Try and Follow

""But in the end, sometimes making an escape is just about being willing to do what the guy chasing you won't. Like jump off a building.""

- Michael Westen, Burn Notice

First Rule of being followed: do what your pursuer is unwilling to do. Of course, part of this is to what extent the prey does not want to be caught.

In some cases you can expect someone to say "No One Could Survive That," because the escape appeared just that insane. In many other cases those following are fully aware that the person survived but are dumbfounded that they are still moving. Especially if surviving that fall was a Million-to-One Chance.

And if the pursuers do keep on following, the hunted still has the Wronski Feint to fall back on.

If you are feeling particularly ballsy, you can give your hunters the raspberry and issue the challenge of "Go ahead, try and follow me!"

Supertrope to Wronski Feint and Aerial Canyon Chase. Compare Briar Patching and Suicidal Gotcha. Rarely, if ever, works on the Implacable Man or The Juggernaut. Is very likely to be pulled of at least once by the Ace Pilot.

Anime and Manga
"Ranma: This is no place for a fight. Kuno! Follow me! Kuno: That I shall!"
 * In Case Closed, Shinichi's mother once hung around too long at an intersection and then pulled away at the last possible minute to evade a car that had been surrepticiously following them.
 * The car chase in episode 2 of Canaan, making the unnamed taxi driver into an Ensemble Darkhorse.
 * This is basically how both Izaya and Shizuo of Durarara!! learned Parkour. Izaya learned it so he could escape and reach places where Shizuo would have to be insane to follow him to. Shizuo was simply insane enough to follow him..
 * In Fairy Tail, Lucy is captured and tied up by the Phantom Lords and held prisoner on a very tall tower. After she kicks the guild leader in the crotch she realizes that there is no way down, so rather than face returning home to her father and/or torture at the hands of the guild, she jumps off the building
 * Double Subverted in Ranma ½. Ranma and Kuno are staring down in a school corridor. Ranma proceeds out the nearest (third floor) window. Subverted because not only does Kuno actually follow, the destination is not as dangerous as Ranma intended (the swimming pool, versus solid ground). The Double Subversion kicks in because the swimming pool actually is a threat to Ranma because of his water-triggered curse (danger of embarrassment, at least), and because he takes advantage of the ensuing positions to defeat Kuno anyway.

Comic Books

 * Bone has a famous and catchphrase-launching subversion in an early sequence where little Fone Bone is being pursued by giant rat creatures. "Those rat creatures would have to be pretty stupid to follow me on this frail, little branch!"
 * "STUPID, STUPID RAT CREATURES!"
 * In Sin City, a common technique in avoiding persuing cop cars is to head to Old Town where they aren't allowed. A civilian car is fine since it's a possible customer for the prostitutes but since the girls have their own rules, a squad car is likely to get blown apart.

Film
"Leia: What are you doing? You're not actually going into an asteroid field!? Han: They'd be crazy to follow us, wouldn't they?"
 * The Fugitive and the famous dam jump. They made this into a perfect moment between hunted and hunter, and showed what extreme Richard Kimble was willing to go to prove his innocence.
 * Homaged in, among many other things, Metal Gear Solid 3, where Snake does the same to escape Ocelot, whose response to this is "Don't you die on me yet..."
 * And in the sequel U.S. Marshals, where the fugitive jumps off the roof of a building, uses a rope to swing over to a train station on the other side of the street, then jumps onto the roof of the departing train in order to evade Gerard.
 * Rambo (In First Blood, he was being chased through the woods and actually jumped from a small cliff into trees to escape.)
 * Subverted in The Matrix. Morpheus gave Neo the ultimatum of either escaping by jumping onto a window washing platform or being captured by the Agents. Neo chose the second option.
 * The videogame Path Of Neo allows you to pursue the first option and see what could have happened. They might catch you anyway, but if you're good enough to escape them, Trinity is waiting outside on her motorcycle and will instantly take you to Morpheus.
 * In the beginning of the movie, Trinity jumps across a roof to escape an agent. The first time, he follows. The second time, she jumps into a window in the side of the building. He doesn't follow.
 * The asteroid field in Star Wars and Han Solo's exclamation, "Never tell me the odds!" The TIE fighters chasing them also ignored the odds, and they exploded pretty well.

