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Fauxlosophic Narration
- 604 statements
- 116 feature instances
- 99 referencing feature instances
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Philosophical narration, dialogue, or exposition that has little to do with the plot, usually of the same vague nature as what first-year philosophy students use to pad out their term papers. When a movie, television show, or other such narrative wants to create the illusion of more depth than it actually possesses, it can use this trope to have some character, whether it be protagonist, villain (especially the Straw Nihilist), or innocent bystander, (especially The Philosopher) talk about "Big Topics", like Life, the Universe, and Everything. This overall doesn't add anything to the story; rather the intent is to put more Faux Symbolism and Mind Screw, and make the story's characters and events seem grander and more fantastic, while also being increasingly vague. This usually backfires, as the faux intellectualism is both insulting and distracting to anyone who has the brains to figure out this narrator is speaking a lot of words and phrases and clauses that don't actually mean anything, and in-universe, this just ends up as a Red Herring. It may be an attempt to change a character's purported wisdom from an Informed Ability. It doesn't work. This trope often has an "Emperor's New Clothes" effect on the more pretentious members of the audience: wishing to appear wise, intelligent, and cultured, and fearful of being perceived otherwise, they convince themselves they are privy to some profound truth. In fact what they are indulging in is often merely pompous, self-important nonsense with no discernible virtue to it. But of course, if you tell them that, it's because you "just don't get it"... Keep in mind, on the other end of the spectrum, that more cynical or attention-span lacking audience members may often call on this when bashing something for petty reasons, wishing to appear down to Earth and wise in their own way, "seeing through the bullshit" when they're really just bashing things they don't wish to take the time to analyze, or have some other gripe with. The point is, judge cautiously. Post Episode Trailers use this quite often to mask the actual events of the coming episode. A product of the desire to Contemplate Our Navels, and maybe of attempts to do a Private Eye Monologue. Is not used so that Evil Sounds Deep. When the author uses this to convey a message, it can overlap with Author Tract. When a character, not the author, does this, it becomes Holding the Floor. If particularly nonsensical, this can become Word Salad Philosophy or Ice-Cream Koan. Also compare Patrick Stewart Speech, Blah, Blah, Blah and Wall of Text. Note: This trope has been subjected to misuse. Do not simply add philosophical narration that you don't like. Also, do not just add any contemplative speech that you can find. If it has a clear relation to the plot, it is not this trope. Philosophical musings are not inherently bad. If done well, they should enhance the work. |
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The 1981 movie Lifepod (not to be confused with the 1993 TV movie) riffs on this trope appearing in B-Movie Science Fiction when it opens with a narrator blathering on about the wonders of space travel in The Future, only it's an advertisement for tickets on the space liner the eponymous lifepod comes from. | |
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The beginning and end narrations on Desperate Housewives are full of musings on love, loss etc with only the barest of connections to the actual show. | |
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The final moments of Fantastic Four: The Animated Series feature one of these between the Silver Surfer and Reed Richards, throwing in something about understanding humanity's nobility that didn't have a great deal to do with the plot. The DVD release cuts Reed's response as the Surfer flies off, removing the final shot of the series in doing so. Fortunately, the Liberation Entertainment release is slated to fix this. | |
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Played straight in Raising Steam, where the plot grinds to a screeching halt and the scene shifts to an irrelevant character in a very different country so that said character can whinge about how terrible cultural assimilation is. | |
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In The Stanley Parable, a few of the more esoteric routes impel the narrator to rambling monologues about choice or narrative direction, particularly during the "Stanley Parable Adventure Lineâ„¢" sequence (which is described as "nonsense philosophy" in that route's ending). | |
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Parodied at the end of Death Race 2000. When Frankenstein runs over racing journalist Junior Bruce, his colleague Harold proceeds to solemnly pontificate about Humanity's history of violence as the credits roll. | |
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The infamous panel in the Doom Comic where the Doom Guy suddenly starts rambling about the need to preserve the environment for mankind's children in a somewhat eloquent way when he stumbles upon some toxic waste. All of this between spurting one-liners and killing monsters left and right. | |
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Bleach would sometimes, albeit rarely, do this. One such involved Yumichika saying a rather obvious musing of "Compared to letting it fall apart, holding it together is so much more difficult", when observing that Renji's taken the tougher path to holding onto his resolve over many decades to reclaim his past relationship with Rukia rather than the easier route of simply giving up in frustration at ever being able to achieve it. And the Bount filler arc spends almost the entire last episode talking about circles. And saying the same things about them. Repeatedly. | |
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The ruminations about life and love that begin and end each episode of Boys Be.... | |
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Fatal Instinct: Parodied in-universe, with the protagonist's internal monologue comprising constant non-sequiturs, nonsensical analogies, and meaningless insights. | |
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Fatal Instinct | hasFeature |
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During the ending credits of each episode of Riget, show creator Lars von Trier gives a Script Wank speech with bizarre rants about the evil and the good. He delivers it with a smirk grin, as if he's parodying this very trope. | |
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Fauxlosophic Narration / int_23185c00 | type |
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Taken: Throughout the series, Allie Keys' narration includes numerous comments on growing up, humanity and human nature, for better and for worse. | |
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Howard the Duck, though it may have been a failed joke. | |
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The eponymous protagonist of Dexter often has inner monologues about his double life that is consistently used to remind us that the "hero" is a Serial Killer with a disturbed mind. | |
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This was spoofed on an episode of The Simpsons when Agent Mulder starts one of these in the day and by the time he finishes it has become night and everyone else including Scully has left the area. | |
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Godiva's used this to open and close each episode, even though the monologues (which were often food-related in keeping with the show's setting) rarely had anything to do with the story. | |
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Fauxlosophic Narration / int_29516906 | type |
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Joe Friday's "This is the city" narrations from Dragnet very rarely fell into this, mostly because the narration is used to set up the plot of the episode, very little waxing philosophical is ever done. However when it does happen, it tends to be very strange; one example is form the infamous O.J. Simpson episode. Friday has a longer-than-usual introduction where he tells the audience about all the things that boats are used for in Los Angeles. The episode has absolutely nothing to do with boats, or anything related to water. | |
