Plot-Based Voice Cancellation



Sometimes, one line can change everything—for the characters as well as the audience. So, often, if that line has to come up early on, it will be cancelled out by some other noise, such as a truck passing or a plane taking off, or, in the case of dream worlds and other special cases, for no obvious reason whatsoever.

Almost universally, this becomes a point for a flashback later in the series, either once the characters (or audience) have learned the rest of the line, or once the conditions have been met for everyone to be clued in as to what happened. Clearing up the issue of what was said usually qualifies as The Reveal.

Compare to: Plot Based Photograph Obfuscation, Instant Mystery, Just Delete Scene, Conveniently Interrupted Document.

Anime and Manga
"Gendo: The truth is, I just saved a bunch of money by switching to GEICO! Ritsuko: You liar..."
 * Melody of Oblivion, when Sayoko is talking to Bokka as the door to the maze closes, and (audience only) what the Melody says to Bokka in the final episode.
 * Uta Kata, Manatsu talking to Ichika in her dream.
 * Bleach, Ichigo can hear the voice of his Zanpakutou, except when the sword tries to tell him its name.
 * It's played differently between the original and the English dub. In the original, the voice is distorted when he says it. In the dub, it's clear, but Ichigo thinks to the audience that he didn't hear it.
 * This happens at least once in Kimagure Orange Road, a show that tends to use a lot of comedic cliches.
 * Anime/film subversion: During  one of Gendo Ikari's lines in End of Evangelion is muted, but for no obvious reason, and we never find out what he was saying.
 * Especially annoying because the line looks to be very important. GENDO: The truth is * Dramatic Pause* (inaudible).

"Yuriko: Gendo did tell Ritsuko something, it's not simply a matter of Anno trying to be clever or leave the audience wondering. What could Gendo have said? Many of theorized it was simply, "I love/loved you." - but that seems too clean and simple, too trite, for Anno to make such a big deal about protecting the secret. Love is the obvious answer - and Gendo was never obvious. Personally, I'm content in believing Gendo said, "Ritsuko Akagi, I truly... needed you.""
 * In this case, Hideaki Anno whispered the real line to Yuriko Yamaguchi (Ritsuko's VA) in order to get the appropriate reaction out of her. So both of them know what it is, but they ain't telling.
 * Originally there was supposed to be an explosion or some such loud noise at that point to drown out Gendo's words. Some viewers have gone back through the whole series to piece together clues to narrow down the possibilities of what Gendo might have been saying to Ritsuko.
 * A collection of theories as to the silent line. NSFW.
 * Yuriko has actually alluded to what she personally thinks Gendo said.


 * The CLAMP manga Tokyo Babylon, precursor to X1999, includes a promise between the two main leads made years before their second meeting, and only remembered by the elder of the two. They conversed rather innocently under a sakura tree, and a convenient blast of wind obscured Subaru's hearing... making him miss a critical part of their "promise".
 * At the end of their showdown in X1999, a dying whispers something to Subaru. All the audience hears is "I ... you."
 * In Code Geass, The only time C.C.'s name is spoken it's replaced by the sound of a drop of water falling.
 * Like the Evangelion example above, Jun Fukuyama actually did say C.C.'s real name, so presumably the main cast all knows it
 * Zettai Karen Children has one of these in a Mexican Standoff between
 * In the Suzumiya Haruhi episode Mysterique Sign, we have Emiri Kimidori have her stating of the Computer Club President's name interrupted by Shamisen meowing.
 * The thing the Rail Tracer whispered into Rachel's ear in Baccano!!, which she eventually reveals when she relays the story to the Daily Days newspaper company:
 * In One Piece, we never hear what Kuma tells Rayleigh until two years in and out of story (there was a Time Skip and there were break weeks in order to get that to sync up). We knew what it was about, that he was splitting up the crew to help them escape, but we didn't get most of the details on why until after that time had passed.
 * In Ouran High School Host Club Tamaki says something to Lady Eclair right before he jumps off the bridge to rescue Haruhi. What he says is revealed later in flashback.
 * Parodied in the Excel Saga anime. The Man in the Iron Mask's final words to Nabeshin are drowned out by a passing train that appears out of nowhere just for the sake of making it inaudible.
 * As the image above shows, the manga version of Chrono Crusade uses a visual example, where the text in the text bubble is scribbled out. Interestingly, that frame is when Rosette remembers the important promise being made, with the audience themselves being left in the dark until Joshua (the boy in the image) remembers it himself.
 * Like the Chrono example, the psychological mystery manga "Lying Mii-kun And Broken Maa-chan: Precious Lies" by Iruma Hiruma features a very similar visual trick;
 * In Harukanaru Toki no Naka de - Hachiyou Shou episode 16, the first time Yorihisa has a flashback to his brother's death, his brother's last words are muted; the actual line -- "Yorihisa, believe in yourself"—isn't revealed until the episode's climactic battle.
 * In the doublet arc of Ah! My Goddess, the only thing that can stop the demon's plan is for his doublet (Belldandy) to say his name. Every mention of  name in flashback scenes is blotted out until Belldandy remembers it (It had been blocked from her memory. The whole point of the doublet system is that the people involved aren't supposed to know who their doublet is) and says it out loud.
 * Madoka Magica: Madoka's dream that opens episode one features Homura shouting something that we don't learn for nine episodes.
 * In A Certain Magical Index, Touma makes an obscured promise to a  villain that apparently gets Misaka very flustered.   It isn't until the end of the second series that we actually learn what he said.
 * Used in their ending parody. "Gin-san...I have no idea what you've just said..."

