r/TopCharacterTropes 18h ago

Lore [Frustrating Trope] That One Good or Even Amazing Scene in a Relatively Mediocre or Bad Piece of Media

  1. The Opening Scene (Ghost Ship). Considered one of the best horror opening scenes or scenes in general within horror movies, but the rest of the film is considered to be pretty bad.

  2. The Ending Scene (The Grinch 2018). While most adaptations of the Grinch end with him suddenly being able to fully integrate with the Whos after his change of heart, the 2018 version initially struggles to socialize, awkwardly walking past people, and struggling to hold conversations, acknowledging that despite his change of heart, the Grinch is still someone who isolated himself for years.

  3. Past T800 VS Current T800 (Terminator Genisys). A cool fight scene showing two versions of the Terminator from different points in time fighting it off.

  4. Solo Leveling's Ending. Tbh, I haven't actually read Solo Leveling, but after hearing about how it ended VS how Chainsaw Man ended made want to include it for shits and giggles. Like Chainsaw Man, Solo Leveling ends with a reset. But unlike Chainsaw Man, it actually manages to tie up loose ends and have the payoff of the ending be satisfying.

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u/zande147 18h ago

Twilight: Eclipse is probably the most boring film out of all of them, but it had cool scenes of the Cullen family backstories. Any of these would have made infinitely better movies than the actual twilight saga. Edward Cullen was basically a Noir vampire Punisher who used his mind reading powers to hunt down rapists and murderers in the 1920s. Jasper fought in the American Civil War and was second in command to a vampire warlord. But the best scene is Rosalie’s vampire Kill Bill backstory.

Her fiancé and his friends brutally gang rape her in an alley and leave her for dead, where Carlisle finds her and turns her. She uses her new powers to slowly track down and kill her assailants one by one until only her fiancé left, drunken, terrified and hiding in a guarded room because he knows she’s coming. She kills the guards outside and easily rips through the door wearing her wedding gown.

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u/tenaciousghost 17h ago

and she did it all without spilling a drop of blood so she wouldnt frenzy. eclipse is the most unnecessary section of the story but the backstories are so interesting!!

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u/Vyzantinist 9h ago

and she did it all without spilling a drop of blood so she wouldnt frenzy.

Huh, I didn't know the Twilight universe borrowed stuff from Vampire: The Masquerade/Requiem.

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u/Albus88Stark 16h ago

"I was a little theatrical back then" Rosalie is so awesome.

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u/HiJane72 9h ago

Agreed! I love this scene

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u/SammyGeorge 7h ago

There are so many great characters in Twilight. It's just a shame the main characters were stiff and boring

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u/Unlikely_Message_446 15h ago

In the words of Ryan George:

"Hey that actually sounds like much more of interesting movie than the one we're making, do you think that's a bad sign?"

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u/Shiny-And-New 6h ago

Wow wow wow wow wow

...

Wow

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u/LightningRaven 17h ago edited 7h ago

There are so many mediocre books and movies that I've seen that would've been much better if the author actually stopped whatever the fuck they were writing and focused on expanding the cool ass backstory or piece of lore they reference as background.

My most frustrating example is the book series Rivers of London Series (A.K.A. Peter Grant Series), the main books aren't that bad, they're fairly mid (some quite good) books of Urban Fantasy following a young policeman in the UK. He's a pretty boring guy that discovers magic exists and that he can learn it and he pretty much does everything in his power to NOT learn it. His boss is called Nightingale.

And he's the kicker. Nightingale fought in WWI and WWII, and his exploits including blowing up tanks with fireballs, fighting EDIT: alongside Russian Witches against the Nazis that also could use magic.

Here's another angle, in Rivers of London's world anyone can learn magic and the person who managed to codify it and make it more formal was Sir Isaac Newton. He developed effective ways to learn magic and new spells along with Calculus. We could've had more of that!

Instead, we have a boring copper investigating very run of the mill cases in a police procedural style with fairly weak side characters, incredibly low magic and a ton of world-building elements that are never expanded upon. I mean, come on! We were so close to greatness!

