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1[[quoteright:325:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/montreal-screwjob_5557.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:325:''"Ring the '''[[PrecisionFStrike FUCKING]]''' bell!"'']]
3
4->''"Some would say... ''I'' screwed Bret Hart. Wrestling/BretHart would definitely tell you I screwed him. I look at it from a different standpoint...I look at it from the standpoint of the referee did not screw Bret Hart, Wrestling/ShawnMichaels certainly did not screw Bret Hart, nor did Vince [=McMahon=] screw Bret Hart. I truly believe that ''Bret Hart'' screwed Bret Hart. And he can look in the mirror and know that."''
5-->--'''Wrestling/VinceMcMahon'''
6
7The Montreal Screwjob is, without a shadow of a doubt, one of the most important events in the history of the entire {{professional wrestling}} industry.
8
9In 1997, [[Wrestling/{{WWE}} the World Wrestling Federation]] was facing its most heated competition ever in the form of [[Wrestling/{{WCW}} World Championship Wrestling.]] The Wrestling/MondayNightWars were brutally engaged in television-ratings combat, and the Wrestling/NewWorldOrder angle helped give WCW that bit higher ratings than their most direct rival. Wrestling/VinceMcMahon saw some seriously hard times ahead for his promotion, which forced him to make some tough decisions. One of these decisions involved a wrestler named [[Wrestling/BretHart Bret "The Hitman" Hart.]]
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11Hart, at the time, had signed an unprecedented twenty-year contract with the WWF in 1996 that would've seen him collect a considerable amount of money for his services. [=McMahon=] felt he would have to breach Hart's contract in order to keep the company alive as WCW ran roughshod over the WWF. Backstage tensions between Hart and fellow performer Wrestling/ShawnMichaels also didn't help in the Fed's regard. The two men infamously didn't get along, and backstage verbal (and often physical) confrontations between Hart and Michaels were becoming ever-common occurrences. Between the desire to get away from Shawn, and the promised fiscal security of the WCW contract, Bret saw no other choice but to jump ship to WCW. In November 1997, Hart (the then-reigning WWF Champion) signed a contract with WCW for a guaranteed three million dollars per year.
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13Hart's last contractually-obligated appearance on WWF programming would take place at ''Wrestling/SurvivorSeries 1997'' in Montreal. Hart would face off against Shawn Michaels in the main event with the WWF Championship on the line. The WWF hadn't scheduled the show as Hart's last with the company, as his working agreement ran for three weeks after the pay-per-view, and WCW gave him verbal approval to work another event in early December. This December PPV would have likely seen Bret drop the title in a four-way match to either Michaels (if Michaels agreed to lose at Montreal) or another wrestler who would later lose to Michaels (if Michaels refused to job). Shawn refused to lose the ''Survivor Series'' match to Hart under any circumstance. Hart made it clear that he would not lose to Michaels in his native Canada. The exit clause in Hart's aforementioned contract required Bret and Vince come to an agreement on any booking decisions regarding Hart, which left Bret holding all the cards. Michaels and Hart's mutual stubbornness placed [=McMahon=] between the proverbial rock and a hard place.
14
15The original plan for the match's finish (according to Hart) would have seen Michaels use Hart's Sharpshooter submission hold against Hart himself after a ref bump. Once Michaels applied the hold, Hart would reverse it, leading to a few more near-falls. Then, feuding factions Wrestling/DGenerationX (to which Michaels belonged) and the Hart Foundation (to which Hart belonged) would run in, start a huge brawl between the groups, and cause the match to be tossed out on a double-DQ. This ending would leave Hart open to drop the title in the aforementioned four-way match. (Hart briefly discussed simply giving up the title on TV, but at that point, [=McMahon=] had committed to the Screwjob, so he agreed to nearly anything Hart said in order to get Bret to perform at ''Survivor Series''.)
