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Shawshank Redemption: Famous oak tree from 1994 film toppled by heavy winds | Shawshank Redemption: Famous oak tree from 1994 film toppled by heavy winds |
(35 minutes later) | |
Fans of The Shawshank Redemption are mourning the loss of an iconic image from the movie’s touching conclusion: an oak tree that stood as a beacon of hope for Morgan Freeman’s character, Red. | |
On Friday, heavy winds knocked down the tree, which stood on private land in Lucas, Ohio, a town between Cleveland and Columbus. The tree was an attraction for fans, who flocked to the monument every year since the movie’s 1994 premiere. | |
Fans eulogised the tree on Twitter, posting photos and immortalising it through the hashtag #ShawshankTree. | Fans eulogised the tree on Twitter, posting photos and immortalising it through the hashtag #ShawshankTree. |
“The tree symbolises hope [to its visitors],” Jodie Snavely, who works for the Mansfield/Richland Convention and Visitors Bureau, told the New York Times. “When they can actually come and see that, it’s very touching to them, and it means a lot to them.” | “The tree symbolises hope [to its visitors],” Jodie Snavely, who works for the Mansfield/Richland Convention and Visitors Bureau, told the New York Times. “When they can actually come and see that, it’s very touching to them, and it means a lot to them.” |
At the conclusion of the film, Red finds a hidden box with a letter and cash under the famous tree after he is released on parole, placed there by his prison escapee friend Andy (Tim Robbins). | At the conclusion of the film, Red finds a hidden box with a letter and cash under the famous tree after he is released on parole, placed there by his prison escapee friend Andy (Tim Robbins). |
"Remember, Red,” the letter in the box read. “Hope is a good thing, maybe the best of things, and no good thing ever dies." | "Remember, Red,” the letter in the box read. “Hope is a good thing, maybe the best of things, and no good thing ever dies." |
The feel-good film is regularly voted one of the best movies in history. |
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