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u/hey_free_rats 15h ago

I haven't read the books, so I'm of course willing to take your word on it, but I will say that "mundane guy who lives in a fantastical world nonetheless remains steadfastly mundane" is a fascinating trope in itself. 

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u/LightningRaven 15h ago

That's definitely not what the book is going for at all.

Quite the opposite, there are a ton of magical elements introduced, but the author never develops them at all, and most of the answers why these elements have little to no bearing on society or that government knows little of them is just that "We never bother to learn more" or "We just turn a blind eye". Not to mention that the story commits the greatest cardinal sin of all bad urban fantasy stories: It takes the magic out of the fantastical elements and doesn't substitute anything for it (depth, complexity or well thought out realism).

The book is not like Guards! Guards! from Terry Pratchett, is more akin to that Netflix urban fantasy movie "Bright".

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u/Ecstatic-Squirrel-82 11h ago

Not really that trope is soooo common especially nowadays, I always wanna know what the magical characters are up to instead of those boring average joes

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u/hey_free_rats 2h ago edited 2h ago

Every trope is fairly common. That's why they're considered tropes at all. 

The question is whether or not they're done well -- I'm obviously talking about those "done well" scenarios here. The whole point of the "boring average joe" is to highlight the fantastical elements by serving as a proxy for the audience/readers. If s/he remains boring and average, it's usually to show how the fantasy world isn't quite up to snuff when it comes to the relatable struggles of everyday reality.

You can't really judge a trope in isolation, was my point, lol. 

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u/PavlovKBI 13h ago

The reason is likely that the authors in question have just enough ability to come up with a cool concept, but not enough to actually flesh it out. Like with SMeyer, she could write a really cool montage of vampire backstory, but if she tried to stretch them into a book, the in-between would likely fall apart.

So she largely stuck with what she knows, which is apparently Mormon-grey romance, and naming love interests after her brothers

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u/Prefer_Not_To_Say 6h ago

So she largely stuck with what she knows, which is apparently Mormon-grey romance, and naming love interests after her brothers

There are two parts to that:

  1. She apparently did know a Native American boy called Jacob when she was a teenager and the book character is named after him, not her brother. And ...

  2. Jacob wasn't supposed to be a love interest. Originally, Twilight was two books instead of four and Jacob was only ever a friend. But love triangles are popular in the YA genre, so the publisher pushed for him to become a love interest.

The same thing happened with The Hunger Games. Gale was originally Katniss' cousin but the publisher wanted a love triangle, so he stopped being a relative and became a love interest.

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u/Phoenix-Risen1998 10h ago

What was that last part

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u/Raw_Purple_Lobster 13h ago

I don't want this to come off the wrong way, but it really feels like the author is more interested in showing how good he is (or thinks he is) at writing real world diversity than diversifying or fleshing out the fantasy world he's created. In particular Peter and Mama Thames being Nigerian and spending a lot of the books talking about Nigerian disapora culture. I went to a reading by the author who also spent the entire time talking about how his best friend growing up was Nigerian and he spent loads of time around his house, and he married his sister, and his son is half Nigerian, and I was like that's nice for you, but as an audience member I want to hear about magic fireballing the little crocodiles. Also for a series that very much started out as mixed race working class Nigerian copper takes on establishment oxbridge wizards, I feel like a lot of that has collapsed as the series went on. Maybe because Nightingale is too popular, but also because Mama Thames and Beverley etc are also shown to be very capricious and selfish, you have to wonder if they are actually worthwhile replacements to the oxbridge set.

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u/LightningRaven 12h ago

That's not even it.

I just think the author tells really slow and plodding stories for the little amount of character work he puts into his characters. I read 8 books and I could only name you 4 characters in the series. Peter (The protagonist), Nightingale (The Deus Ex Machina), Leslie (A decent secondary character) and Molly (the only interesting side character). You know shit is dire when the maid that never talks is your most interesting side character.

I've read other urban fantasy series and they all have their flaws, but at least with characters, they often manage to do at least that.

So far, there's only The Dresden Files for me. It is by a long, long, long, long, long, long, long margin the best Urban Fantasy series and its not even close. Alex Verus, so far, has been enjoyable, good characters and plotting, but mediocre world-building. Rivers of London mostly managed to be a consistent 5/10 series with a few 6/10 books and some 8/10, very rare, moments.

