Danger Takes a Backseat



""Rule #31: Always check the back seat.""

- Zombieland

A character walks to their car. She may be aware that something is dangerous out there, or we may get a creepy vibe. But eventually she gets into the car, unharmed and prepares to drive off. She adjusts the rear-view mirror and- OH GOD TEETH IN THE FACE!

Perhaps it's because there's some idea of a car as a safe place, but attackers in TV regularly hide in your backseat, waiting to attack when you enter the car. Whether it's psychos with knives, flesh eating monsters or mysterious spies with secret information, the intrusion of personal space is creepy if not outright terrifying. It's nearly never noticed before the victim is in their car, and no reference is made to how they got in without breaking the windows.

Occasionally a stealthy or mysterious Anti-Hero protagonist can pull this off to intimidate someone, but it's not a very heroic thing to do -- it's rude!

See also Offscreen Teleportation, Stealth Hi Bye. Compare Not My Driver, Closer Than They Appear.

Examples:

Advertisements

 * Played with in this commercial for the Smart Fortwo: Sometimes a car with no back seat IS the safer choice...

Anime and Manga

 * In a variant that overlaps somewhat with Closer Than They Appear, an episode of Paranoia Agent has a television producer being stalked by Lil Slugger. He's on his way to work and looks in the rearview mirror.. Nothing. He's in the clear. He looks again.. Lil Slugger is roller blading behind him. On the highway. And it's catching up.

Comic Books

 * Subverted in an issue of Mister Miracle. When his wife Big Barda gets into her car, she finds a mob thug hiding in her back seat: "Oh, please don't hurt me, I'll do anything you say," she mewls. (Anyone who is familiar with Big Barda's abilities and personality knows why this is funny.) Cut to later as she tells her husband about the incident: "Oh my god! Is he okay?!"
 * For the Anti-Hero variant, Batman has made something of a habit of this. But then, sneaking up and scaring people is part of his MO.
 * In 52, The Question sort of... magics his way into the back of Renee's car between panels in Week 4.