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Parodied in The Big Lebowski: the narrator is not only Wrong Genre Savvy, but can't keep his fauxlosophy straight and keeps getting sidetracked. At one point he repeats "Sometimes there's a man" a few times before trailing off and stating that he lost his train of thought. He eventually just gives up ("Aw, hell, I done introduced him enough."), and at the very end even lampshades it ("Huh — I'm ramblin' again."). Ironically, the last time he realizes this and gives up is when he's actually on the verge of making a sage, relevant point for once. | |
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Heroes has a few of these, with one of the main characters, Mohinder, starting and ending a large number of episodes (season openers, finales, and any episode that lends itself to it) with a philosophical note that extrapolate on the events of that episode (and some that merely capitalize on the mood). Occasionally other characters, such as Linderman or Sylar, got in on the act, usually exhibiting their own dark tones to deviate from Mohinder's (usually) more positive narration. | |
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Raising Arizona. Done intentionally. | |
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Raising Arizona | hasFeature |
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Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann: Mechanic par excellence Leeron gives one of these around episode 22, about... gyroscopes. | |
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Meredith's opening and closing narrations on Grey's Anatomy sometimes fall into this rut. | |
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The Outer Limits, both original and 90s revival, had the Control Voice give one of these speeches. Say it with me: "Do not attempt to adjust your set..." | |
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The Phantom Planet has an especially cringe-worthy example, fully lampshaded on an episode of MST3K where it turns into a running gag. | |
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The Narrator from Finale tends to fall into this trope with her Exposition Dumps. | |
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Paranoia Agent has the Mysterious Old Man rambling on about seemingly completely random things during each preview. Not helping is that it includes puns that only work in Japanese. | |
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Profit, though it's more like a demented corporate speaker spouting uplifting cliches that are undercut by the action just seen. | |
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Discussed and Played for Drama in the Alice Isn't Dead episode "Omelet", as out of nowhere, the Character Narrator begins a long, ambivalent digression on the pointlessness of ascribing traits to the night sky, which is a void of nothingness. Though she self-deprecatingly notes that the listener can ignore her, she says that humans are also nothing. Abruptly, she reveals that she witnessed a Humanoid Abomination casually murdering a man, which gives her prior nihilistic musings context as a coping mechanism for her fear. | |
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Fauxlosophic Narration / int_3e5de40b | comment |
Scrubs does the opposite with JD talking about the world and modern life in relation to events that are happening in the episode. This doesn't make it any less predictable or irritating though, especially when he literally does it every episode. Also, JD must have some latent psychic abilities to make connections between his philosophy of the day to things he has no in-character knowledge of, no matter how tenuous the link may be. This was lampshaded in one episode, where JD openly admitted that he was taking advice that was given to somebody else and using it for his own solution. When Jordan explained that seemed rather convenient, he would agree "except that he does it nearly every week." JD's constant talking and his vivid fantasy are one of the defining aspects of the series. The fauxlosophic narration is just one part of it. Touche, magic hallway |
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Fauxlosophic Narration / int_416c3686 | comment |
The introduction of Gadget: Past as Future is accompanied by the main character rattling off strange symptoms and sensations, and how "from the beginning on, never moved a step. Nothing at all is beginning." It continues at the ending which is just as surreal as it started. Given that you're repeatedly exposed to the Sensorama within the game proper, this may be the only thing in the game that is clear. | |
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Fauxlosophic Narration / int_4447019e | type |
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Fauxlosophic Narration / int_4447019e | comment |
The narrator for the TV advertisements for Kingdom Hospital, while not entirely inaccurate, made the show seem like an overly dramatic, extremely intense, straight horror series. Anyone who actually watched an episode of the show knows it doesn't take itself nearly as serious as the narrator made it out to be, who exaggerates even the silly comedic or mundane moments in the series to make them sound ominous or exciting. One example would be "The head doctor is inducted into a secret society!" The actual "secret society" is a standard fraternity deal with ridiculous hats and silly secret hand gestures, and its hazing ritual is mostly played for laughs. Narrator: "The dead cause the Earth to tremble!" The reality: Minor earth tremors occur at Kingdom hospital occasionally, and while they technically caused by the dead it really isn't as big a deal as the narrator made it sound. | |
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Kingdom Hospital | hasFeature |
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Fauxlosophic Narration / int_44fe781e | type |
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Fauxlosophic Narration / int_44fe781e | comment |
A contrary-to-popular-expectations aversion: Neon Genesis Evangelion, despite actually having massive themes to talk about, focused its very occasional narration on either what's going on right now, the big alien that shows up next episode, or the Fanservice. You would really expect a story about Man-destroying Angels and Screwing Destiny to have some of this going on. Rei's monologue, too. | |
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Neon Genesis Evangelion | hasFeature |
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Fauxlosophic Narration / int_471cc207 | type |
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Spoofed to hell and back in Xavier: Renegade Angel. | |
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Xavier: Renegade Angel | hasFeature |
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Fauxlosophic Narration / int_4d1ba412 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_4d1ba412 | comment |
Parodied by The Adventures of Dr. McNinja at the end of every chapter. Then parodies itself at the end of "Judy gets a kitten" | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_4d1ba412 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_4d1ba412 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Adventures of Dr. McNinja (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_4d1ba412 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_4ebd9372 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_4ebd9372 | comment |
This often pops up in the promos of self-proclaimed geniuses and/or lunatics. Then there's fellows like the Ultimate Warrior, where even the other people behind the scene can't tell whether it's an unbelievably in-depth put-on or they really believe the insanity coming out of their mouths. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_4ebd9372 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_4ebd9372 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Ultimate Warrior (Wrestling) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_4ebd9372 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_4f9a3b9f | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_4f9a3b9f | comment |
In Plain Sight does this a lot, to the point that the narration often has an entirely different version from the subtitles. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_4f9a3b9f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_4f9a3b9f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
In Plain Sight | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_4f9a3b9f | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_4fde0f82 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_4fde0f82 | comment |
