The Big Damn Kiss/Playing With

Basic Trope: Epic kissing scene.
 * Straight: After a long Unresolved Sexual Tension, two characters kiss, and the scene looks gorgeous.
 * Exaggerated: When they are kissing, new volcanoes erupt on the ground around them, and sprinkle lava everywhere.
 * Justified: The characters are Reality Warpers who unwillingly change their environment by their excitement.
 * Inverted: When the two are kissing, clouds cover the sky, and The Bee Gees' Stayin' Alive plays in the background.
 * Subverted: The music gets powerful, the ocean's waves get higher, the sun starts shining.... they look at each other... He gets closer... but she just slaps him...
 * Double Subverted: ...That makes it even more powerful when she continues with a Slap Slap Kiss.
 * Parodied: When they are kissing, rainbows appear even though it's night, and the moon is having an orgasm.
 * Deconstructed: The outstanding scenery above everyone who is kissing, means the end of privacy. You can't have a secret affair while fireworks are appearing above your head.
 * Reconstructed: People either learned to live without secret affairs, or learned to replace kissing with other practices, but the spectacular scenery is enough compensation for the inconviniences.
 * Zig Zagged: ???
 * Averted: They are kissing, but nothing particular happens. It's just... mouths touching.
 * Enforced: The writer specifically asked for realistic visuals, but the visual artists found a kissing scene in that style too depressing.
 * Lampshaded: Did the Earth Move For You, Too?
 * Invoked: Bob buys fireworks, and sets them off when he is planning to kiss Alice.
 * Exploited: Bob times his kissing of Alice at the fireworks event, so influenced by the assault of all of her senses, she will fall for him.
 * Defied: Alice just wants a pleasantly, boring life, and intentionally avoid disruptive situations that would result in fireworks and catharsis.
 * Discussed: Two girls discuss if the other one ever had such a situation.
 * Conversed: A character mocks that in cartoons, emotions seem to control even the colors.