int_ba72eebb
featureApplicability
-0.3
 On Guard / int_ba72eebb
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_ba72eebb
 On Guard / int_bce16d24
type
Why Don't You Just Shoot Him?
 On Guard / int_bce16d24
comment
Why Don't You Just Shoot Him?: For all that you can say against Gonzague, he's very good at averting this. The second he has a shot at his cousin, he kills him, even if it means stabbing him In the Back. Later in the movie, when his men have cornered Lagardère, his chief henchman demands permission to duel him to the death himself. Instead, Gonzague simply grabs the henchman's pistol and shoots Lagardère at point blank range. It ultimately doesn't kill him, but not for lack of trying. In a literal sense, the trope is somewhat justified by the time period. In the early eighteenth century, firearms were much less accurate than they would become, and most of them only allowed one shot before you'd have to reload. This helps explain the number of people who carry swords and use them as their primary weapons.
 On Guard / int_bce16d24
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_bce16d24
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_bce16d24
 On Guard / int_c3c77510
type
There Is Only One Bed
 On Guard / int_c3c77510
comment
There Is Only One Bed: The sequence when Philippe de Nevers and Lagardère have to share a bed on the trip to Caylus. As they get into bed, the Duke comments that his marriage to Blanche will surprise a relative who "thinks I only like boys. Ever dabbled in sodomy?". The unnerved look on Lagardère's face is priceless. So is the way he clutches at the blankets.
 On Guard / int_c3c77510
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_c3c77510
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_c3c77510
 On Guard / int_c772e7c5
type
Rags to Riches
 On Guard / int_c772e7c5
comment
Rags to Riches: Rags to titles, which for this time period is possibly even more important. Lagardère is born an orphan, raised as a circus performer, and by the beginning of the movie is known to work as a hired thug and assassin. He then manages to win Nevers' respect and friendship, soon after which Nevers makes him a knight (though thanks to the events of the movie, he still has to live as a fugitive for sixteen years before he can enjoy it).
 On Guard / int_c772e7c5
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_c772e7c5
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_c772e7c5
 On Guard / int_d500b978
type
Adaptational Wimp
 On Guard / int_d500b978
comment
Adaptational Wimp: Out of all adaptations, it's the one where Gonzague is the least combat-capable, resorting to blinding Lagardère with dirt and using Aurore as a Human Shield.
 On Guard / int_d500b978
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_d500b978
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_d500b978
 On Guard / int_dc057cf3
type
Adaptation Name Change
 On Guard / int_dc057cf3
comment
Adaptation Name Change: Aurore's mother is also named Aurore in the novel. Her name is changed to Blanche here, likely to avoid confusion.
 On Guard / int_dc057cf3
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_dc057cf3
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_dc057cf3
 On Guard / int_dca70c44
type
Reasonable Authority Figure
 On Guard / int_dca70c44
comment
Reasonable Authority Figure: Duke Philippe d'Orléans, Regent of France. He's established early in the movie as a crusty old fart and a Sore Loser, telling a ridiculous lie in order to save face. He also has genuine affection for his cousin Nevers and later for his widow Blanche; when Lagardère shows up at court to accuse Gonzague, he doesn't have him thrown out, but listens to his accusations and, when they prove convincing, withdraws his protection from Gonzague.
 On Guard / int_dca70c44
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_dca70c44
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_dca70c44
 On Guard / int_deea2fb5
type
Idle Rich
 On Guard / int_deea2fb5
comment
Idle Rich: Philippe de Nevers is filthy rich, but managing his numerous businesses bores him to death and he even wants to buy a castle on a whim, to the frustration of his business-savvy cousin Gonzague. It pushes the latter even moreso to kill him so he can inherit it all and manage it the way he wants.
 On Guard / int_deea2fb5
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_deea2fb5
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_deea2fb5
 On Guard / int_dfbf8667
type
Right Under Their Noses
 On Guard / int_dfbf8667
comment
Right Under Their Noses: While organising a manhunt after Lagardère, Gonzague in the same time invites him into his house and makes him his book-keeper, all thanks to a crafty disguise of a hunchback. He's visibly shocked when the charade comes down in the finale.
 On Guard / int_dfbf8667
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_dfbf8667
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_dfbf8667
 On Guard / int_ea51fa45
type
I Never Got Any Letters
 On Guard / int_ea51fa45
comment
I Never Got Any Letters: Gonzague intercepted eleven letters Blanche de Caylus sent to her lover Philippe de Nevers, being jealous of their love affair. Until the day Blanche ordered a messenger to personally give one of her letters to Philippe, which Lagardère intercepts to give it himself to Philippe in exchange for a duel so he can learn the Botte de Nevers. Since Philippe is Book Dumb, he asks the less Book Dumb Lagardère to read the letter, then he's shocked to find out Blanche sent him other letters and he never got them. A very jealous Gonzague, who overheard everything, burns all the eleven letters he kept in a drawer plus the new one afterwards before planning the murder of Philippe.