Comic Books

 * The trope is played straight in the Sin City story "The Big Fat Kill," where a great deal of trouble could have been avoided if a passing helicopter had not obscured the line

Film

 * The Bride's name in Kill Bill is bleeped out until halfway through the second movie; this is more of a theme-based voice cancellation — the point at which we first hear her name coincides with the point at which we begin to see her as less of a pissed-off, vengeful force of nature, and more of a wounded and put-upon human being.
 * Though we can see her name earlier in the story on her airplane ticket. Also many characters refer to her by her last name:, though until her full name is revealed, the viewer is not aware of it.
 * In Batman Forever, Two-Face says he won't set off a bomb if Batman surrenders himself, dead or alive. Bruce Wayne (in attendance) yells, "Harvey! I'm Batman!" But by this point the shrieks of terror drown him out. Eventually, this leads to the Grayson family dying and kicking off Robin's Backstory.
 * Narrowly averted in The Neverending Story. Bastian declares the Empress' new name in the middle of a raging storm, making it seem as though he's yelling incoherently - but if one listens closely, you can hear Barret Oliver calling out "MOON-CHI-ULD!" Since he named the Empress after his mother, this has rather interesting implications. Apparently his grandparents were hippies.
 * The German dub of the film makes the line much clearer, avoiding this altogether.
 * One wonders if the use of Dramatic Thunder and the soundtrack to cover the name up was a stylistic choice on the part of the director, so that each viewer could imagine the name to be whatever they wanted (example: "Moriah!"), or if it was unintentional.
 * Done for laughs in Blazing Saddles: "The new sheriff's a nigg..."[bell peal]
 * "What'd he say?"
 * "He said the sheriff is near!"
 * Some televised versions of the movie also do this to censor out various examples of profanity, making the censored version funnier than the original, as what they were going to say is pretty obvious.
 * "Now is a time of great decision: Are we to stay or up and quit? We can only come to one conclusion: Our town is turning into ..." [mangled chord]
 * Used amusingly in The Extra, where the movie's arguable bad guy tells anyone in his presence off for referring to the movie as "A black comedy. And I mean black. F*** the censors.", with 'F***' being cancelled by a siren going off or another miscellaneous noise. Of course, the moment the bad says it himself to all and sundry, it isn't cancelled.
 * In The Spanish Prisoner, this is used to prevent the audience from ever learning.
 * Oddly enough, though, the line shows up clearly in the subtitles.
 * In Shrek the Third, it takes poor Fiona three tries to tell Shrek she is pregnant, because of the boat horn. When she actually manages it he's too far out of range to continue the conversation, although he does actually get the message.
 * A unique variant appears at the end of the 1999 Sean Connery/Catherine Zeta-Jones heist film Entrapment. Robert MacDougal (Connery) escapes from police custody, leaving Virginia Baker (Zeta-Jones) and several police officers at a train station. After the officers leave, frustrated by the thief's escape, MacDougal appears and asks Baker what she wants to do next. Baker explains a plan that is drowned out by the passing of a train through the station, directly between the two characters (standing on two platforms). What exactly the plan is never gets explained.
 * This is used for a more romantic ending to Public Enemies. When John Dillinger dies, he whispers something which a fed pretends not to have heard. He only just barely heard it and it didn't make much sense to him, but he relates it to Dillinger's lover, forming the last line of the film. "Tell Billie for me: bye-bye, blackbird."
 * In From Russia with Love, Robert Shaw plays a Russian assassin, Grant. Immediately prior to meeting Bond, there's a scene in which Grant dupes and kills another agent, and his dialogue is deliberately too quiet for the viewer to hear. His assumed English accent when he finally talks to Bond is thus that much more surprising.
 * Grant is English, a criminal recruited by SPECTRE. Bond only assumes he's Russian because he doesn't know yet that
 * In the original novel he's stated to be from County Armagh in Ireland, but this doesn't seem to be the case in the film.
 * In Rushmore, when Max tells Mr. Blume's wife that he's having an affair, he meets her on a highway overpass (no reason for this location is ever given) and what he says is inaudible due to the sound of a truck going by, but it's evident from her horrified reaction. In the script, he says, "Your husband's fucking a schoolteacher, pardon my French. I thought you should know."
 * In Pinocchio, Geppetto is searching for Pinocchio in the rain when Stromboli's cart, with Pinocchio caged inside, passes by. He calls out one more time, but is drowned out by thunder.
 * About two-thirds of the way through North by Northwest, the Professor explains the whole "George Kaplan" scenario to Thornhill at the airport, and his voice is drowned out by the roar of plane engines. This is actually a rather clever inversion of the trope, in that we the viewers already know about the stuff he's talking about, so making the conversation inaudible is sparing us from the redundancy.
 * In "Suspiria" the heroine arrives at an exclusive ballet school in the midst of a storm. A student appearing outside her cab says something unintelligible. The student is killed shortly afterward. When the heroine finally realizes what she said it drives the plot toward its resolution.