Early Edition often had this. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_4fde0f82 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_4fde0f82 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Early Edition | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_4fde0f82 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_503d3d54 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_503d3d54 | comment |
Parodied in The Rocky Horror Picture Show with the Criminologist, especially his closing lines. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_503d3d54 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_503d3d54 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Rocky Horror Picture Show | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_503d3d54 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_519b5595 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_519b5595 | comment |
Anatomy of Hell, a cold, sexually-explicit, coma-inducing arthouse film by Catherine Breillat. As put by Roger Ebert: "They talk. They speak as only the French can speak, as if it is not enough for a concept to be difficult, it must be impenetrable. No two real people in the history of mankind have ever spoken like this, save perhaps for some of Breillat's friends that even she gets bored by. "Your words are inept reproaches," they say, and "I bless the day I was made immune to you and all your kind." | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_519b5595 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_519b5595 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Anatomy of Hell | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_519b5595 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_5392bc91 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_5392bc91 | comment |
In The Wonder Years, Kevin seemed to begin and end every single episode with a monologue. Often times it could be relevant or meaningful but other times it felt like writers were trying to garner something inspiring from completely mundane events. After a while, Adult Kevin seems to wax nostalgically about everything that has ever happened to him. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_5392bc91 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_5392bc91 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Wonder Years | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_5392bc91 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_53a0bd32 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_53a0bd32 | comment |
The Twilight Zone (1959). Rod Serling's opening and closing monologues are simultaneously brilliant and brain-twisting. One generally needs to re-listen to Serling's soliloquys three or four times before they stop sounding like so much word salad and start making sense. It's honestly just easier to read them. A lot of this is due to Serling's gumshoe delivery, which adds a healthy dose of mystery to what would otherwise be a commonplace prologue or summation. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_53a0bd32 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_53a0bd32 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Twilight Zone (1959) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_53a0bd32 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_53a73ca0 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_53a73ca0 | comment |
Each episode of Star Wars: The Clone Wars opens with a philosophical quote or pseudo-quote that tries to tie it in to the episode. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_53a73ca0 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_53a73ca0 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Star Wars: The Clone Wars | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_53a73ca0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_553051f | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_553051f | comment |
Done to Green Lantern by Tommy Monhagan in Hitman. Kyle Rayner is hoodwinked from all sides and ends up helping Tommy put the smack down on homicidal government agents. He ends waxing Fauxlosophic after the adventure. Before Kyle comes to his senses and arrests Tommy, he sneaks off. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_553051f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_553051f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Green Lantern (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_553051f | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_562e8a6e | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_562e8a6e | comment |
Max Payne: Max's Private Eye Monologue musings often stray into this when he takes time off from capping mafiosos in order to muse about the nature of choice, the true meaning of fairy tales, and the end of the world. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_562e8a6e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_562e8a6e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Max Payne (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_562e8a6e | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_5ae0bec6 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_5ae0bec6 | comment |
Tends to pop up in the opening video packages for WWE pay-per-view events, probably somewhere between 1/3 and 1/2 of them.note It begins around 1996 and is pretty prominent during the Attitude Era. The rest are pretty blatant, "Hey, come check out grown men hitting each other with chairs and throwing each other around to make it look like it hurts without actually breaking their necks! Only this time ON A LADDER!!!" This often pops up in the promos of self-proclaimed geniuses and/or lunatics. Then there's fellows like the Ultimate Warrior, where even the other people behind the scene can't tell whether it's an unbelievably in-depth put-on or they really believe the insanity coming out of their mouths. |
|
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_5ae0bec6 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_5ae0bec6 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
WWE (Wrestling) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_5ae0bec6 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_5c135763 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_5c135763 | comment |
Revenge opens and ends with Emily giving an over the top the narration each week. Sometimes it manages to fit the episode theme very well. Other times... | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_5c135763 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_5c135763 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Revenge | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_5c135763 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_5ea59a76 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_5ea59a76 | comment |
The Mystery of Irma Vep ends with a melodramatic rambling speech by Lady Enid as she stares off over the blasted heath that ultimately has no purpose except to make fun of Victorian melodrama. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_5ea59a76 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_5ea59a76 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Mystery of Irma Vep (Theatre) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_5ea59a76 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_60804f39 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_60804f39 | comment |
On very rare occasions, the narration at the beginning of each episode of GUN×SWORD refers to previous plot events in a helpful way, but it frequently falls into this sort of pseudo-philosophy. The over-the-top voice doing the narrating on the English dub makes matters worse. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_60804f39 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_60804f39 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
GUN×SWORD | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_60804f39 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_61f55153 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_61f55153 | comment |
Zero Effect: Darryl Zero's narration is mired in this. It isn't as bad as in some other cases, but usually the point he's trying to make isn't worth the time it takes to make it. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_61f55153 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_61f55153 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Zero Effect | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_61f55153 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_636fe6c1 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_636fe6c1 | comment |
