Characteristic Trope: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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Compare [[Trope Codifier]] and [[Trope Namer]], which both identify a show for becoming well known for a [[Trope]], but not necessarily laying such claims on future use of it. Contrast [[Ur Example]], which is when a show uses what will eventually become a [[Trope]], but wasn't actually one at the time.
Compare [[Trope Codifier]] and [[Trope Namer]], which both identify a show for becoming well known for a [[Trope]], but not necessarily laying such claims on future use of it. Contrast [[Ur Example]], which is when a show uses what will eventually become a [[Trope]], but wasn't actually one at the time.
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* The [[Planet of the Apes Ending]] is cliche for many reasons, but it's also so characteristic of the film for which it is named that you can't "unexpectedly" reveal a planet to be Earth without the audience flashing back to Charlton Heston.
* The [[Planet of the Apes Ending]] is cliche for many reasons, but it's also so characteristic of the film for which it is named that you can't "unexpectedly" reveal a planet to be Earth without the audience flashing back to Charlton Heston.
* [[The Rashomon]] is similarly characteristic of the film for which it is named, though since, at least in the US, most viewers will never have actually seen ''Rashomon'', you can get away with it so long as you throw in some [[Lampshade Hanging]] to let the more culturally literate viewers know you're not trying to pass it off as your own idea.
* [[The Rashomon]] is similarly characteristic of the film for which it is named, though since, at least in the US, most viewers will never have actually seen ''Rashomon'', you can get away with it so long as you throw in some [[Lampshade Hanging]] to let the more culturally literate viewers know you're not trying to pass it off as your own idea.

Revision as of 01:29, 9 March 2017

Tropes can become discredited in a number of ways. Usually this involves overuse or changes in social values. But sometimes it doesn't even take that.

When a Trope which may have been perfectly ordinary on its own is used so famously by one particular show, its meaning gets changed. Instead of what the Trope had meant before, it now means "Homage or parody of the show which used it famously." (Or, if you're less lucky, "Blatant rip-off of the show which used it famously.") Think of it as a kind of Real Life Flanderization of a Trope.

This can get annoying for writers, since the Trope may be a useful screen-metaphor in its own right, but they can't use it without creating unwanted associations.

Compare Trope Codifier and Trope Namer, which both identify a show for becoming well known for a Trope, but not necessarily laying such claims on future use of it. Contrast Ur Example, which is when a show uses what will eventually become a Trope, but wasn't actually one at the time.

Examples of Characteristic Trope include:

For that matter, most of the tropes in this catalogue which are actually named for a particular show are probably so characteristic of those shows that it's dangerous to use them if you can't handle the association.

See also Older Than They Think.