(Adding categories) |
No edit summary Tag: Source edit |
||
Line 34: | Line 34: | ||
He was portrayed by {{w|Bob Gunton}}, who also portrayed [[Leland Owlsley]] in the first season of the Netflix series ''Daredevil''. |
He was portrayed by {{w|Bob Gunton}}, who also portrayed [[Leland Owlsley]] in the first season of the Netflix series ''Daredevil''. |
||
− | == |
+ | ==Biography== |
Samuel Norton starts out as a deeply religious man when Andy Dufresne arrives in 1947. As the year's pass, he notices a lot of potential in Andy and gives him protection from the guards, library access, and helping inmates get their GED's in return for aiding him in laundering money from kickbacks and his scams. At one point, Norton has his second-in-command and top prison guard [[Byron Hadley|Captain Byron Hadley]] beat up convicted rapist [[Bogs Diamond]] after it transpired that Bogs and his gang called [[The Sisters (Shawshank Redemption)|The Sisters]] had been terrorizing Andy to the point where they constantly raped and beat up Andy on multiple occasions. |
Samuel Norton starts out as a deeply religious man when Andy Dufresne arrives in 1947. As the year's pass, he notices a lot of potential in Andy and gives him protection from the guards, library access, and helping inmates get their GED's in return for aiding him in laundering money from kickbacks and his scams. At one point, Norton has his second-in-command and top prison guard [[Byron Hadley|Captain Byron Hadley]] beat up convicted rapist [[Bogs Diamond]] after it transpired that Bogs and his gang called [[The Sisters (Shawshank Redemption)|The Sisters]] had been terrorizing Andy to the point where they constantly raped and beat up Andy on multiple occasions. |
||
Line 48: | Line 48: | ||
In the book, however, Norton escapes arrest by resigning from his post. He isn't as cruel in the book, as he had Tommy transferred to another prison where he could be paroled soon to keep him quiet instead of having him murdered, and didn't force Andy to be in solitary confinement for two months. He is also not as present in the book, given he doesn't take over Shawshank as warden until later in the story. In fact, within the film, he is a combination of the different wardens in the novel that took over Shawshank before he did. |
In the book, however, Norton escapes arrest by resigning from his post. He isn't as cruel in the book, as he had Tommy transferred to another prison where he could be paroled soon to keep him quiet instead of having him murdered, and didn't force Andy to be in solitary confinement for two months. He is also not as present in the book, given he doesn't take over Shawshank as warden until later in the story. In fact, within the film, he is a combination of the different wardens in the novel that took over Shawshank before he did. |
||
− | == |
+ | ==Personality== |
Samuel Norton is shown to be an extremely greedy, blasphemous, unsympathetic, cruel, sadistic, pompous, and two-faced individual. |
Samuel Norton is shown to be an extremely greedy, blasphemous, unsympathetic, cruel, sadistic, pompous, and two-faced individual. |
||
Line 65: | Line 65: | ||
The Shawshank Redemption (1994) Scene 8 10 Tommy Dies |
The Shawshank Redemption (1994) Scene 8 10 Tommy Dies |
||
</gallery> |
</gallery> |
||
+ | |||
+ | ==Trivia== |
||
+ | *The song he whistles at time is "Eine feste Burg ist unser Gott", translated as "A Mighty Fortress is Our God." from Martin Luther. |
||
+ | *Despite him claiming he believes in the Bible, it is pretty clear he doesn't read it regularly because he would have discover Andy's rock hammer. |
||
==External Links== |
==External Links== |
Revision as of 16:00, 26 July 2021
✓ | ||
This Villain was proposed and approved by Villains Wiki's Pure Evil Proposals Thread. Any act of removing this villain from the category without a Removal Proposal shall be considered vandalism (or a futile "heroic" attempt of redemption) and the user will have high chances of being |
This article's content is marked as Mature The page contains mature content that may include coarse language, sexual references, and/or graphic violent images which may be disturbing to some. Mature pages are recommended for those who are 18 years of age and older. If you are 18 years or older or are comfortable with graphic material, you are free to view this page. Otherwise, you should close this page and view another page. |
“ | I believe in two things; discipline and The Bible. Here you'll receive both. Put your trust in The Lord, your ass belongs to me. Welcome to Shawshank. | „ |
~ Samuel Norton. |
“ | Nothing stops. Nothing... Or you will do the hardest time there is. No more protection from the guards. I'll pull you outta that one-bunk Hilton and cast you down with the sodomites. You'll think you've been f-cked by a train. And that library? Gone. Sealed off, brick by brick. We'll have us a little book barbecue in the yard. They'll see the flames for miles. We'll dance around it like wild Injuns. You understand me? Catching my drift?... Or am I being obtuse? | „ |
~ Samuel Norton threating to break Andy Dufresne completely if he quits the money laundering scheme. |
Warden Samuel Norton, simply known as Samuel Norton, is the main antagonist in the 1982 Stephen King book Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption, and its 1994 film adaptation The Shawshank Redemption. He is a corrupt and religious warden of the Shawshank penitentiary.