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17However, [=McMahon=] was nervous about sending Hart out of the company as the champion. [=McMahon=] still had some leftover anger concerning then-WWF Women's Champion [[Wrestling/{{Madusa}} Alundra Blayze]] tossing the WWF Women's Championship belt in the trash live on ''WCW Monday Nitro''. [=McMahon=] reportedly feared Hart would show up on WCW programming with the WWF Championship and proceed to do the very same, even though the WWF had filed multiple lawsuits regarding the Blayze incident against WCW. Since Hart had refused to drop the belt to Michaels in Canada, [=McMahon=] had to worry about the possibility of Bret jumping ship with the championship belt.[[note]]This would have been impossible, at least in a legal sense, and both Vince and WCW booker Wrestling/EricBischoff knew that. Not only was Bret still under contract for a short time after the Screwjob, it had been established by then that a wrestling belt is the intellectual property of the promotion that owns it. Not to mention, the belt itself would be stolen property if Hart ever showed up on WCW despite losing or being stripped of the title when he left. ''However'', there was nothing preventing Bischoff from opening up ''Nitro'' the next night with a simple statement of fact: that they had signed '''the reigning WWF champion''' to a contract and he would be appearing on WCW programming in a couple weeks. This would have accomplished pretty much the same thing, only without the lawsuits and possible criminal charges. So even if Hart legally couldn't throw the WWF Championship in the trash on WCW, it was still a possibility that WCW could capitalize on Hart holding the title.[[/note]]
18
19Well, that's the story [=McMahon=] will tell you, anyway. Wrestling critics/historians say the real reason for the Screwjob on [=McMahon=]'s end was money. At the time of ''Survivor Series'' 1997, Hart had been earning just shy of two million dollars per year, making him the highest-paid worker in the WWF (for comparison, Shawn Michaels was earning $750,000 per year). Also at the time, Wrestling/StoneColdSteveAustin and Wrestling/TheUndertaker had new contracts under negotiation with the WWF. When Austin and Taker compared themselves to Hart (meaning they thought they should be paid close to the same amount that Hart was making), that's when [=McMahon=] got ''really'' scared. But whatever the reason might have been -- respect, money, prestige, or something else -- [=McMahon=] knew he had to get the belt off Bret Hart by any means necessary.
20
21And so, Vince hatched a plot on the night of ''Survivor Series''. When Michaels caught Hart in the Sharpshooter submission hold as planned, [=McMahon=] ordered mainstay referee Earl Hebner to ring the bell as if Hart had submitted to the hold, despite Hart clearly having done no such thing. This ended the match, promptly made Michaels the champion, and screwed Hart on his way out of the WWF without a proper send-off.
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23This singular moment became one of the most controversial, shocking, and altogether important events in the history of pro wrestling. The Screwjob sent Hart packing to WCW on very bad terms with the WWF. The event destroyed {{kayfabe}} for many fans around the world after what was going on began to be understood by the general audience. The next night on ''Raw'', [=McMahon=] famously said "Bret screwed Bret" when talking about the incident. While [=McMahon=] thought the audience would see him as [[IDidWhatIHadToDo doing what he had to do]] and hoped the whole thing would blow over with time, [=McMahon=] instead found himself as the most hated man in all of professional wrestling. However, [=McMahon=] decided to [[ThrowItIn just run with it]], using the Screwjob the launching pad for the "Mr. [=McMahon=]" character, an CorruptCorporateExecutive {{heel}} who would handpick his own champions while screwing babyface wrestlers out of matches. [=McMahon=] ended up having a much bigger on-screen role than he could have ever imagined, playing the role of "evil boss" to the hilt as he feuded with Wrestling/StoneColdSteveAustin during the Attitude Era. That feud would come to define both the Era itself and the CorruptCorporateExecutive role in pro wrestling for years to come.[[invoked]]
24
25The Screwjob actually qualifies as HilariousInHindsight when you consider how Hart ''won'' his first title in the WWF. The Hart Foundation (Hart and brother-in-law Jim "The Anvil" Neidhart, with non-relative manager "The Mouth of the South" Wrestling/JimmyHart) defeated the British Bulldogs (Wrestling/DynamiteKid and cousin Wrestling/DaveyBoySmith -- another brother-in-law, though not acknowledged as such at the time) for the [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-world-t.html WWF World Tag Team Titles]] on the 7 February 1987 (taped 26 January) episode of ''WWF Superstars''. Bret and "The Anvil" won due to referee Danny Davis generally ignoring the Harts' constant double-teaming and spending most of the time checking on the injured Dynamite Kid. After the Harts won the match, Davis left with them. It wasn't even the only match of that Survivor Series defined by a massive betrayal either, as the earlier Team Canada vs Team USA match ended in Team USA's loss due to Wrestling/{{Goldust}} walking out on them mid-match with Wrestling/TerriRunnels.
