Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Film / TheShopAroundTheCorner

Go To

1[[quoteright:340:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/the_shop_around_the_corner.jpeg]]
2
3''The Shop Around the Corner'' is a 1940 film directed by Creator/ErnstLubitsch.
4
5This classic RomanticComedy features [[Creator/JimmyStewart James Stewart]] and Margaret Sullavan as bickering co-workers at a leather goods store, who are also ([[ObliviousToLove unbeknownst to them]]) pen pals in love. Set in Budapest, Hungary, since it was adapted from the 1937 play ''Parfumerie'' by Hungarian author Miklós László.
6
7Remade in 1949 as the {{musical}} film ''Film/InTheGoodOldSummertime'', starring Creator/JudyGarland and Creator/VanJohnson and set in Chicago in the early 1900s. Adapted as the Broadway musical ''Theatre/SheLovesMe'' in 1963. Remade yet again in 1998 as ''Film/YouveGotMail'' with Creator/TomHanks and Creator/MegRyan, employing such newfangled technology as ''email'' and ''instant messaging''.
8
9----
10!!This film features examples of:
11
12* AcquaintedInRealLife: Bitter coworkers ignorant of the fact that they are each other's pen pal.
13* AdaptationTitleChange: ''The Shop Around the Corner'' is adapted from the play ''Parfumerie''.
14* BelligerentSexualTension: Between the two leads.
15* BrutalHonesty:
16-->'''Miss Novak''': Mr. Kralik, I don't like you.
17* ButHeSoundsHandsome:
18** Played straight when Miss Novak receives a letter from the "Dear Friend", who says he saw her with Mr. Kralik at the restaurant. "Who is this very attractive young man? He's just the type women fall for."
19** Subverted later when Kralik pretends that he met Miss Novak's "Dear Friend," and ''insults him.'' before TheReveal. She admits then she'd long hoped it would be him.
20* ClassyCane: Vadas is seen carrying one halfway through the movie. The implication is that he upped his social status thanks to becoming Ms. Matuschek's GoldDigger.
21* TheComicallySerious: A Lubitsch trademark, in that everyone in the film is this, except for Vadas (who isn't actually funny but who wears a perpetual smirk.) Critic David Thomson notes that Kralik and Miss Novak in particular are almost entirely humourless, which just makes them funnier.
22* ContrivedCoincidence: Where does Klara find a job in Budapest? The store where her anonymous pen pal works.
23* DatingServiceDisaster: Two anonymous pen pals fall in love with each other, then meet in real life (without realizing that they're pen pals) and hate each other.
24* DelayedReaction: In the final scene, when Kralic reveals that he knows about the post office box 237, it takes Klara a few seconds of talking before she realizes what he just said.
25* DramaticIrony: From the point Kralik knows who his "Dear Friend" is, and Miss Novak doesn't.
26* ExpospeakGag: When Pepi describes his profession to the doctor:
27-->'''Pepi:''' I'm a contact man. I keep contact between Matuschek & Co and the customers - on a bicycle.
28-->'''Doctor:''' You mean an errand boy.
29-->'''Pepi:''' Doctor, did I call you a pill-peddler?
30* ExtremeDoormat: Pirovich is willing to let the boss insult him to his face rather than risk losing his job. When he overhears Mr. Matuschek asking the workers for "their honest opinion", he turns tail and flees into the stockroom.
31* FaintInShock: Klara collapses when she learns that Mr. Kralik is now managing the store.
32* FoodPorn: When Mr. Matuschek invites errand boy Rudy to share Christmas dinner with him:
33-->'''Matuschek''': Rudy, do you like chicken noodle soup?
34-->'''Rudy''': I certainly do, Mr. Matuschek.
35-->'''Matuschek''': And what would you think of roast goose stuffed with baked apples, and fresh boiled potatoes in butter, and some red cabbage on the side, huh?
36-->'''Rudy''': I'd love it!
37-->'''Matuschek''': And then some cucumber salad with sour cream...
38-->'''Rudy''': Oh, Mr. Matuschek!
39* FourthDateMarriage: Back then it didn't seem hard to imagine becoming engaged over the weekend to a man you have never even met face-to-face. Of course, they have written to each other for some time by that point.