Film

 * The Godfather. "Hello, Carlo". Explainable, as it wasn't Carlo's car.
 * A good many horror villains do this.
 * A glaring example is Rob Zombie's House of 1000 Corpses where it gets done in a convertible.
 * Conspiracy Theory has the Hero pull this off a few times.
 * In Hot Fuzz
 * The first victim to die in Urban Legend was killed this way. As mentioned further below, it references a well-known urban legend, as do many of the important killings in the movie.
 * Eric Draven does this to T-Bird, one of the five targets of his Roaring Rampage of Revenge, in The Crow.
 * Jimmy Angelo pulls this in Practical Magic when his abused girlfriend, about to be rescued from their motel room by her more sensible sister, insists that she can't leave without the lucky necklace she left hanging on her rearview mirror...
 * At the end of Lucky Number Slevin,.
 * The dilophosaur from Jurassic Park.
 * A flashback in Series 7 The Contenders shows Action Mom Dawn garroting a victim from a past series this way.
 * In the movie Firewall the hero is kidnapped by two thugs waiting for him inside his car.
 * The Texas Chainsaw Massacre the Beginning does this with the rebooted version of Leatherface, when he kills a fleeing woman by hiding in her car and surprising her. Which is actually rather incongruous, given that Leatherface is approximately 12 feet tall and built like a linebacker.
 * Not to mention how he must smell. A small, enclosed space is the last place a big, filthy guy wearing a human skin mask should be able to hide.
 * Tommy Boy with the deer (which Chris Farley and David Spade thought was dead).
 * Grace Jones as "May Day" murdered two guys this way (separate attacks) in A View to a Kill, resulting in James Bond not getting the support/reinforcements he expected.
 * The short film Suspicious has this happening to Janane Garofalo's character, in an enactment of an urban legend.
 * Dog Soldiers has this happen when a werewolf hides in the back of a jeep..
 * There's a variation on this in Aliens where.
 * Night of the Demons 2 has Angela popping out of the trunk to interrupt two horny Catholic school students.
 * The Human Alien kids in Escape to Witch Mountain do this early in the movie. Unusually for this trope, we see how they do it.
 * Played straight in The Hills Have Eyes.
 * Technically, Indiana Jones finding a snake in the compartment of his friend's plane in Raiders of the Lost Ark is a variant of this, albeit subverted as the snake is harmless. Not that he cares.
 * Subverted in James Rolfe's short movie The Deader The Better. The film is about two men whose job it is to patrol a cemetery where zombies emerge every night. Despite being standard Romero zombies who only need one good hit to the head, one of the men delights in creatively dismembering them, which he's reprimanded for by his partner. Sure enough, when he drives home that morning, there's a zombie in his backseat. Karmic Death, right?
 * Played painfully straight in The Strangers. The male lead makes a dash for the car to see if it's still working. He sees that all the windows of the car have been smashed in. Now, any person with half a brain would either give up on checking the car, or at least look in the backseat. What does this guy do? Gets into the car without even taking a quick glance to the seats behind him! Guess what happens?
 * In A Few Good Men, Lt. Kaffee is on the receiving end when Lt. Col. Markinson is waiting in his car. Possibly a subverted trope (on account of the fact that there was actually no danger)?
 * Also, Markinson points out that he left the back door unlocked.
 * It's probably a sub-trope, given how often that exact scenario is used in espionage movies and TV shows.
 * The Hangover has it with a . Hilarity (and car damage) Ensues.
 * One of the rules that the Genre Savvy Columbus adheres by in Zombieland is to make sure to always check the backseat for any zombies.
 * Unfortunately Tallahassee doesn't listen to this
 * In the original Halloween film, Annie plans to drive over to her boyfriend's house after leaving her babysitting charges with Laurie. Finding her car locked, she goes into the house to fetch the keys, comes back to the car, opens the door without having to unlock it...and just has time to notice steam on the windshield when Michael Myers (whose breath caused said steam) springs from the back seat and throttles her.
 * This also happens in Halloween 4 where Michael clings to the bottom of a moving pickup truck, before climbing up the side and killing the three men in the back of the truck.
 * And in the sixth film, where Michael lurks in the back of someone's van.
 * Screamers ends with a shot of a doll in the back of the one-man spacecraft used by the protagonist to escape the planet. The doll is the type previously seen carried by the Creepy Child Killer Robot. Just before the movie ends we see the doll start to move of its own accord.
 * Wolf Creek. The main character, believing she's gotten away from Mick Taylor, gets into a car, then hears his distinctive chuckle in the seat behind her, right before he stabs her in the back.
 * The first Saw film had a variant. Dr. Gordon isn't attacked in his car immediately, but when he steps out of it momentarily to use a phone, you see the back door slowly opening...
 * In a flashback in Saw II we see that this is how  kidnapped Laura.
 * The Yellow Bastard did this in Sin City. This was sort of implausible, since 1) it was snowing, 2) he was bleeding pretty badly, and 3) it was mentioned several times how much he stank, so you'd think there'd be some sort of a sign or trail that would've tipped them off.
 * Hartigan does mention smelling him the whole time, but attributes it to a lingering stench from checking out his car.
 * The Judge Reinhold film Baby On Board subverted this when the lead character, a cabbie, returns to his taxi after getting some coffee only to have a man with a gun pop up from the backseat. The thug demands money, and the cabbie asks to put his coffee down first. As he does, he presses the button that deploys pepper spray from the roof of his car. Cue the thug staggering out of the car while the cabbie calmly hands him eye drops and tell him it'll wear off in a few minutes.
 * Strangely averted in Independence Day. Will Smith drives across the desert with an unconscious alien in the back of his truck. He brings it to the secret lab without incident. Very unexpected.
 * Well, he already knew the alien was there, because he put it there, unconscious. And it was the bed of a truck, not the backseat of a car, so it's easier to get into, so there's less surprise to it - but also harder for the passenger to reach the driver from. Granted that the movie was a Cliché Storm, using this trope there would have single-handedly turned the movie into a parody.
 * By far the best addition to Let Me In was a 10 minute sequence where we follow the killer in the back seat from the time he gets in to the time he makes the kill. It's also one of the most intense sequences in the movie.
 * Played with in Scream 4, where characters scared of Ghostface are constantly checking the back seat when getting into a car.
 * The Dark Knight has Harvey Dent/Two Face pulling a slightly modified version of this on Salvatore Maroni- Maroni gets into the back seat and then notices Dent sitting next to him.
 * Talladega Nights features a particularly vicious cougar in the back seat of the car that Ricky Bobby learns to drive again.