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27Even before the Screwjob became a running gag, other promotions had ''already'' started to parody it. At Wrestling/{{ECW}}'s ''November to Remember '97'' PPV (held a mere ''three weeks'' later), Wrestling/AlSnow -- in the early months of his [[CompanionCube carrying around a mannequin head]] [[TheGimmick gimmick]] -- cut a promo where he said, "I didn't screw the Head. The HEAD SCREWED THE HEAD!" Even ''Creator/ScottKeith'' called it funny.
28
29Bret Hart left the WWF and spent three years [[DemotedToExtra getting bumped about in WCW]] thanks to the company's [[WagTheDirector notoriously-biased booking]] and nobody really knowing what to do with him. This was despite Hart being -- at the time -- ''the hottest free agent in professional wrestling'' (something that ''[=McMahon=] himself'' predicted would happen). The people pressuring Wrestling/EricBischoff, the head of WCW creative at the time, didn't want Hart to get over if he jumped ship. WCW kept Bret on the shelf for over a month before popping a buyrate with the then-considered washed-up Wrestling/RicFlair and being buried in pointless United States Title feuds. After enduring a mule kick by Wrestling/{{Goldberg}} during their World Heavyweight Championship match at ''Starrcade 1999'', Hart suffered a career-ending concussion and retired from in-ring action. A stroke suffered after Hart's retirement has ensured that, save for special circumstances where he doesn't have to take a bump, he'll never perform in the ring again. Following his retirement, Hart had very little love lost for WWF -- thanks both to the Screwjob and the death of his brother [[Wrestling/OwenHart Owen]] at the ''Over the Edge'' PPV in 1999 -- but managed to put his animosity aside to help preserve his legacy. He worked with WWE to produce a DVD set that became widely acclaimed as a great retrospective on his career ([[WhatCouldHaveBeen one that WWE initially planned as a smearjob set called "Screwed"]] until Hart heard about the plans). In 2006, Hart accepted induction into the WWE Hall of Fame, making his first appearance on WWE programming of any kind in nearly a decade to accept the honor. A few years later, Hart signed up again with WWE to ensure a proper and honorable exit from the business (see below).
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31Shawn Michaels spent the next few months as the WWF Champion, but back injuries suffered during a Casket Match with The Undertaker at ''Wrestling/RoyalRumble 1998'' eventually caught up to him. Following his loss to Steve Austin at ''Wrestling/WrestleMania XIV'' (where he performed despite his injury causing him severe pain), Michaels spent the next four years on the shelf, making sporadic appearances for WWE while he slowly healed up. In this interim, Michaels not only admitted that he knew of the plan to screw over Hart, but he became a born-again Christian. Michaels made his return to active competition in 2002, and he remained one of WWE's most popular and skilled performers until his retirement at ''[=WrestleMania=] 26''.