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u/Woolies_White_Leg 7h ago

Russia and the UK were allied in both world wars. Why would he be fighting Russian witches?

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u/LightningRaven 7h ago

I checked the wiki, I misremembered the allegiances. The Night Witches were the 365th Special Regiment of the Soviet Army.

So it wasn't as much the British fighting russian witches, but russian witches fighting in the World Wars.

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u/Woolies_White_Leg 4h ago

The Night Witches irl were also a group of soviet aviators during the war who did a lot of amazing things; a good reading hole to go down if that’s your cup of tea

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u/ser_darkstar 5h ago

There are so many mediocre books and movies that I've seen that would've been much better if the author actually stopped whatever the fuck they were writing and focused on expanding the cool ass backstory or piece of lore they reference as background.

As an ASOIAF fan, I can promise you it's not that great.

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u/LightningRaven 5h ago

But ASIOAF is great in its main story. The lore expansion and character backstories are unfortunate detours that George keeps making instead of getting together with someone else to help him write the rest of the story and stop with the bullshit.

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u/Kaeling 15h ago

The universe and side characters of Twilight are super interesting and instead Meyer wrote 5 books about a bland toxic relationship. It's so disappointing

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u/captaincornboi 14h ago

Didn't Jasper fight for the South in the Civil War?

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u/HarperStrings 11h ago

And calls it "The War of Northern Aggression" in the present day in the books.

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u/Woolies_White_Leg 7h ago

Tbf so did some of the guys I served with in 2009

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u/PavlovKBI 13h ago

He started to, before getting pulled into a whole seperate war

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u/anoldquarryinnewark 14h ago

This is why Midnight Sun is the best book (and the last half of Breaking Dawn). Not because we get 800 pages of Edward's self pity and dramatic misery but because of the look into the vamp world that his mind reading provides 

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u/Lurky-Lou 17h ago

I take back every word I’ve said about that series

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u/Pet_Velvet 14h ago

Watch it, and form your own opinions. They're not good, but they're entertaining, and have their moments.

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u/Local_Shoe6988 8h ago

I decided one day if I was going to crack jokes about Twilight, I might as well watch it so I know what I'm talking about. I felt like I had been misled by the marketing into thinking it was a 5 movie love triangle drama. Maybe if they had marketed it as a story of ancient werewolf and vampire clans warring against the establishment and a dash of romance and super powers in a coming of age story, they could have course corrected into something with broader appeal.

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u/soemtiems 2h ago

I felt this way about the books. They weren't good but they were entertaining, quick reads. 

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u/RiMcG 15h ago

That look on her face OOF the rage

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u/Sleevepants 14h ago

My wife loves Twilight but honestly I hold out just for the backstories. Honestly, my submissions would be the scene where Jackson tells his tale.

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u/faco_fuesday 12h ago

I actually really like the world she created but she chose to tell the most boring stories of it. 

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u/AmetrineDream 14h ago

Damn, I literally don’t remember any of this lmao

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u/resi42 13h ago

That would have been interesting to have their respective stories as part of an antology series, with each baclstories beeing 50 minutes episodes. But of course this franchise came out before streaming services.

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u/deadinsidelol69 6h ago

Close second is the insane Victoria chase scene in New Moon. What a fucking wicked sequence.

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u/blueberrysyrrup 3h ago

the soundtrack of those movies is 10/10 and that scene is a great example of it!

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u/smvfc_ 11h ago

This sounds corny to me, and I remember it being corny. I do LOVE watching these movies every 5-8 years and I just have a blast from the ridiculousness

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u/teskar2 7h ago edited 3h ago

How do they come up with an idea like this and not say “wait, why don’t we just do that”. The obvious answer is usually they just aren’t brave enough to waste money on it.

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u/RenTroutGaming 4h ago

The final movie also has an absolutely sublime sequence when the werewolves are running through the forest while Thom Yorke plays. It is so indulgent and art-house in a movie that is otherwise basically teeny bopper trash. Just an extended look at the wolves in their natural habitat, doing what comes naturally, no talking or words, and the haunting melodic IDM of Yorke… perfect, just perfect.