In the Game Mod Batman Doom, the text screens that pop up a few times throughout the game are filled with Batman's musings about how he's "the chosen one" to fight evil. They don't have much to do with the actual game. On the other hand, if you assume that Batman in this game is actually Azrael, it's pretty in-character for him to brood like that. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_636fe6c1 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_636fe6c1 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Batman Doom (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_636fe6c1 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_691be369 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_691be369 | comment |
This applies to The X-Files, where it was common either for Mulder to go on at length about how there are more things in heaven and earth etc., or Scully to lecture about how science is the only reliable guide to the truth without which nothing makes sense yada yada. These voiceovers are most often framed as being readings of the case reports Scully (and sometimes Mulder) are seen writing. It's interesting to think what Skinner's feelings were about all the pretentious quasi-philosophical stuff in what should have been straightforward accounts of events. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_691be369 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_691be369 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The X-Files | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_691be369 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_6f7cfb8d | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_6f7cfb8d | comment |
In the fictional The Princess Bride, characters go on about existential matters, such as Inigo going into a 6 page "who am I" speech. Fortunately, William Goldman excises such ramblings in his abridged version of S. Morgenstern's tale. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_6f7cfb8d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_6f7cfb8d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Princess Bride | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_6f7cfb8d | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_6f96cb3d | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_6f96cb3d | comment |
The opening and closing of Sucker Punch involves narration about guardian angels, and taking back the power, which are basically Sweet Pea's musings on the role that Baby Doll played in her life and, more immediately, springing her from the Bedlam House. They also state that you have power in your own life. It ends You have all the weapons you need, now FIGHT. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_6f96cb3d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_6f96cb3d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Sucker Punch | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_6f96cb3d | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_701f0ece | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_701f0ece | comment |
Berserk: Episodes from Anime often begin with a Pastel-Chalked Freeze Frame of a giant, mutated hand holding the Crimson Behelit while a deep, ominous voice gloomily narrates about how mankind has no true free will. Seems like pseudo-profound pretext so the audience can pretend that this over-violent storyline actually has depth. Then last few episodes reveal exactly who the narrator is, why we needed to remember this, and just how fucked up this story really is. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_701f0ece | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_701f0ece | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Berserk (Manga) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_701f0ece | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_711ab3c8 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_711ab3c8 | comment |
Parodied in Withnail and I. Marwood's voiceovers are magnificently self-important rubbish. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_711ab3c8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_711ab3c8 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Withnail & I | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_711ab3c8 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_74a4c704 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_74a4c704 | comment |
Kingdom Hearts opens with Sora's disembodied voice saying "I've been having these weird thoughts lately. Like, is any of this for real? Or not?" which sounds deep, but has no connection to the story itself. Director Tetsuya Nomura even admitted that the line was originally from a scenario that didn't make it into the final game, but he kept the quote because it sounded cool. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_74a4c704 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_74a4c704 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Kingdom Hearts (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_74a4c704 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_7529056 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_7529056 | comment |
The Super Mario World rom hack "Rise to the Challenge" is filled with this. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_7529056 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_7529056 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Super Mario World (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_7529056 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_755fadab | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_755fadab | comment |
Haruhi Suzumiya has some of this from Koizumi. Though knowing this series, the things he say might be laced with significance down the line. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_755fadab | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_755fadab | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Haruhi Suzumiya | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_755fadab | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_76885dcf | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_76885dcf | comment |
Are You Afraid of the Dark?: The Midnight Society had a variant on this: The kids knew they were spewing nonsense in the prefaces to their stories; it was all just to build atmosphere, and sometimes to mislead the audience on what their story was actually about. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_76885dcf | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_76885dcf | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Are You Afraid of the Dark? | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_76885dcf | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_78fa0f35 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_78fa0f35 | comment |
My Inner Life is a huge example of this. Jenna attempts to convince the readers that she is a deep, philosophical thinker in her prologue about dreams and past incarnations. The story is about Jenna's deluded fantasy that she was a Mary Sue of epic proportions in an alternate universe. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_78fa0f35 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_78fa0f35 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
My Inner Life / Fan Fic | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_78fa0f35 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_79579e28 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_79579e28 | comment |
The various character endings of Resident Evil: Outbreak's scenarios have the characters brood over the zombie outbreak going on around them, and what it means for humanity going forward, in various levels of depth. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_79579e28 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_79579e28 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Resident Evil: Outbreak (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_79579e28 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_79620aaa | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_79620aaa | comment |
In Sandra and Woo, Sandra's attempts to justify her jealous destruction of a sand castle. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_79620aaa | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_79620aaa | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Sandra and Woo (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_79620aaa | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_7ddbc888 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_7ddbc888 | comment |