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33In December 2009, Hart confirmed that he would return to WWE in 2010 to guest-host the first ''Raw'' of the year (his first appearance on ''Raw'' in over twelve years), and during that show's opening segment, Hart made his peace with Michaels in the middle of the ring in one of the most surreal moments in wrestling history. He was (kayfabe) attacked by [=McMahon=] at the end of the show, which set up an angle that led up to ''[=WrestleMania=] 26'', where [=McMahon=] faced Hart in a "No Holds Barred" Match. Although [=McMahon=] tried to bribe the rest of the Hart family into screwing Hart over again, they saw through Vince's scheme and double-crossed him, which allowed Hart to finally make [=McMahon=] pay for Montreal (via thirteen chairshots and the Sharpshooter) and receive the full closure he'd been looking for. As part of the angle, Hart's father -- legendary Canadian wrestling promoter/trainer and patriarch of the Hart family, the late Stu Hart -- received a posthumous induction into the WWE Hall of Fame. After ''[=WrestleMania=]'', Bret appeared sporadically to help put over The Hart Dynasty (David Hart Smith, Wrestling/TysonKidd, and [[Wrestling/NatalyaNeidheart Natalya]]) and serve as ''Raw'''s General Manager for a brief period (Wrestling/TheNexus would eventually take him out). Both Hart and Michaels continue to make special "cameo" appearances at WWE events to this day.
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35In late 2011, WWE released ''Greatest Rivalries: Shawn Michaels vs. Bret Hart'' on DVD and UsefulNotes/BluRay. As the title suggests, WWE dedicated the set -- a first-of-its-kind release for the company -- to the long rivalry between Hart and Michaels, which stretched back all the way to the feud between The Rockers and The Hart Foundation. The real meat of the DVD came from Wrestling/JimRoss' sitdown interview with both Hart and Michaels, who discussed their careers and their rivalry -- including the Screwjob -- at length. The DVD appeared to back Bret Hart's side of the story, as Ross conceded that no WWE employee had any fear of Bret pulling a Ric Flair or Madusa with the belt (and that Bret had acted reasonably regarding the Survivor Series finish). Fans, critics, and wrestling historians generally regard the set as one of WWE's best home video releases.
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37In April 2019, wrestling documentary series ''Series/DarkSideOfTheRing'' focused on the screwjob in its second episode, featuring Hart detailing his side of things, as well as going into what happened backstage after the event was over. It also features Wrestling/JimCornette admitting to being an UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom on the screwjob, with Cornette alledging that he offhandedly suggested such a screwjob to [=McMahon=] during a meeting and planting the seed of the forced title change in Vince's mind.
38----
39!! Tropes associated with the Montreal Screwjob include:
40* AccidentalMisnaming: In the [[UsefulNotes/ProfessionalWrestlingJargon lexicon of pro wrestling]] the Montreal Screwjob wasn't technically a screwjob, it was a double cross. At the time, a screwjob was an inconclusive ending to a match, where neither wrestler is conclusively defeated. But "Montreal Screwjob" did sound better, and the naming stuck, redefining the term 'screwjob' to mean 'an authority figure conspiring with a heel to deny the babyface the win', most likely thanks to this incident.
41* TheBadGuyWins: Going by kayfabe, that is. Assuming that the screwjob was the first of the evil deeds of the "Mr. [=McMahon=]" CorruptCorporateExecutive character (going by his later "Bret screwed Bret" interview), Mr. [=McMahon=] got ''exactly'' what he wanted out of this and more. This was pretty much the turning point in the Wrestling/MondayNightWars, the birth of the Wrestling/AttitudeEra, and all he had to do was get rid of an expensive wrestler who was already on his way out. Mr. [=McMahon=] became the main heel of his own show, and the following year, his company had some of the best matches, angles, and [=PPVs=] it ever had, to say nothing of the publicity that came with what he just did. Bret, for his part, was literally screwed, as WCW squandered his talent, a clear symptom of their own inevitable decline.
42* BelatedHappyEnding: Kayfabe-wise. It took twelve years, but Hart ultimately mended fences with Michaels and avenged Montreal by beating the shit out of [=McMahon=] with his family, capped off by [[LaserGuidedKarma Hart forcing McMahon to submit to the very same Sharpshooter that cost him the title]].
43* BigDamnHeroes: Wrestling/TheUndertaker put his career on the line to force [=McMahon=] to apologize to Hart, likely saving the WWF from imploding and a number of wrestlers from walking out.
44* BlatantLies:
45** Wrestling/MichaelCole interviewed [=McMahon=] before the event. When asked who will win, [=McMahon=] replied "I don't know", of course, he had been well aware of the plan from several weeks prior.
