The Plot Thickens
Stock Phrase often said after a turning point in the Plot.
It usually refers to things becoming overly complex or mysterious. Today this term is often Played for Laughs. Coined in the 17th century, it originally described the plot of a play that was overly intricate, and by the late 1800s it was used for increasingly complex mysteries in detective stories.
The phrase is sometimes parodied as "The plot sickens". You may also hear "the plot thins" - usually uttered after a major Anticlimax.
Film
Castor Troy: [looking at Jamie in her underwear] The plot thickens. |
- Shadowlands
C.S. Lewis: He comes; he sleeps; he goes. So the plot thickens. |
Literature
- Famously used in the Sherlock Holmes story A Study in Scarlet, as uttered by Holmes himself.
- One of the chapters in The Phoenix Guards by Steven Brust is titled "In Which The Plot, Behaving In Much The Same Manner As A Soup To Which Cornstarch Has Been Added, Begins, At Last, To Thicken."
Live Action TV
- Hawaii Five-O (1968) pilot episode.
Wo Fat: As we clever Chinese say, "The plot thickens..." |
- Knight Rider episode "Mouth of the Snake"
Michael Knight: So, the plot thickens. I bet this guy David Dalton is not down in Mexico looking for the world's biggest burrito. |
Pauline: It's about Mickey. He's getting married. |
Newspaper Comics
Poetry
- Roald Dahl used this to customary darkly comic effect in his retelling of Cinderella
Ah ha, you see, the plot grows thicker, |
Video Games
- Dragon Age Origins: The Warden can say it during one of Leliana's tales.
Western Animation
- Justice League - When Luthor's soon-to-be Injustice Gang sees who's gathered them, the Shade quips, "Lex Luthor? The plot thins."