Follow TV Tropes

Following

History Film / GoodbyeMissTurlock

Go To

OR

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* LastDayOfSchoolPlot: It's the ''last'' day of school, in that the old one-room schoolhouse is closing down, and Miss Turlock is retiring. Her old students going back decades come to see her off.


Added DiffLines:

* OffIntoTheDistanceEnding: Ends with Miss Turlock slowly walking away from the old schoolhouse.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* WholeEpisodeFlashback: As the film opens the schoolhouse is long-closed and crumbling. The film cuts back some decades to show when it was in use as a one-room schoolhouse.

Added: 4

Changed: 6

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Short films use quotes, feature-length films use italics.


''Goodbye, Miss Turlock'' is a 1947 short film (ten minutes) directed by Edward Cahn.

to:

''Goodbye, "Goodbye, Miss Turlock'' Turlock" is a 1947 short film (ten minutes) directed by Edward Cahn.



--> "Goodbye, Miss Turlock. School's out at last."

to:

--> "Goodbye, Miss Turlock. School's out at last.""
----
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mv5byjllzwq3njgtmzk3ms00nzrkltk3yjgtmgnjnje2njkyzguzxkeyxkfqcgdeqxvymjayodg1oa_v1.jpg]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


It was written, produced, and narrated by John Nesbitt as part of his ''Passing Parade'' series of film shorts for MGM. This one deals with what was even then a vanishing institution: the rural one-room schoolhouse. As Nesbitt explains in his narration, the building of a highway system has made the one-room schoolhouse obsolete, as it is now more efficient to bus the kids in tiny rural communities to larger schools in towns. The film regards this with melancholic nostalgia, focusing on one particular one-room schoolhouse, and on Miss Turlock, an OldMaid schoolteacher who spent decades helping to raise the children of one little town.

to:

It was written, produced, and narrated by John Nesbitt as part of his ''Passing Parade'' series of film shorts for MGM. This one deals with what was even then a vanishing institution: the rural one-room schoolhouse. schoolhouse. As Nesbitt explains in his narration, the building of a highway system has made the one-room schoolhouse obsolete, as it is now more efficient to bus the kids in tiny rural communities to larger schools in towns. towns. The film regards this with melancholic nostalgia, focusing on one particular one-room schoolhouse, and on Miss Turlock, an OldMaid schoolteacher who spent decades helping to raise the children of one little town.



* BratsWithSlingshots: The boy called "Irish" doesn't even have a slingshot, but he improvises with a rubber band and his two fingers, successfully landing a spitball on Miss Turlock's blackboard. He gets detention.
* {{Narrator}}: No dialogue, but instead John Nesbitt narrating, as he always did in the ''Passing Parade'' shorts. Here he is a student in one of Miss Turlock's classes.
* OldMaid: Miss Turlock, spending her life doing one of the few jobs available to women, raising a whole community of children. (Naturally the film does not stop to consider the sexism in this trope.)

to:

* BratsWithSlingshots: The boy called "Irish" doesn't even have a slingshot, but he improvises with a rubber band and his two fingers, successfully landing a spitball on Miss Turlock's blackboard. He gets detention.
* {{Narrator}}: No dialogue, but instead John Nesbitt narrating, as he always did in the ''Passing Parade'' shorts. Here he is a student in one of Miss Turlock's classes.
* OldMaid: Miss Turlock, spending her life doing one of the few jobs available to women, raising a whole community of children. (Naturally the film does not stop to consider the sexism in this trope.)



* OldSchoolBuilding: The short begins and ends with shots of the crumbling, abandoned schoolhouse. At the end Nesbitt muses about how eventually it will be forgotten entirely.

to:

* OldSchoolBuilding: The short begins and ends with shots of the crumbling, abandoned schoolhouse. At the end Nesbitt muses about how eventually it will be forgotten entirely.



--> "Goodbye, Miss Turlock. School's out at last."

to:

--> "Goodbye, Miss Turlock. School's out at last."
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

''Goodbye, Miss Turlock'' is a 1947 short film (ten minutes) directed by Edward Cahn.

It was written, produced, and narrated by John Nesbitt as part of his ''Passing Parade'' series of film shorts for MGM. This one deals with what was even then a vanishing institution: the rural one-room schoolhouse. As Nesbitt explains in his narration, the building of a highway system has made the one-room schoolhouse obsolete, as it is now more efficient to bus the kids in tiny rural communities to larger schools in towns. The film regards this with melancholic nostalgia, focusing on one particular one-room schoolhouse, and on Miss Turlock, an OldMaid schoolteacher who spent decades helping to raise the children of one little town.

----
!!Tropes:

* BratsWithSlingshots: The boy called "Irish" doesn't even have a slingshot, but he improvises with a rubber band and his two fingers, successfully landing a spitball on Miss Turlock's blackboard. He gets detention.
* {{Narrator}}: No dialogue, but instead John Nesbitt narrating, as he always did in the ''Passing Parade'' shorts. Here he is a student in one of Miss Turlock's classes.
* OldMaid: Miss Turlock, spending her life doing one of the few jobs available to women, raising a whole community of children. (Naturally the film does not stop to consider the sexism in this trope.)
--> "Maybe spinster Turlock wasn't so alone and so childless after all."
* OldSchoolBuilding: The short begins and ends with shots of the crumbling, abandoned schoolhouse. At the end Nesbitt muses about how eventually it will be forgotten entirely.
* {{Schoolmarm}}: Miss Turlock, the OldMaid variant of the country schoolteacher, beloved by generations of students.
* TimeShiftedActor: Miss Turlock's last day teaching school sees a bunch of grown-up former students come to her class, including the mother of four who was the pretty girl everyone fought over, or the grown man who was "Irish", the boy shooting the spitball.
* TitleDrop: The last line of narration.
--> "Goodbye, Miss Turlock. School's out at last."

Top