46** When confronted by Hart after the match, Shawn Michaels strongly denied any foreknowledge of the altered finish and claimed he was just as confused and outraged at the result as Hart was. It would later be revealed that not only did Michaels know of the plan the entire time, he had a hand in crafting its execution.
47** In the ''Wrestling With Shadows'' documentary, Bret claims Vince "somehow ran into [his] hand" after Bret slugged Vince post-screwjob.
48* ContinuityNod:
49** The ending was recycled a year later for the purpose of turning [[Wrestling/DwayneJohnson the Rock]] {{heel}}, and several other companies have used the Screwjob as a template for screwy endings.
50** When Wrestling/RickRude jumped to WCW he called out [=McMahon=] for the screwjob and used it as his reasoning why Hart and other wrestlers should jump ship.
51* {{Documentary}}: ''Hitman Hart: Wrestling with Shadows'' and ''[[http://www.indywrestling.us/downloads/the-montreal-theory/ The Montreal Theory]]''. Also, the second episode of ''Series/DarkSideOfTheRing'' is all about the screwjob.
52* EveryoneHasStandards: According to Bret's documentary, Michaels claimed that he's both equally furious and baffled at what happened during the match. In reality, Michaels kept his mouth shut about the "screwjob" under Vince's instructions, but still [[IDidWhatIHadToDo felt bad over screwing Bret]].
53* EvilCannotComprehendGood: According to Jim Cornette, Vince [=McMahon=] genuinely thought he was going to be the babyface (i.e. good guy) in the aftermath of the Screwjob, as evidenced with the interview he gave where he says he did what he had to do to protect the "time-honored tradition" of champions losing the title before leaving a company. This did not gel with the visual of him very clearly screwing Hart out of his title on live television, a deliberate choice on [=McMahon=]'s part to ensure that all the heat would be on ''him'' rather than anyone else involved in the Screwjob. After a few weeks of public backlash, Vince decided to roll with it and in kayfabe became [[CorruptCorporateExecutive Mr. McMahon]], arguably the greatest heel character in professional wrestling of all time.
54* FleetingDemographicRule: The Montreal Screwjob had such a massive effect on wrestling history that it has been rehashed numerous times with no less than three different companies (WWE, WCW, and TNA), with gradually diminishing returns. It's to the point that newer fans actually learn about the event from said rehashes.
55* ForcedIntoEvil: Referee Earl Hebner was coerced into participating in the Screwjob at the last minute on pain of being sacked on the spot if he refused to cooperate. Hart has stated that he holds no animosity towards Hebner and probably would have done the same thing in his shoes.
56* IDidWhatIHadToDo:
57** Even after Michaels' RealLife HeelFaithTurn, this has been his stance regarding the screwjob. Both in kayfabe and in real life, Michaels feels like he did what was necessary to save the WWF, even though he didn't like doing it. When Hart and Michaels confronted each other in 2009 on an episode of WWE Raw, Michaels even told Hart "you deserved what you got twelve years ago at Montreal" for disrespecting him, the business, and the title by refusing to drop it.
58** Vince [=McMahon=] feels very much the same as Michaels, feeling like Hart put him between a rock and a hard place. Because Bret wouldn't do the job, [=McMahon=] felt that what he did was necessary to keep his company going.
59** Earl Hebner didn't want to participate in the finish on ethical grounds; Gerald Brisco told Hebner he'd be fired if he didn't. Hebner agreed to go with it because he needed the job. When discussing the Screwjob as part of a 2020 [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=41E2ENNe1LM interview]] with Wrestling/StoneColdSteveAustin, Bret admitted that he would probably have done the same thing in Earl's place and didn't hold it against him.
60* KickTheDog: The camera just had to show Bret's face in total right after the bell rang, didn't it?
61* MyGodWhatHaveIDone:
62** According to Bret's autobiography, Shawn broke down crying in the locker room after the match. Shawn himself would also later confirm that the screwjob would haunt him in the years afterwards. Even so, Shawn felt that [[IDidWhatIHadToDo what he did was ultimately necessary]].