"Ben: Who's the more foolish - the fool, or the fool who follows him?"
 * See also the following line from Ben Kenobi:

"Buttercup: We'll never survive! Wesley: Nonsense! You're only saying that because no one ever has."
 * The Expanded Universe shows that such ploys are such a standard part of Han's repertoire that this trope could be named the "Han Solo Gambit".
 * Simba's escape from the Hyenas through a thorn bush field after Mufasa's death in The Lion King. Of course, Simba didn't mean to do this, but it had the same effect.
 * Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid jumped off the cliff into the river below to avoid being caught. But that wasn't enough and they learned later that their pursuers would keep after them until they were captured or dead.
 * The Princess Bride, when Wesley and Buttercup escape into The Fire Swamp to evade their pursuers.


 * And earlier, when Vizzini's gang climb the Cliffs of Insanity.
 * The most hilarious moment in the film True Lies involves Arnold Schwarzenegger on a horse (borrowed from a mounted city cop) chasing a bad guy on a motorcycle through an improbable array of settings, including crashing through an elegant soiree in a grand hotel. Eventually the villain uses a ramp to do a suicidal leap from the hotel roof... into a rooftop swimming pool a hundred feet away and twenty feet down. Arnold attempts to follow—only to have his horse come to a dead stop and give him an "Are you insane?" look.
 * Subverted in Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer. When Johnny tries this move, apparently hoping his superior knowledge of the area will pay off, the Surfer phases stoically through the obstacles.
 * Probably one of the most popular sequences from Casino Royale is when Bond is chasing after a bomber who is employing Le Parkour moves to navigate a construction site and trying to lose Bond in the process. Instead of replicating his nimble target's movements, Bond would go for far more direct approaches to navigate the same obstacles, like slamming through a sheet of drywall after his target squeezed through a small, hard-to-reach hole.
 * In Mel Gibson's Apocalypto, Jaguar Paw's jump from a waterfall is a turning point for the character and story. When his pursuers actually do follow and survive, he realizes that he can't just outrun them. After all, he is Jaguar Paw. He is a hunter. And this is his forest.
 * In Remo Williams: The Adventure Begins, at one point Remo is being chased by a relentless trio of doberman pinschers. He climbs to the roof of a building to escape, but they follow somehow, at which point he runs across a cable connecting the building he's on to another building. He even lampshades the situation by uttering a sarcastic, "Try and follow me now, you bastards!" Two of the dogs leave the roof to find other avenues of approach. But the third dog follows him across the cable.
 * Batman Returns: Batman heads directly toward a narrow alley far too small to accommodate the Batmobile, then transforms his vehicle until it will fit. The police following him obliviously maintain acceleration right until they crash into the alley

Literature

 * In Rudyard Kipling's Second Jungle Book story "Red Dog", Mowgli is fleeing the rampaging dogs and jumps off a cliff into a raging river. This is a deliberate subversion, though - he knows they'll follow him, but is setting a trap for them.
 * Stalky & Co. by Rudyard Kipling: right in the first chapter the boys lured their supervisors (overeager to catch them on something) to the land of a retired colonel who doesn't like strangers wandering on his lawn and didn't have much an opportunity for years to jaw the hell out of someone. Hilarity Ensues.
 * In Men at Arms, Sergeant Angua (a w-) is running from a dog pack on the rooftops. She jumps over a wide street, and the dogs following stop. The leader tells them to keep chasing, and jumps over to demonstrate.
 * In Lucky Starr and the Rings of Saturn, Starr evades pursuit by flying directly at Saturn's moon Mimas in an apparent crash dive.
 * In the Descent novels, St. John, during a dogfight around Shiva Station, decides to lose his tail by flying mere meters above the station's hull, dodging and weaving among the towers, antennae, and other assorted space station stuff. This absolutely horrifies his co-pilot, who is convinced that they are going to die. Fortunately, they do not. Unfortunately, the pilot chasing them is good enough to follow them.

Live-Action TV
"Clarkson: The Corvette is stuck in British Home Stores!"
 * Explained in Burn Notice in the top quote. The show has a "Spy Work for Dummies" narration and in trying to escape some pursuers, Michael jumped down two stories and ran home on a twisted ankle. From a later episode, "You bend your knees, tuck and roll... and just accept that it's going to hurt."
 * In another episode, he said that this is also an effective way to tell if you are being trailed, you take unnecessary risks. If in a car, you signal one way and go the other, speed through red lights, etc.
 * On Top Gear, Jeremy Clarkson (being pursued through a shopping mall by "baddies" in a Corvette as part of an 'extreme road test'), attempted dodging in and out of several tight spaces in his Ford Fiesta. The 'Vette still gave chase, but it got significantly delayed, and Clarkson eventually made his escape.