Live Action TV
"Misha Collins: (Typing into his phone) Ever. Get. The. Feeling. That. There's. Someone. In. The. Back. Seat? Frowny-face."
 * Angel pulls this on Wolfram & Hart employees when he wants to intimidate them. It's not even as though they can see him in the rear-view mirror.
 * Happens to Alex Drake near the start of Ashes to Ashes
 * In Breaking Bad,
 * Happens to Veronica Mars at the end of the first season with.
 * Dexter pulled this off at least once.
 * Shawn Spencer from Psych pulled this off in hilarious fashion on two cops.
 * Another episode inverted it. Abagail is in the back of Buzz's cop car when suddenly he's knocked out and the episode's villain gets in the front seat.
 * The classic Twilight Zone episode "The Hitchhiker."
 * In Carnivale, Justin Crowe uses astral projection to hijack the car is using to escape, killing him with a garotte.
 * Ben probably should've warned him about that.
 * One British crime drama (I think it was Inspector Morse) had an interesting variation. A female office worker is being hassled by a creepy co-worker. When she leaves he starts chasing her in his own car, and by the time he gets her to stop she's quite hysterical -- it turns out he's trying to warn her about the man he saw jumping into the back of her van.
 * An episode of Millennium has a service station owner calling a woman into his office because her credit card was invalid -- it turns out he'd actually seen a man hiding in her back seat. That killer was also striking in the manner of Urban Legends.
 * In the Doctor Who telemovie, the Doctor did this to Grace. Well, she knew he was around, as he'd followed her to her car, but he sort of vanished and got in the back of the van without her noticing. He's not exactly an Anti-Hero, but due to Trauma-Induced Amnesia, he has No Social Skills -- even more than usual.
 * Heroes: Danko is relaxing in his car fiddling with the radio only to be interrupted by Sylar: "I love this song."
 * In Vengeance Unlimited, Mr. Chapel waits in the backseat of one of his marks' accomplice's car, then chloroforms them.
 * In one Mr. Bean episode, a Doberman sneaks into Mr Bean's car.
 * Partially lampshaded in the fourth episode of the second season of Lie to Me in that the victim, Torres, is later seen to berate herself for not locking the car door. Still, it was broad daylight...
 * Justified in The X-Files episode "Alpha" where the killer is a dog
 * Also justified in the Smallville episode Pariah as the killer
 * In The Sarah Connor Chronicles, a poor secretary discovers a Terminator waiting in the back seat of her car. She promises not to scream. Don't make promises you can't keep...
 * Used in One Life to Live". Todd Manning has been stalking his victim Marty Saybrooke for several days, intending to persuade her into not testifying against him--he's planning to rape her again and possibly kill her. He lurks in the backseat of her car, but his attack his foiled when her friend shows up and unwittingly saves the day, with neither of them having ever been aware of his presence.
 * In the final battle of the KGB vs. CIA episode of Deadliest Warrior,
 * Played with in the Power Rangers SPD episode "Reflection". While hunting for the escaped criminal, Mirloc, Bridge and Z spot him in the rear view mirror of their jeep and turn around to face him in the back seat, expect hes not there. Mirloc reminds them that his the power is to travel through reflective surfaces so hes only appearing to them through the mirror.
 * Happens in the Supernatural episode "The French Mistake", where hides in the backseat of Misha Collins' car. He himself lampshades it.


 * It occurs in the series pilot as well; one of the victims of the Monster of the Week agrees to take her home, but when he reaches the house she vanishes. As he's driving away he checks the rear-view mirror and sees her sitting in the back seat. Cue Gory Discretion Shot.
 * In the CSI: Miami episode "Special Delivery", the Victim of the Week - a delivery driver - is garrotted from the back of his van as he gets back into the driver's seat.
 * In the New Tricks episode "Only The Brave" a gang member tries this on Sandra, threatening her with a gun. This is a mistake as Sandra breaks his nose and knocks him out.
 * On Walker, Texas Ranger, Alex (of course) is kidnapped by one of the Villain of Week's henchmen, who has been lurking in the backseat of her SUV. One would think that as an ADA, the girlfriend of a cop, and someone who's been kidnapped or assaulted numerous times, she'd be more vigilante about her personal safety.

Literature

 * LOOK BEHIND YOU!
 * No, DON'T!
 * Death Troopers features quite an interesting one near the end of the book.
 * The Surgeon. Dr. Catherine Cordell gets into her car, intending to return to the hospital to tend to a patient. But when she calls the hospital from her car phone to verify some information, she's told that a previous call originated from that very same phone. Her attacker lunges at her from the backseat...
 * In John Dies at the End, the protagonist is driving in the middle of the night with a lot on his mind, and experiences this trope. Fortunately, the guy in the backseat just wants to talk. Unfortunately, the guy brought along something to motivate the protagonist into speaking more freely, and it's thirsty for blood.
 * In Stephen King's novel Gerald's Game, Jessie finally escapes the (almost) human version of Death and her Cuffed-to-the-bed predicament. She runs outside, jumps in her car, and gets a few miles down the road before tiredly glancing into her rearview mirror and gets an eyeful of the guy she just narrowly avoided. Whoops!
 * Played with in Bad Monkeys. An attendant at a gas station is trying very hard to get Jane to leave her car and come into the gas station.