63** Wrestling/JimCornette has spent years rallying against the death of {{Kayfabe}} and feels that pulling back the curtain and exposing the business is what led to the downfall of professional wrestling. He said that it occurred to him much later that the accidental architect of the Montreal Screwjob was ''himself'', after remembering that he had been the first one to suggest a double cross on Bret during a booking meeting, and as such he's indirectly responsible for the death of kayfabe.
64* OhCrap: Going by Bret's description of the aftermath during the "Broken Skull Sessions" interview, Shawn Michaels had a ''huge'' one of these following the screwjob, after Vince had come to the locker room, been knocked out by Bret with one punch[[note]]In Bret's defense, he told Vince "If you're still here when I get out of the shower I'm going to punch your lights out." Bret showers, Vince is still there, Bret punches his lights out. Vince had the chance to just walk away and not get punched in the head, he should have taken it[[/note]], and carried out again by his supporters. Shawn realized he was practically alone in the locker room with not only the furious Bret (who he'd just seen ''punch out his boss'') but Owen Hart, Davey Boy Smith, Wrestling/RickRude and Jim Neidhart- all family and friends of Bret Hart. Wrestling/TripleH wasn't there, and the most support Shawn could reasonably expect was from the equally-furious Undertaker, who would ''probably'' intervene if it looked like Shawn was going to be ''beaten to death.'' Then Bret walked over to Shawn, tapped him on the shoulder, [[BaitAndSwitch offered him his hand and said "Shawn, thank you for the match".]] (Bret said that when he later found out that Shawn had been in it up to his neck, despite swearing his ignorance, he wished he'd kicked Shawn's head off instead.)
65* RuleThirtyFour: In 2017, porn company Brazzers announced that they were going to produce a pro wrestling parody film titled ''[=The Fuckjob=]'', but it appears that the project has never been released, making this an aversion.
66* RunningGag: The Montreal Screwjob had such a massive effect on wrestling history that it became a sort of running gag for it to be rehashed across the wrestling world in several different companies numerous times, as seen on the [[ReferencedBy/MontrealScrewjob Referenced By page]].
67* SadisticChoice: Right before the match, Gerald Brisco forced referee Earl Hebner into taking part in the screwjob, or else he'd be fired from the WWF. Making matters even worse for Earl, Bret had caught up with him the day before the match and warned him that the brass were going to try and screw him, only for Earl to swear on the lives of his children that he wouldn't allow that to happen, and that because of this Bret had been hoping that Earl would be the referee for the match, feeling safe when he saw that he was.
68* ScrewTheRulesImDoingWhatsRight: Undertaker straight up confronted Vince backstage, and Wrestling/MickFoley quit for a day in protest. In his perspective, this is how Vince feels about the event.
69* ScrewThisImOuttaHere:
70** A number of wrestlers attempted to walk out from the company in protest; (Wrestling/MickFoley actually did for a day). Bret talked them out of it.
71** Jim Cornette, who had proposed the finish to Vince [=McMahon=] as a hypothetical scenario but believed that [=McMahon=] wouldn't listen based on past experiences, was watching the match backstage on a monitor. As soon as he saw his hypothetical scenario become reality, Cornette immediately made his way out of the building and headed to his car to get as far away from the inevitable fallout as quickly as possible. According to Cornette, he managed to beat Earl Hebner to the parking lot, who had told his brother ahead of time to put all their stuff in the car and keep the engine running.
72* SecretKeeper: Wrestling/TripleH also knew of what was going to happen in the main event, but there have been conflicting accounts as to the extent of his involvement. Some of them say that HHH suggested the screwjob in the first place, while others say HHH knew what would happen but did nothing about it. All that said, HHH admitted he still thinks it was the right call years later.
73* ShootTheDog: [=McMahon=] views the Montreal Screwjob as an IDidWhatIHadToDo moment. Ditto for Michaels.
74* SpitefulSpit: Bret spits on Vince out of disgust once Bret realized what was going on. There's even multiple angles of Bret doing it, along with Vince wiping it off his face.