Eureka Seven's next episode previews. This one is pretty ingenious, actually – it actually is relevant, usually, but the ambiguous language ("the boy" and "the girl" instead of "Renton" and "Eureka", for example) makes it sound like it could be talking about anything. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_7ddbc888 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_7ddbc888 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Eureka SeveN | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_7ddbc888 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_7ea098dd | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_7ea098dd | comment |
The Glass Scientists has Mr. Hyde's narration and inner monologues. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_7ea098dd | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_7ea098dd | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Glass Scientists (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_7ea098dd | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_7f0972fd | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_7f0972fd | comment |
Druuna: Some of the more elaborate philosophical meanderings of various characters can come across as overwraught attempts to pad out the more action- or sex-focused parts of the comic. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_7f0972fd | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_7f0972fd | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Druuna (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_7f0972fd | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_7ff41376 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_7ff41376 | comment |
Dark Shadows opened almost every episode with Victoria introducing herself for the 500th time and then say something philosophical sounding that usually was either stating the obvious or completely falls apart once you think about it. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_7ff41376 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_7ff41376 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dark Shadows | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_7ff41376 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_87c2b177 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_87c2b177 | comment |
Every episode of The Invisible Man starts with Darien narrating a quote by a famous figure. It usually has something to do with the episode's plot. It's established in the pilot that, despite Darien never going to college and spending a chunk of his life behind bars, he is actually pretty well-read (he immediately spots Arnaud's bullshit when the latter appropriates one of Mark Twain's quotes for himself). Lampshaded late in the series, when he's attacked in his apartment after delivering the requisite quote, and a book falls of his shelf. The book is basically a compilation of quotes from famous people. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_87c2b177 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_87c2b177 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Invisible Man | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_87c2b177 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_8847db09 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_8847db09 | comment |
The Hitchhiker had a few of these, that tried horribly to give the show a feeling of Film Noir. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_8847db09 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_8847db09 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Hitch-Hiker | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_8847db09 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_893f66b7 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_893f66b7 | comment |
This makes up about half of Jason X: Death Moon. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_893f66b7 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_893f66b7 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Jason X | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_893f66b7 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_8da0ea80 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_8da0ea80 | comment |
The cave in Mt Ember where the Ruby is found in Pokemon FireRed and LeafGreen contains the following inscription, in braille: "Everything has meaning. Existence has meaning. Being alive has meaning. Have dreams Use power." This doesn't relate to the game's plot or themes in any way at all, and just seems there for the sake of it. Contrast the braille inscription near the Sapphire, which is an elaborate metaphor for cross-version trading, which the gems enable you to do. This could be a hilarious subversion as within the confines of the game, unlike its counterpart, the text has absolutely no meaning despite what it preaches. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_8da0ea80 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_8da0ea80 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Pokémon Red and Blue (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_8da0ea80 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_90552223 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_90552223 | comment |
Subverted in Stranger Than Fiction The narration means something, even the scenes that appear to be random filler fold into Emma Thompson's story, and when the narrator talks about objects and events being meant to save our lives, she is talking literally... and literarily. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_90552223 | featureApplicability |
-0.3 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_90552223 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Stranger Than Fiction | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_90552223 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_90f42a9b | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_90f42a9b | comment |
The Wheel of Time by Robert Jordan begins each book with an intro (to the intro) of the book which, despite being rather short relative to the books themselves, is still quite huge by conventional standards. Pops up additionally throughout the writing as well. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_90f42a9b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_90f42a9b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Wheel of Time | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_90f42a9b | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_91209b29 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_91209b29 | comment |
Xenosaga has a generally good-quality narrative, but there are more than a few wince-worthy moments in ~120 hours of series gameplay. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_91209b29 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_91209b29 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Xenosaga (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_91209b29 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_91fab261 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_91fab261 | comment |
Teenagers from Outer Space's opening scene. In fact, many B-movies from the 1950s and 1960s either began or ended with some amount of Fauxlosophic Narration. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_91fab261 | featureApplicability |
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Fauxlosophic Narration / int_91fab261 | featureConfidence |
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Teenagers from Outer Space | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_91fab261 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_930c87f6 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_930c87f6 | comment |
In Glen or Glenda, Bela Lugosi's addled delivery of obtuse philosophical rants over Stock Footage of buffalo herds is memorable in a way Wood surely did not intend it to be. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_930c87f6 | featureApplicability |
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Glen or Glenda | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_930c87f6 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_93985d2b | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_93985d2b | comment |
Criswell's narration in Plan 9 from Outer Space and Night of the Ghouls, both written and directed by Ed Wood. Neither examples are helped by the fact that the dialogue is extremely awkward or the fact that Criswell delivers it very oddly. You can tell he's reading it off of cue cards, likely without any prior rehearsal. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_93985d2b | featureApplicability |
