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A trope is a cliché setup; of any kind, that audiences have come to expect. An example in a commercial is the great looking guy catching sight of a jaw-dropping girl, dropping everything to approa...
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Source: https://writers.stackexchange.com/a/29875 License name: CC BY-SA 3.0 License URL: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
#3: Attribution notice added
Source: https://writers.stackexchange.com/a/29875 License name: CC BY-SA 3.0 License URL: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
#2: Initial revision
A trope is a cliché setup; of any kind, that audiences have come to expect. An example in a commercial is the great looking guy catching sight of a jaw-dropping girl, dropping everything to approach her as she smiles, and walking past her to the new car, or picture of a stacked burger, or to the nerdy guy with the new iPhone. Another commercial: A man hears music blasting in his front yard; cut to a teen holding a boom box up, looking to the window on the second floor; cut back to man with his iphone punching a button, cut to teen -- lawn sprinklers come on full blast and the teen is surprised and runs for cover. In Deep Blue Sea, they subvert a racist trope: LL Cool J plays a black cook in a film where nearly every main character gets eaten by genetically engineered clever sharks. The racist trope, built up over numerous movies in the previous decades, is that black characters die first. (This is racist and was not invented or ever used by ME, please hold any angry comments.) However, in DBS although Samuel L. Jackson _does_ get eaten by a shark, LL Cool J the lowly cook comes close but always escapes by wit and action; in fact he ends up one of the two survivors. (But Samuel L. Jackson breaks the same racist trope in Die Hard with a Vengeance; as a black store owner reluctantly caught up in Bruce Willis' bid to stop a lethal heist; but Jackson's character (Zeus Carver) ends up a brave and useful sidekick that survives the entire ordeal). Broke Back Mountain is subverting the trope of Cowboy Masculinity. Buffy the Vampire Slayer subverts the trope of the helpless teen cheerleader that is typically an eye candy cardboard character. In the series Heroes, Hayden Panettiere played Claire Bennett; another cheerleader type that looks like a petite, beautiful, helpless teen. But she has unlimited magical healing powers and (for a few seasons at least) apparently cannot be killed; making her one of the most formidable fighters of all heroes. The Truth About Cats and Dogs is a romantic comedy that subverts a trope: Unlike other romantic comedies in which the female romantic interest tends to be beautiful (younger Meg Ryan, Julia Roberts), here the love interest is a short, plain girl (played by Janeane Garofolo). In the series Psych, the "Sherlockian" detective (uses hyper-observational powers) subverts the Sherlock trope by being an immature, lazy, get-rich-quick liar. (The Sherlock Holmes trope is more like the series Elementary; but **they** then subvert that trope by making sidekick Watson a female doctor, and often the smartest person in the room except for Sherlock -- and sometimes beating even him to the punch.) In The Mentalist, the Sherlockian detective subverts the Sherlock trope by being a carny con man. (also female sidekick and eventual love interest.) In the series Monk, the Sherlockian detective subverts the Sherlock trope by being an obsessive compulsive afraid of just about everything (in advertising, the Defective Detective; although they were not the first to use it). Subverting a trope is just writing against any "formula" the audience has come to expect (even subconsciously) from a genre; be it horror, romantic comedy, action/adventure, war or drama. It can be a minor part of the movie or a major component of it. It is a way of injecting surprise into the work. But it can be overdone or come off as flat or unsatisfying: Some tropes are founded in human nature, and often if audiences cannot identify with the character violating the trope, the story will fall flat.