Literature
""Uh. . . why does your partner keep saying ' 'ing' ', Mr Pin?""
 * This drives the plot of The Mysterious Disappearance of Leon (I Mean Noel).
 * The Truth: Hired muscle Mr. Tulip's dialogue is peppered liberally with "—ing!" making it look like he's using a near constant stream of profanity. Until about a quarter of the way through when someone asks his partner about it:

""She could use a simple word like “ungrateful” in a way that would require a dash and an “ing” in the mouth of Mr. Tulip.""
 * It's made even clearer later in the book that he really is simply pausing and saying 'ing':

Live-Action TV

 * Babylon 5 "You are "
 * In the Korean adaptation of Hana Yori Dango (Boys Before Flowers), a passing plane drowns out what Jun Pyo says to Jan Di regarding their relationship.
 * Revenge of the killer example: The first name of Mrs. Doyle from Father Ted is never revealed. In one episode her full name is repeatedly mentioned over a telephone conversation but something in the background always creates a loud noise at exactly the right time.
 * Funnily enough, she does casually reveal her first name in one of the earliest episodes, which the writers admitted was an example of "the kind of information you carelessly throw around [...] without realising that it had the potential to become this deep, dark secret." It's, by the way.
 * Eastenders had a scene where Jack Dalton told Dennis Rickman the truth about what really happened to his father Den Watts. Predictably it was drowned out by the noise of a passing train. It wasn't until several weeks later that viewers learned that Dalton told Dennis that Den was alive.
 * Young Jae confesses his love just when the Zamboni machines zips by at an iceskating rink in the Korean Series Full House. Naturally, Ji Eun is left looking puzzled...
 * In one episode of House, Chase fatally misdiagnoses a patient immediately following a seemingly irrelevant phone call. Not until the end of the episode do we find out the phone call was.
 * But that was actually a case of Unreliable Narrator.
 * That Mitchell and Webb Sound had a sketch involving a condition where a character makes a random sound instead of the key word in a sentence - making it very difficult to get their point across. Everyone in the sketch had it.

Video Games

 * In the very first of Roxas's dreams in Kingdom Hearts II, two Organization members meet; only one is given vocal dialogue, while the other only gets the subtitles. Upon The Reveal where Roxas realizes that, the scene is shown again, this time longer and with both characters speaking.
 * Not to mention the incredibly contrived intro plot where nobody could say the word.
 * 358/2 Days plays with the scene again, showing us the ending of the scene for the first time...except the final line is completely muted and not even subtitled. Near the end of the game, we hear it in flashback.

Western Animation
"Angelica: She (Ms. Carol) thinks we're all little -- (CUT AWAY)"
 * Also done for laughs in The Fairly OddParents: when Timmy goes back in time and meets his parents as children, when Mr. Turner says his name a car passes and doesn't let the viewer hear it. The same happens when Mr. Turner says his future wife, then crush's name.
 * An episode of Rugrats also played this trope for laughs. After Angelica learned a dirty word from a TV idol named Ms. Carol she would always be silenced out by a cutaway.


 * Although this could be considered more as a Sound Effect Bleep because it wasn't so much the word itself that was important than it was that Angelica was actually saying it.