あらすじ
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Commentary (films not included). Pages: 26. Chapters: Avalon High (film), A Man Called Sarge, Bach's Fight for Freedom, Crimes of Fashion, Full-Court Miracle, Girl vs. Monster, Going to the Mat, Hatching Pete, Kart Racer, Paradise (1982 film), Riverworld (2010 film), RocketMan, Taking Liberty, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles III, The Cutting Edge 3: Chasing the Dream, The Initiation of Sarah (2006 film), The Return of the Shaggy Dog, The Scream Team, Twitches (film), Twitches Too, WarGames: The Dead Code. Excerpt: A Man Called Sarge is a 1990 American parody film, written and directed by Stuart Gillard, starring Gary Kroeger, Marc Singer, Gretchen German and introducing a young Natasha Lyonne. Set during the World War II North African Western Desert Campaign, it follows a misadventurous squad of French Foreign Legion deserters, led by their charismatic Sarge, who set out across the Sahara desert to strike a blow on the Nazi-occupied city of Tobruk. The humour is built on slapstick and verbal puns, in the fashion of comedy filmmaking trio Zucker, Abrahams and Zucker, spoofing a variety of classic war movies - notably Casablanca - and the stereotypes of the genre. Sarge (Gary Kroeger), the anti-hero protagonist, is a patriot with an over-the-top John Wayne persona. The antagonist, General Von Kraut (Marc Singer), is a derogatory portrayal of a Nazi commander - extremely evil, perverted and a poor decision maker - emphasized by his name, as kraut is often used as a pejorative term for German soldiers. Furthermore, Sarge's group of misfit soldiers include a Native American, a New York Jew, a hillbilly and a French officer in the style of Maurice Chevalier. A memorable moment in the movie is when Miss Sadie (Gretchen German), a naive mission school teacher, sings a song called "Jesus was a Black Dude," with a full gospel choir, to the...