40* TheFriendNoOneLikes: Even before the revelations that he's the one having an affair with Mrs. Matuschek, Vadas is this, largely due to his [[SycophanticServant sycophantic]], smarmy behavior. However, he appears not to recognize this, and is thus very surprised when nobody comes to his defense after Kralik fires him.
41* GoldDigger: Vadas, who is bleeding Mrs. Matuschek (and thus her husband) for money and favors.
42* GrewASpine: The perpetually nervous and non-confrontational Pirovich finally confronts Mr. Matuachek to call him out for unexpectedly firing Kralik. While he eventually backs down after Matuschek threatens his job too, it's telling how much he cares for his friend that he was willing to do it in the first place.
43* HappilyFailedSuicide: At the hospital, Mr. Matuschek thanks Pepi for saving his life when he [[InterruptedSuicide stopped his suicide attempt]].
44* HiddenDepths: Kralik is brusque and businesslike, and Miss Novak can be blunt, but they're both deeply sensitive people underneath their exteriors.
45* ImmediateSelfContradiction: Upon first meeting her, Mr. Matuschek assures Miss Novak that "impossible" is not in the store's vocabulary. When he finds out she's looking for a job, he replies, "Oh no no, that's impossible! Out of the question!".
46* InternalReveal: When Miss Novak finally finds out who her Dear Friend is in the final scene, while the audience found out halfway through.
47* InterruptedSuicide: Mr. Matuschek with a gun (interrupted by Pepi) when he finds out his wife has been [[MistakenForCheating cheating on him with Mr. Vadas instead of Mr. Kralik (as he originally suspected)]]. He does it not so much because of the infidelity itself, but because he feels guilty about suspecting Kralik in the first place, and firing him. However, when he returns from the hospital, the bittersweet pain in his eyes at being welcomed "Home" by his employees shows that he knows that the workplace has become more of a home to him than his actual house.
48* LastNameBasis: The shop workers all address each other as "Mr. _____" or "Miss _____". Kralik does start privately calling Miss Novak "Klara" once he begins to care for her, though.
49* LivingWithTheVillain: Or at least working with him/her.
50* LoveBeforeFirstSight: The two leads fall in love through written letters, and had exchanged the first few before Miss Novak arrives at the shop looking for a job.
51* MarriedToTheJob: Mr. Matuschek. Even more so after he discovers his wife has been cheating on him.
52* MatchCut: Pepi opens the front door to the shop, followed immediately by Kralik opening the office door.
53* MeanBoss: Mr. Matuschek crosses into this a little bit through the early part of the movie, although he undergoes something of a HeelFaceTurn after surviving his suicide attempt, winding up as something almost like a TeamDad.
54* MistakenForCheating: Inverted; Mr. Matuschek knows that his wife is cheating with one of his employees and comes to the conclusion that it is Mr. Kralik. It's really Mr. Vadas.
55* NotEvenBotheringWithTheAccent: Despite the film being set in Budapest, director Lubitsch recommended the actors use their native accents to encourage a more naturalistic performance.
56* PenPals: Alfred and Klara fall in love through anonymous pen pal letters.
57* RepeatingSoTheAudienceCanHear: Since we never hear the other end of Mr. Matuschek's phone conversations, he repeats the content so the audience can follow along.
58* RunningGag: Whenever Matuschek asks for someone's "honest opinion", Pirovich leaves the room.
59* ShapedLikeItself: Why Miss Novak likes the music box.
60-->'''Miss Novak''': Well, cigarettes and music, I don't know. It makes me think of moonlight. And cigarettes. And music.
61* SmugSnake: Vadas.
62* StoodUp: Kralik didn't intend to stand Miss Novak up--but he loses his job. And then she's particularly cruel to him at the restaurant after he comes in and sits at her table. So he goes home without revealing himself. Miss Novak takes being StoodUp very badly.
63* SugaryMalice: Vadas likes to make insinuating comments and then points out that he did not technically say anything wrong when the other person gets defensive.
64* TechnoBabble:
65-->'''Doctor:''' It appears to be an acute epileptoid manifestation and a pan-phobic melancholiac with indication of a neurasthenia cords.
66-->'''Pepi:''' Is that more expensive than a nervous breakdown?