 On Guard / int_ea51fa45
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_ea51fa45
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_ea51fa45
 On Guard / int_ecac4c42
type
Why Won't You Die?
 On Guard / int_ecac4c42
comment
Why Won't You Die?: Invoked few times by various characters toward Lagardère, as he always seems to end up dead, only to show up again few days later and wreak even more havoc. Gonzague eventually asks one of his assistant what did he do to Lagardère that he refuses to just die after being apparently drown, stabbed, shot and stabbed again, always coming back.
 On Guard / int_ecac4c42
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_ecac4c42
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_ecac4c42
 On Guard / int_eef35d8d
type
A Handful for an Eye
 On Guard / int_eef35d8d
comment
A Handful for an Eye: Gonzague throws dirt in Lagardère's face to distract him during the final fight. Aurore instead tells him where Gonzague is and eventually uses her own voice as a beacon for Lagardère.
 On Guard / int_eef35d8d
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_eef35d8d
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_eef35d8d
 On Guard / int_ef20dac5
type
Servile Snarker
 On Guard / int_ef20dac5
comment
Servile Snarker: For as long as Nevers is alive, Gonzague never stops to be in the same time always at his service (especially when it comes to the duke's wealth), while constantly being one step away from openly berating him. Nevers is too naive to notice.
 On Guard / int_ef20dac5
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_ef20dac5
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_ef20dac5
 On Guard / int_f617419c
type
Trial by Combat
 On Guard / int_f617419c
comment
Trial by Combat: Duke of Orléans decides to make the duel between Lagardère and Gonzague into one of those. Gonzague is quick to point out that God always seem to stand on the side of the stronger and better swordsman.
 On Guard / int_f617419c
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_f617419c
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_f617419c
 On Guard / int_f6b1c9f3
type
"You!" Exclamation
 On Guard / int_f6b1c9f3
comment
"You!" Exclamation: Upon being stabbed to death by his cousin Gonzague, Philippe de Nevers lets one out.
 On Guard / int_f6b1c9f3
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_f6b1c9f3
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_f6b1c9f3
 On Guard / int_f818b637
type
Dude, Where's My Respect?
 On Guard / int_f818b637
comment
Dude, Where's My Respect?: Besides greed and jealousy, Gonzague's main motivator: he resents his cousins' wealth, power, and status, and sees himself as the Only Sane Man managing their fortune and steering it towards intelligent investments, while they get all the credit, live off his hard work, and waste its profits on frivolities. He's not entirely wrong, either; but he's also a hypocrite who, when he inherits his cousin's fortune, turns out to be just as prone to wasting it by spending lavishly and skimming off the top of his business interests.
 On Guard / int_f818b637
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_f818b637
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_f818b637
 On Guard / int_f9876f7e
type
Faking the Dead
 On Guard / int_f9876f7e
comment
Faking the Dead: Lagardère fakes his death and that of baby Aurore with the help of an Italian travelling theatre troupe after escaping the massacre at Caylus.
 On Guard / int_f9876f7e
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_f9876f7e
featureConfidence
1.0
 On Guard
hasFeature
On Guard / int_f9876f7e
 On Guard / int_fff371b4
type
Death Seeker
 On Guard / int_fff371b4
comment
Death Seeker: Being widowed and believing she's outlived Aurore gives Blanche some understandably morbid thoughts right out of the gate when what's believed to be Aurore's corpse is put in a burial vault, although she never attempts to kill herself in the following sixteen years either.
 On Guard / int_fff371b4
featureApplicability
1.0
 On Guard / int_fff371b4
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 On Guard
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On Guard / int_fff371b4
 On Guard / int_name
type
ItemName
 On Guard / int_name
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 On Guard / int_name
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1.0
 On Guard / int_name
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 On Guard
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On Guard / int_name
 On Guard / int_name
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On Guard

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

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Commedia dell'Arte / int_baf21b4c
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Costume Drama / int_baf21b4c
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Films of 1995–1999 / int_baf21b4c
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Knighting / int_baf21b4c
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Royal Rapier / int_baf21b4c
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The Cavalier Years / int_baf21b4c
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There Is Only One Bed / int_baf21b4c