Music

 * The end of Ayumi Hamasaki's music video for the song "ourselves".

Newspaper Comics

 * In one Robotman strip, the protagonist is afraid to adjust the rear-view mirror of his car at night, citing the tendency of such an act to reveal a killer waiting in the back seat. But he does it anyway, and freaks out upon seeing the reader's eyes in the mirror.

Radio

 * A Suspense episode titled "Backseat Driver" stars Jim and Marian Jordan (aka Fibber McGee and Molly) as a married couple driving home from the movies who discover that an escaped killer has been hiding out in the back of their car.

Urban Myth

 * ...and the driver behind was only flashing his lights/crashing into the back of her car to try to warn the woman about THE KILLER IN HER BACKSEAT!

Video Games

 * Played straight in one ending of the Super Nintendo horror game Clock Tower. The protagonist flees the house of death in a stolen car, and just as she thinks she's gotten away from it and the scissors-wielding murderer... [[media:cloth-6.gif|cue scissors rising up]], scream, and Fade to Black.
 * In some of the various endings of Dead Rising the pilot who comes to pick you up at the end of the 72 hours is attacked by a zombie hiding in his helicopter.
 * In Dead Space, at the end of the game,.
 * Resident Evil 2 uses this in the introductory cutscene. Claire and Leon pile into an abandoned police cruiser and start driving for the station. A zombie eventually lunges out of the back after Claire finds a gun in the glove compartment. The three swerve into a wall, causing the unbuckled zombie to fly through the windshield.
 * In Army of Two: The 40th Day, one cutscene involves a man robbing a store, running to a car, and preparing to make his getaway...only to realize that there is a tiger in the back seat. It ends about as well for the robber as you would expect.
 * In Grand Theft Auto San Andreas, T-Bone Mendez, who (correctly) suspects that CJ is a double agent, pulls one of these to try and get him to admit it. He hides in the back seat of the car, then gets CJ in a chokehold from behind and puts a gun at his temple. CJ doesn't spill the beans and after a bit Mendez is called off by Mike Toreno.

Webcomics
"Mordecai: I'd like a word with you...if you can refrain from assaulting me with bakelite for a moment.
 * In one issue of Penny Arcade, Tycho goes to Game Stop to buy a copy of Street Fighter IV on its release date, only to find out that they only have one copy, a used one. Tycho immediately questions how this happened. The next two panels are from earlier in that day; Gabe picked up a copy, only to find the store manager, Frank, was in the back seat of his car, and...coerced Gabe into selling it back for store credit.
 * While Mordecai Heller of Lackadaisy didn't mean Mitzi harm when he hid in her backseat to wait for her, you can bet he went about it that way because he was very used to meaning people harm.

Mitzi: Is that all? Why do you always have to do things the creepy way?"

Web Original

 * The manticore was in the back seat the whole time.
 * In the ninth episode of the Joker Blogs,
 * In Everyman HYBRID (a subset of The Slender Man Mythos), there's a brief shot that shows the Slender Man himself in the back of someone's car. One of the team remarks on it, thinking it's the fake Slendy they'd been putting in as a prank, but when the car later pulls over, there's nobody in the back-seat.
 * This short video.

Western Animation

 * A variation came in The Simpsons, with Bart sprinting from his home to the school bus to escape a killer dog and convincing himself that he's safe when he gets to his seat, only to be chased right back out by the dog in the seat behind him.
 * In another episode an escaped convict tries this on Marge, but waits on the backseat of the wrong car.
 * Another episode invokes the above urban myth with Otto telling Lisa a story about a someone doing this. He ends up terrifying her into screaming at the top of her lungs when he tells her that he was the maniac.
 * In yet another, some sleazy executives make a getaway from Homers' farm, where he grows addictive tomatoes laced with nicotine, in a helicopter, soon after the farm is devasted by crazed farm animals addicted to the product. One of these, a pig, is hiding in the back seat.
 * Home Movies: In the season 1 finale,

Real Life

 * Despite the probability of this actually happening even if you take reasonable precautions being somewhat lower than that of winning the lottery while being struck by lightning, Volvo has introduced a car with a heartbeat sensor that will let you know if a murderer is hiding in the backseat.
 * This does happen in real life, although not as often as true crime shows make it appear.
 * Being "taken for a ride" was a common method of execution by The Mafia. This entailed being driven to an out-of-the-way location and then killed by a hitman sitting in the seat behind the victim.
 * Also a precaution included in every female defense guide ever. If you're walking to your car and it's dark, check the damn back seat first.
 * One story in a kid's magazine was written by a girl who got in a car with her mother to head to school, only to have a cat jump out. They had left the window open, and newborn kittens were in the trunk.