67* ThinksLikeARomanceNovel: Miss Novak eventually tells Kralik that she had a crush on him from the start and was rude to him because she'd been reading a book where a glamorous French stage actress made herself irresistible to admiring men [[PlayingHardToGet by treating them like dogs]]--but that only worked because she was a glamorous French stage actress rather than a shop clerk.
68* TheThirties: Technically from 1940, but the feeling is much more Depression-era '30s than WWII-era '40s: Matuschek worries about money, Miss Novak desperately needs a job, and Kralik is less than overjoyed by the prospect of having to look for another one. When they have the best sales day in years Matuschek remarks that it was the best since '28.[[note]]Plus, of course, no Nazis in sight.[[/note]] (The play on which it was based premiered in 1937.)
69* TookALevelInJerkass: Though already a bit full of himself, Pepi's holiday promotion to sales clerk puffs him up even further, prompting him to throw his weight around with the new delivery boy Rudy.
70* TranslationConvention: They live in Hungary, after all. [[note]]What language they were meant to actually speak is a trickier question than it may look at first glance. Judging by their surnames, Matuschek, Kralik, Novotny, Kaczek and Novak seem to be Slovaks or (somewhat less probably) Czechs, not Hungarians. (In fact, the only one who has an unambiguously Hungarian name is Ferenc; Pepi's surname is Hungarian, but the diminutive name is of Slavic origin, though it might be just a nickname given to him by the Slavic-speaking staff.) It's possible that they spoke Slovak or Czech among themselves, but Hungarian (or even German, at the time popular among upper classes of Budapest and something of lingua franca for the region) with the other staff and the customers. [[/note]]
71* TrueCompanions: Mr. Matuschek says that Kralik is [[LikeASonToMe like a son to him]]. Also, he takes the new delivery boy home for Christmas Eve dinner after discovering that both of them are spending the holiday alone.
72* {{Tsundere}}: Miss Novak to Kralik. One of the most well known early examples in fiction (Type 2 to be exact), [[LampshadeHanging Lampshaded]] when she said she read a book that tells her that if you [[KickTheDog treat a man like a dog]] he'll be eating out of your hand but all he did [[TheDogBitesBack was return the favor]].
73* TwoPersonLoveTriangle: Between Klara, her all-too-flawed BelligerentSexualTension co-worker Kralik, and her ideal lover, the anonymous pen pal "Dear Friend"--who is also Kralik.
74* TheUnseen: Mrs. Matuschek never makes an appearance. The closest we come is phone conversations where we don't hear her voice.
75* UnseenPenPal: Alfred Kralik and Klara Novak correspond through letters after answering a Lonely Hearts ad in the newspaper, calling each other "Dear Friend". However, when the two unknowingly meet in real life as work colleagues, they get off on the wrong foot. When the pen pals agree to meet in person and Alfred realizes the truth first, he lashes out, while also not telling her who he is so that she thinks she was stood up. However, he realizes his mistake and decides to woo Klara in real life while also undermining his Dear Friend persona, so that she won't be as upset as he was when he finally tells her. [[spoiler:It works so well that Klara is actually relieved when he reveals himself, since she no longer has to worry about choosing between them.]]
76* XanatosSpeedChess: How Miss Novak manages to get a job with Matuschek. She sees a customer examining the cigarette box and pretends to be a clerk, commenting that it's a lovely box. The customer asks if it's a candy box, and Miss Novak, seeing that the customer wants it to be one, says that it is. She then opens it, demonstrating that it plays a tune. The customer thinks that this is a terrible idea. ("Imagine, every time you take a piece of candy, you have to listen to that song.") Miss Novak agrees but says that that's precisely what's ''good'' about it; noticing that the customer herself is a bit overweight, she says "There's no denying that we all have a weakness for candy" and explains that they designed the box in such a way that it plays a tune to remind you that you're about to eat yet another piece ("This little box makes you candy-conscious.") The customer asks how much it is, and Miss Novak quotes her a price which is more than they were planning to sell it at, adding that it's reduced from twice as much again. The customer buys it. Miss Novak gets hired.
77* YouExclamation: During the InternalReveal at the end, Klara softly voices a surprised "You!?"

Top