ITT: Tropes you love

>TV show starts out relatively grounded and realistic
>It later goes full sci-fi/fantasy

>Chuck sells his store to Sneed

Agents of shield?

>villain immediately executes hero upon capture

That was capeshit from the beginning

>villain explains his evil plan to hero
>only after it has already succeeded tho

>heroes don't do anything wrong or make any mistakes, try their hardest
>everything still goes to shit and they get btfo and the movie ends with half of them dead and the rest living in a wasteland
I fucking loved the worlds end

Name one flick where this happens

watchmen
you should have gotten that from his reaction image

This is nice but only if they don't do the whole self-aware "haha what you thought I was going to monologue and let you escape thing get real buddy lol" thing

>determined teacher takes on worst class

>Watchmen
>Film

He said flick not kino

I said flick, not a film. Reddit dumbass.

NAME THREE (3)

>You know, we are actually not that different you and I
I...actually like this...

>The love interest is a...
a robot
a robot made by the guy's dad
a clone with one of his parents' DNA
a ethereal being that comes to this world through his dad

My guilty fetish...

Lost
The Leftovers
Mr Robot

>character never uses the washroom

user I'm no psychiatrist but it sounds like you wanna fuck your dad

>fit guy gets the boipussy

>when the protagonist is part of the plan and kills himself to foil it

>villain completely outmatches the hero in every way
honestly seeing a hero beat-down is pretty rad

my sister actually

At World's End
Game of Thrones
Stranger Things

>gang of hooligans approaching a bank that they are set to rob in a van
>shots of one of the members vomiting with his balaclava on due to the nerves
>another shot of a different members leg with urine flowing freely down his trousers
>another shot of a different robber who not only evacuates his bladder but also his bowels due to the nerves
>due to the bullying of one of the more confident members of the team they are all forced to commit the robbery
>another shot of excremement rolling out of the trousers of the robber in the bank and a high pitched squeal (Ryan gosling style) as he demands everyone gets down
>another robber accidentally calls the main robber by his name

The realism was astounding.

The best, feels like a proper way to do it

I kept hoping Castle would eventually do one of those

and they did, with the Time Traveller episode

Name one kino this happens in, it sounds great

Looper

>training/inventing montage

He said kino

The very first scene in Game of Thrones involves undead ice zombies

Harry Potter
Butterfly Effect (sorta)

I did think of that but I thought it still fit the bill because if you discount that one scene you have a steady buildup from "realism" to fantasy with the slow introduction of magic, mythical creatures, resurrection and so on. I also couldn't remember if there were any undead or if the character just saw a massacre

Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon

>>TV show starts out relatively grounded and realistic
>>It later goes full sci-fi/fantasy
I hate that.
Especially in historical shows that take place in the middle ages.

Such as?

That sounds incredibly gay

When has this ever happened?

>the girl is cool. She slept with girls. But in fact she prefers men she just shut them off to protect herself
I am happy to list at least three shows but I want to see if you noticed this

you see this

>a clone with one of his parents' DNA
They don't even look alike

chasing amy?

I am too pleb for that
Girl with Dragon Tattoo, House, Wonder Woman
I am really pleb

>he STILL thinks Mr. Robot is going full time travel

*inhales*

the hills have eyes.

>TV starts out gimmicky police procedural
>turns into an interdimensional war started by a genius who stole a living version of his son (After the tragic death of his own) from a parallel dimension, driving his own parallel version of himself mad from the loss and hellbent on destroying the prime universe

>TV starts out gimmicky police procedural

I'm enjoying this kind of thing more and more these days.
Lucifer, Continuum, Person of Interest and Fringe stick out but using it as a hook to get the story settled and people watching before descending into full sci-fi/fantasy is really fucking awesome.

>asshole with a heart of gold

eh that's kind of a reach there with wonder woman, unless you're talking about some source comic I haven't heard about

the house and dragon tattoo shit though, thats um. Well I don't think I even need to say it

Just try harder to watch stuff that isn't obvious corporate pushed bait to handover your neetbux is all I can really suggest. Learn some french and watch passion of joan, that's what finally did it for me

>Movie about an asteroid/comet
>A city gets hit by a fragment despite the odds

>giant rock hits Paris

probably the best way to clear france of the brownies tbhfam

...

This.
Self-congratulatory post-modernist breakdowns of a cliche are the most annoying fucking things in any media ever. Immediately ruins all enjoyment up to that moment.

>says name one flick
>names a profession
This place gets worse everyday.

we got a fucking comdian over here.

look he made a joke, go on, laugh at it.

Chuckled

...

>ignorant whypipo being transphobic
>wise tolerant black man puts them in their place

>full sci-fi/fantasy
formerly relatively grounded and realistic

>how to spot the untermensch one easy step

>girlfriend watches anime with subtitles
>most of my psych professors would read translated german works

I seriously hate people who don't watch/read/listen to shit in its original language. Joan of Arc is a prime example of this. Same with Nietzsche or Kafka. Its entirely impossible to understand the subtleties with some amerifat state school mfa hack translating it into english, one of the least nuanced languages in the modern world

Watch the man in the high castle. That is the best example I can think of

Berserku

...

>be me
>want to read beowulf
>spend years mastering a dead saxon dialect of olde english
>mfw finally understand that the dragon had a light beige underbelly rather than a light brown one, in conflict with Tolkien's hackery translation
>learn many other things, such as the great hall being made of scottish elm
>mfw I learned people don't do this for everything they read and watch

How do translationfags even live?

My favorite trope is when two American comedy actors stand next to each other and keep explaining the joke they just saw and dragging on and on, I love it!

What film?