He was portrayed by Bob Gunton, who also portrayed Leland Owlsley in the first season of the Netflix series Daredevil.
Biography
Samuel Norton starts out as a deeply religious man when Andy Dufresne arrives in 1947. As the year's pass, he notices a lot of potential in Andy and gives him protection from the guards, library access, and helping inmates get their GED's in return for aiding him in laundering money from kickbacks and his scams. At one point, Norton has his second-in-command and top prison guard Captain Byron Hadley beat up convicted rapist Bogs Diamond after it transpired that Bogs and his gang called The Sisters had been terrorizing Andy to the point where they constantly raped and beat up Andy on multiple occasions.
In 1965, a young thief named Tommy Williams comes along. Tommy reveals to both Red and Andy who truly killed his wife and that Andy was set up, proving his innocence. Andy tells this to the warden, but he refuses. Indeed, Norton needs him to take care of his shady business; but above all, he fears that his frauds will come to light if Andy is released. Dufresne, taken aback, asking him why he is so "obtuse" and trying to reassure him about his silence, only enrages and frightens Norton. He sentences Andy to the hole for one month. Then Norton questions Tommy Williams.
Comforted by his testimony and his desire to help Dufresne unveil the truth, Norton has Tommy eliminated by Captain Hadley, disguising the murder as an escape attempt. The next day, he visits Andy in his isolation cell, lying about the murder by telling instead Tommy has attempted to escape. Andy, suspecting the murder, tells Norton he is done with all this. Norton, determined to keep Andy under his thumb, threatens to take away everything from Andy if he quits by torching the library, removing him from being protected from the guards and moved from his cell into appalling conditions and gives him another month to think about it.
However, Andy then succeeds in escaping through a tunnel he had been digging for the past 20 years (27 years in the book). An angry Norton fortuitously discovers that the poster on the wall actually masks the entrance to a tunnel, which Dufresne painstakingly dug during his nineteen years of imprisonment, using the stone slicer Red had given him. Under the name "Randall Stevens", the identity he used to store all of Warden Norton's money, Andy not only drains him of all of his ill-gotten gains - but also delivers a book that exposes Norton's corruption and Hadley's conspiracy when it includes disclosing their killing of Tommy to the Daily Bugle.
The police then come to Shawshank to arrest them both. They succeed in arresting Captain Hadley, but Norton wasn't going to go quietly. Loading up a gun he kept in his drawer, he prepares to take as many police officers down with him as possible as soon as they entered his office, but then he decides to turn the gun on himself and takes his own life instead. While what Norton was exactly thinking when the bullet passed through his head is unknown, Red likes to believe that it was to ponder on how Andy Dufresne ever got the better of him.
Book Ending
In the book, however, Norton escapes arrest by resigning from his post. He isn't as cruel in the book, as he had Tommy transferred to another prison where he could be paroled soon to keep him quiet instead of having him murdered, and didn't force Andy to be in solitary confinement for two months. He is also not as present in the book, given he doesn't take over Shawshank as warden until later in the story. In fact, within the film, he is a combination of the different wardens in the novel that took over Shawshank before he did.
Personality
Samuel Norton is shown to be an extremely greedy, blasphemous, unsympathetic, cruel, sadistic, pompous, and two-faced individual.
Gallery
Images
Videos
Trivia
- The song he whistles at time is "Eine feste Burg ist unser Gott", translated as "A Mighty Fortress is Our God." from Martin Luther.
- Despite him claiming he believes in the Bible, it is pretty clear he doesn't read it regularly because he would have discover Andy's rock hammer.
External Links
- Samuel Norton on the Pure Evil Wiki.