75* TalkToTheFist: Backstage footage of Bret afterwards showed Bret saying that "Vince ran into [his] fist." If you look at Vince closely enough during the "Bret Screwed Bret" interview, you can see that he has a black eye.
76* TrashTheSet: Bret destroyed several things around the ring after the cameras went off-air. He apparently did the same thing backstage.
77* TurnTheOtherCheek: It took twelve years after the Montreal Screwjob for [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jrU7wl0sUXo Michaels and Hart to come face-to-face again]] on an episode of ''Monday Night RAW'' in 2009. While Michaels admitted that there was still a part of him that felt like Hart deserved what he got, Michaels agreed with Hart that their careers shouldn't be defined by this one moment, and the two men buried the hatchet with a handshake.
78* UnbuiltTrope:
79** The Montreal Screwjob shows what would really happen if a wrestler ever got screwed out of the title. Forget beating his opponent and/or winning the belt back; Hart was so angry that he attacked [=McMahon=], [[TrashTheSet destroyed WWF equipment in rage]], and left the company for ''decades'' before he came back. Plus, other people backstage almost quit out of anger at management. And yet, it's the Montreal Screwjob that shaped pretty much every similar story that came afterwards.
80** An inversion had happened over a decade earlier. On the November 21, 1985 episode of ''WWF on PRISM''[[note]]PRISM was a regional pay TV service in the UsefulNotes/{{Philadelphia}} metro area, airing movies like HBO, but with a strong focus on local sports events, especially any taking place at the famed Spectrum (including WWF matches), which the channel was semi-named for; it ceased operations in 1997, being replaced by the first Comcast [=SportsNet=][[/note]], there was a match between David Sammartino and Ron Shaw that David had been booked to win. Unexpectedly, David ran off the ropes and jumped into Shaw's arms and "submitted" to a BearHug. It has become known as the "Phantom Submission Match."
81* UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom: Wrestling/JimCornette has stated on ''Series/DarkSideOfTheRing'' that he was the first one to suggest a double cross on Bret during a booking meeting. Cornette first suggested booking Bret with Wrestling/KenShamrock, who with his background in MMA could have legitimately beaten Bret in a fight if he refused to do the job. (Although given that the entire problem was that Bret was refusing to put over ''Shawn Michaels'' specifically, had they booked him to lose to Shamrock, a double-cross wouldn't have been necessary.) In June 2019, Cornette detailed on his podcast that he actually came up with the finish. He says he suggested it hypothetically because Vince [=McMahon=] rarely took his suggestions. Cornette didn't know Vince was actually going to use the finish until he saw it live that night. However, once Cornette saw what was going to happen, [[ScrewThisImOuttaHere he promptly hauled ass out of the arena]] because he knew the backstage fallout was going to be intense. Cornette has, for the longest time, lamented the death of {{Kayfabe}} in pro wrestling in podcasts and interviews, yet accidentally helped create one of the biggest kayfabe-destroying incidents ever, which Cornette has noted several times with [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone no small amount of self-loathing]].
82* WhamEpisode: For many fans of pro wrestling, this was the first point that {{Kayfabe}} was irrevocably broken. If nothing else, the screwjob forever changed the careers of everyone involved.
83* WhamLine: "Ring the [[PrecisionFStrike fucking]] bell!" This was the point in which [=McMahon=] deviated from the plan for the match; rather than allow the match to be thrown out by a brawl between Hart's and Michaels' factions, Vince forced the ref to end the match when Hart was put into a submission hold, despite Hart clearly not submitting. This forced Hart to capitulate and give up the belt to Michaels. The {{Kayfabe}} illusion at this point was shattered with those four words, and it redefined the careers of everyone involved in the incident, including [=McMahon=] himself.
84* WhatTheHellHero: The backlash Vince, Earl Hebner, and HBK got from this event are ''huge''.
85** The immediate aftermath saw Mick Foley almost quit, and Undertaker telling [=McMahon=] that he needed to face Hart like a man, or he "wouldn't have a company" the next day.

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