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Plan 9 from Outer Space | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_93985d2b | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_945f2d42 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_945f2d42 | comment |
Wapsi Square: Used deliberately to avoid questions. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_945f2d42 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_945f2d42 | featureConfidence |
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Wapsi Square (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_945f2d42 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_9582bc82 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_9582bc82 | comment |
Every post-pilot episode of First Wave has Cade quote one of the "lost quatrains" of Nostradamus he found. While the quatrains themselves are made up for the show, they do usually have something to do with the episode's plot, as Cade usually uses them to figure out what to do next. | |
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Fauxlosophic Narration / int_9582bc82 | featureConfidence |
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First Wave | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_9582bc82 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_9e7ed97a | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_9e7ed97a | comment |
Dead Like Me often has it, and often reiterates the same message that death is random, seems unfair, but is inevitable. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_9e7ed97a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_9e7ed97a | featureConfidence |
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Dead Like Me | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_9e7ed97a | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a183d57f | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a183d57f | comment |
Futurama: Spoofed at the end of the episode "Love And Rocket," with Zoidberg's meditation on Valentine's Day: The narrator of The Scary Door intros tends to do this as well, in a spoof of The Twilight Zone. And boy howdy do they play with it: |
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Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a183d57f | featureApplicability |
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Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a183d57f | featureConfidence |
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Futurama | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a183d57f | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a3325757 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a3325757 | comment |
Touch (2012) (from the same producer as Heroes) begins and ends each episode with a rambling philosophical monologue from Jacob, which tend to follow the same pattern as Mohinder's speeches. One episode begins with him talking about how army ants are amazing because they can cooperate, then ends with a discussion about how humans are amazing because they are the only species that knows how to cooperate. | |
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Touch (2012) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a3325757 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a48c533e | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a48c533e | comment |
The B-movie Zardoz begins with this, but there is no way to be profound when Sean Connery is running around in a red thong. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a48c533e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
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Zardoz | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a48c533e | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a4a6b86a | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a4a6b86a | comment |
Code Geass tends to do this during the Previously on… segments that are part of several episodes. They feature narration from C.C., trying to sound deep, describing Lelouch's situation in abstract terms ("The actions one takes are answered by consequences...") and finishing with something like, "At least, that was the hope Lelouch carried in his heart back then," or "But their fate has already been determined, with inevitable outcome." That last one is particularly noteworthy, since it actually contradicts a theme of the series — the constant What If? moments, the way Lelouch's entire argument against his eventual enemies his father and Schneizel is that humanity should have free will and shouldn't be controlled by either of their plans. So thanks for that, C.C. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a4a6b86a | featureApplicability |
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Code Geass | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a4a6b86a | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a4ccfbf7 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a4ccfbf7 | comment |
VR Troopers. Every one of the episodes (save one) over two seasons opened up with Ryan Steele musing about Life, The Universe, and the Monster of the Day, always tying it into some memory of his father. The guy had issues. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a4ccfbf7 | featureApplicability |
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Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a4ccfbf7 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
VR Troopers | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a4ccfbf7 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a86b7660 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a86b7660 | comment |
Due South often opened or closed with Fraser Sr.'s voiceover reading extracts from his diary. But the man wrote beautifully, and the text always offered an interesting commentary on the main action. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a86b7660 | featureApplicability |
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Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a86b7660 | featureConfidence |
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Due South | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a86b7660 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a8c6fdb | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a8c6fdb | comment |
The Witness: The game is littered with audio recorders that read out quotations from the likes of theoretical physicist Albert Einstein, NASA astronaut Russell Schweickart, spiritual teacher Gangaji and astronomer Arthur Eddington; the quotes provide a very esoteric story for the game itself. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a8c6fdb | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a8c6fdb | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Witness (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a8c6fdb | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a993be1f | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a993be1f | comment |
Kreia from Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords skirts this trope for the majority of her dialog, but tends to pull off something more to the effect of Contemplate Our Navels. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a993be1f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a993be1f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_a993be1f | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_aa954170 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_aa954170 | comment |
Invoked in After War Gundam X when Roabea muses that one path on a crossroad must be heaven and the other hell. Witz immediately complains that he hates people who say stuff like that. (Ultimately, however, the comparison proves apt—the paths lead to their hometowns, and when they meet up again both claim to have found hell.) | |
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After War Gundam X | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_aa954170 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_b11e29d2 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_b11e29d2 | comment |
Outlaw Star episodes always start with an opening narration, some of which fall into this category; most of the rest are universe building or exposition. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_b11e29d2 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_b11e29d2 | featureConfidence |
