The Three Godfathers (novel)
The Three Godfathers is a 1913 novel by Peter B. Kyne about a trio of bank robbers who become godfathers to a newborn child.
Plot summary
Four men rob a bank in Wickenburg, Arizona. One man is shot and killed, and the other three flee to the wilderness. One of the fleeing men has a gunshot wound in his shoulder. They encounter a woman in labor in a covered wagon who delivers a baby, entrusts the child to the mens' care (asking them all to act as godfathers to the child), and then dies. The men then try to get the baby back to civilization; two of them die on the way due to the lack of water. The final man, suffering from extreme thirst, carries the baby to the town of New Jerusalem, pursued doggedly by coyotes and aided by a burro.
Characters
- Tom Gibbons, referred to as The Worst Bad Man
- Bill Kearney, referred to as The Wounded Bad Man
- Bob Sangster, referred to as The Youngest Bad Man
- the woman
- Robert William Thomas Sangster, the baby
Adaptations
The novel has been adapted into films multiple times:
- Three Godfathers, a 1916 film with Harry Carey
- Marked Men (1919), a remake of the 1916 film, also starring Harry Carey, considered a lost film
- Action (1921), regarded as lost
- Hell's Heroes, a 1929 film directed by William Wyler
- Three Godfathers, a 1936 film featuring Chester Morris
- 3 Godfathers, a 1948 film starring John Wayne
- Tokyo Godfathers, a 2003 Japanese animated film loosely based on the novel
See also
- Ice Age (2002), a computer-animated film directed by Chris Wedge for Blue Sky Studios with a similar plot
- Tokyo Godfathers (2003), an anime film directed by Satoshi Kon about three homeless people who find an abandoned newborn