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Outlaw Star (Manga) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_b11e29d2 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_b51b368d | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_b51b368d | comment |
Ergo Proxy, to the point of overuse — practically to the point of parody. As well as its spiritual predecessor, Witch Hunter Robin, the narration of which (if anything) made even less sense. |
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Fauxlosophic Narration / int_b51b368d | featureApplicability |
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Fauxlosophic Narration / int_b51b368d | featureConfidence |
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Ergo Proxy | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_b51b368d | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_b99ea867 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_b99ea867 | comment |
The narrator from Armored Trooper VOTOMS displays some of the funniest and yet most entertaining examples. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_b99ea867 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_b99ea867 | featureConfidence |
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Armored Trooper VOTOMS | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_b99ea867 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_bb4c0ef5 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_bb4c0ef5 | comment |
Parodied in episode 6 of The Strangerhood, where Nikki does the narration and goes on rambling, repetitive musings about the nature of things. All she does is make Wade even more confused than he usually is and even she admits at the end that she has no clue what she's talking about. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_bb4c0ef5 | featureApplicability |
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Fauxlosophic Narration / int_bb4c0ef5 | featureConfidence |
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The Strangerhood (Web Animation) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_bb4c0ef5 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_bfef9cdb | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_bfef9cdb | comment |
Cecil's opening and closing narrations in Welcome to Night Vale come off like this, given they're usually quite random and have little to do with the plot. Example: | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_bfef9cdb | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_bfef9cdb | featureConfidence |
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Welcome to Night Vale (Podcast) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_bfef9cdb | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_c18bfdae | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_c18bfdae | comment |
Deckard's narration on the rooftop with Roy Batty from the theatrical cut of Blade Runner definitely veers into this territory. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_c18bfdae | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_c18bfdae | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Blade Runner | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_c18bfdae | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_c4282b71 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_c4282b71 | comment |
Parodied in the special 100th episode of My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic, which features this Inner Monologue from Gummy the alligator. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_c4282b71 | featureApplicability |
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My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_c4282b71 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_c43df4d8 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_c43df4d8 | comment |
In the Doctor Who serial The Horns of Nimon, Soldeed interprets everything Nimon says as this. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_c43df4d8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_c43df4d8 | featureConfidence |
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Doctor Who | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_c43df4d8 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_c8599ff4 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_c8599ff4 | comment |
The Beast of Yucca Flats was composed almost entirely of the director Coleman Francis performing this sort of narration to avoid having to sync the soundtrack. Much of it has nothing to with the movie. Flag on the moon. How did it get there? A man murdered. A woman's purse. Nothing bothers some people. Not even flying saucers. A couple vacations, unaware of scientific progress. Man's inhumanity to man. Flag on the moon. Caught... in the wheels of progress. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_c8599ff4 | featureApplicability |
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The Beast of Yucca Flats | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_c8599ff4 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_c9a98ba0 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_c9a98ba0 | comment |
This is how Rust talks on True Detective | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_c9a98ba0 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_c9a98ba0 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
True Detective | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_c9a98ba0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_ccabd314 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_ccabd314 | comment |
Digimon Adventure tri.: Most of the movies begin with a narrator rattling off philosophical stuff which has nothing to do with the film's events. The final one, meanwhile, isn't this, it's just the narrator saying "everything will turn out fine" in the most flowery way possible. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_ccabd314 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_ccabd314 | featureConfidence |
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Digimon Adventure tri. | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_ccabd314 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_ccf875f7 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_ccf875f7 | comment |
Bit of a subversion, Criminal Minds begins and/or ends each episode with one of the characters narrating a quotation, usually philosophical. And surprisingly, they usually DO have something to do with the episode, typically the nature of the killer. And a beautiful subversion on the episode where TV Genius Spencer Reid gives a victim's watch back to her father, telling him that he doesn't recognize the piece of poem in it. The guy starts reciting it, and it is clear that it fills him with emotion, so much that he cannot bring himself to finish it. Reid then leaves, and, being a genius who remembers each letter of every text he's read in his life, the finishing narration is him finishing the poem. The episode "True Night" opens with the killer, in voiceover, delivering an odd monologue about real darkness and how most people don't see it. It does make some sense when you watch the rest of the episode, though, and the killer is Ax-Crazy anyway. The subversion at the end of the fourth season finale "...And Back" is probably one of the best. Rather than give the usual quote, Hotch gives his own opinions on the matter as he arrives at his home after a beatdown of a case only to discover that George Foyet aka "The Reaper" is waiting there for him. |
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Fauxlosophic Narration / int_ccf875f7 | featureApplicability |
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Criminal Minds | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_ccf875f7 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_cd6bad8a | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_cd6bad8a | comment |
The narrator of The Scary Door intros tends to do this as well, in a spoof of The Twilight Zone. And boy howdy do they play with it: | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_cd6bad8a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_cd6bad8a | featureConfidence |
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The Twilight Zone (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_cd6bad8a | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_d0557b8 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_d0557b8 | comment |
Curse of the Headless Horseman is accompanied by a narration that tries to sound profound, but usually just ends up weird, confused and pretentious: not helped by the fact the narration often seems to have little to do with what is happening on the screen. One sample gem: | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_d0557b8 | featureApplicability |
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Curse of the Headless Horseman | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_d0557b8 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_d109f322 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_d109f322 | comment |
Andromeda opened with the text of a different quote (usually at least bordering on this trope), sometimes real ones from actual real-world sources, often from some in-universe source. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_d109f322 | featureApplicability |
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Andromeda | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_d109f322 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_d4fe0152 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_d4fe0152 | comment |
Oz often included odd narration segments from Augustus Hill (Who is also a main character) regarding the theme of the episode. Sometimes they were beautiful and insightful. Other times they were just bizarre. He also delivered exposition on prisoners and their crimes, making his exact nature (Augustus as a character couldn't possibly know some of the facts) somewhat ambiguous. | |
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Fauxlosophic Narration / int_d4fe0152 | featureConfidence |
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Oz | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_d4fe0152 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_d89cbc1a | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_d89cbc1a | comment |
Dr. Harley of Find Us Alive is prone to lapsing into this. In a particularly funny in-universe acknowledgement, it turns out to be something he tends to do when he's drunk. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_d89cbc1a | featureApplicability |
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Fauxlosophic Narration / int_d89cbc1a | featureConfidence |
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Find Us Alive (Podcast) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_d89cbc1a | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_df290812 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_df290812 | comment |
Gossip Girl sometimes does this. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_df290812 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_df290812 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Gossip Girl | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_df290812 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_e186e2cf | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_e186e2cf | comment |
In How NOT to Write a Novel, this is discussed, with the example it provides being a page worth of narration that relates, of all things, Niestchze and adultery. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_e186e2cf | featureApplicability |
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How NOT to Write a Novel | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_e186e2cf | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_e293455a | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_e293455a | comment |
Buffy the Vampire Slayer did this in "Passion", "Becoming, Part 1" (which was more of a case of bookends delivered by Whistler) and "Redefintion", including one narration by the villain. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_e293455a | featureApplicability |
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Fauxlosophic Narration / int_e293455a | featureConfidence |
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Buffy the Vampire Slayer | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_e293455a | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_f0a86c12 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_f0a86c12 | comment |
How I Met Your Mother has Future!Ted provide narration like this, in addition to commenting on all the stupid things he and his friends used to do. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_f0a86c12 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_f0a86c12 | featureConfidence |
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How I Met Your Mother | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_f0a86c12 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_f15f622e | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_f15f622e | comment |
MacGyver usually starts an episode with some unrelated adventure backed by a fauxlosophic voice-over by the man himself. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_f15f622e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_f15f622e | featureConfidence |
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MacGyver (1985) | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_f15f622e | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_f3897bcf | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_f3897bcf | comment |
As well as its spiritual predecessor, Witch Hunter Robin, the narration of which (if anything) made even less sense. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_f3897bcf | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_f3897bcf | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Witch Hunter Robin | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_f3897bcf | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_f3c3ca42 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_f3c3ca42 | comment |
Parodied in almost every episode of The Tick, as the eponymous character was quite fond of it. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_f3c3ca42 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_f3c3ca42 | featureConfidence |
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The Tick | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_f3c3ca42 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_fae1b03e | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_fae1b03e | comment |
Glass Fleet features Fauxlosophic Narration from Michel before the opening credits of each episode. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_fae1b03e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_fae1b03e | featureConfidence |
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Glass Fleet | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_fae1b03e | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_fcfa999b | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_fcfa999b | comment |
FLCL. Naota usually begins each episode with some sort of semi-emo philosophical musings. He says several times throughout the six-episode series that "nothing exciting ever happens here. Everything is ordinary", which is clearly not the case, what with the fighting robots and such (though this is probably meant to be ironic, especially as the series goes on). As the single most mature individual in the series, Naota is probably affecting what he thinks is an "adult" outlook. But most of his monologues are largely meaningless and inaccurate. | |
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FLCL | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_fcfa999b | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_fd6b8067 | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_fd6b8067 | comment |
The Naked Witch opens with a strange narration musing on the nature of good and evil, and what lurks beyond edge of light. It makes little sense, especially as the witch was seemingly just a wronged widow before she was killed and rose from the dead, and did not indulge in any of the acts the narration is rambling on about. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_fd6b8067 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_fd6b8067 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Naked Witch | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_fd6b8067 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_ff9ab17f | type |
Fauxlosophic Narration | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_ff9ab17f | comment |
Star Trek: The Next Generation: A badly done Patrick Stewart Speech can seem like this. | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_ff9ab17f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_ff9ab17f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Star Trek: The Next Generation | hasFeature |
Fauxlosophic Narration / int_ff9ab17f |
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