 * In an episode of Firefly, Wash attempts to lose the Feds on their tail by saying "Let's see them follow us through here!" and ducking and weaving through a narrow canyon. The camera pulls back to show the Feds are simply flying above the canyon and watching them from there. "Oh...I didn't think of that." Then they start with the bombing.

Video Games

 * In Heavy Rain, Ethan can escape from the police by jumping off a building and hijacking a taxi. It's not clear why this works though, since the police have a helicopter.
 * It's possible to invoke this trope in the X Universe games. If your ship is small enough, you can do things like fly through gaps in space stations and make tight passes through asteroid thickets. Meanwhile, your AI pursuer's collision avoidance programming is likely to force it into going through a wide loop around the object while you continue to open the gap.
 * When playing games such as Snake or Light Cycles ( Tron ), getting into tight alleys that your opponent can't follow is a key tactic in advanced play. Of course, one has to be sure they can actually make it through the often tight maze to the other end before someone seals it off...

Web Comics
"Violetta: Now do you understand what I have to work with?!"
 * In Girl Genius Tarvek has a bright idea to run into the Castle Heterodyne. At the time, it's one big insane deathtrap used as a prison not seriously guarded once the prisoners are shepherded into the gate - usually the equivalent of a death sentence. Yes, the guards didn't follow him inside...

"Agatha: ...He was so afraid of being killed, he hid in a poorly-mapped labyrinth full of traps? Librarian: Well, assassins aren't fools. They stay out of places like that."
 * He wasn't the only one - Violetta's uncle later did much the same, if in a less ridiculously deadly place:


 * Buck Godot: Zap Gun for Hire had a whole mini-arc where Buck ran from the guy with Tax Notification. This included Roof Hopping, riling up some corporate security so they were very ready for the second intruder and moving through a brothel where the guy was jumped by a girl too cute to resist physically and too enthusiastic to be stopped in any other way.

Western Animation

 * Peter and Lois from Family Guy escape from wheelchair-bound cop Joe by jumping over a fence.
 * Another episode had a robber do the same thing. After he got away, Joe went through a Heroic BSOD and quit the force, but at the end crossed paths with the robber again, who tried the same thing, only for Joe to find a way to fling himself over the fence and land on the guy.
 * In Invader Zim, when Dib and Zim are driving the planets Mercury and Mars, Zim attempts this with Dib by challenging him to follow him through the asteroid belt. Dib is smart enough not to take on the challenge.
 * Parodied in an episode of King of the Hill: Hank is caught in a car chase with a pimp, and so he waits at an intersection for a yellow light and then guns it. When the pimp runs through the subsequent red light, Hank is shocked.

Truth In Television

 * Criminals in car chases will sometimes take really crazy risks (swerving, going in the wrong lane) to get the police to stop following them—an officer's first duty is to protect the innocent, after all. Watch any episode of "World's Wildest Police Chases" or similar shows for confirmation. Of course, with police helicopters, the police can keep the criminals under surveillance until they can get the situation back under control.
 * There is one instance of a guy in a stolen tank leading the police on a merry chase that they couldn't follow directly (mainly because he was in a tank and crushed things rather than going around them) when he tried to lose them by swerving into oncoming traffic Reality Ensued and the tank got stuck on the concrete lane dividers.
 * Linkage
 * Incorrect. They did follow him, en masse and quite closely. If he had reversed instead of going over that median, he would have crushed at least two, possibly five police cars. To me, this is the police taking insane risks. He stole the tank from a national guard depot, he should have never gotten that far and the response shouldnt have been police.
 * The cruisers helped get the attention of other drivers and pedestrians to get them out of the way, served as a rolling road block behind the tank, and made sure that as soon as the tank was somehow immobilized, officers could immediately swarm it and break open the hatch. A military response would probably have occurred if the chase lasted much longer than the 23 minutes it did; the delivery of an anti-tank unit would require the declaration of martial law (since it has to be operated by trained military members, not civilian law enforcement) and for good reason that can't be done with just a call to the nearest National Guard base.
 * A rock cliff in New York's Shawangunk Mountains bears the name Sam's Point. According to legend, it was named back in the 1700s for Sam Gonzales, who escaped a party of pursuing Indians by jumping off the cliff into the bushes below. There is no record as to whether the Indian chief further guaranteed Sam's escape by looking down from atop the cliff and confidently stating "No One Could Survive That".
 * Find yourself a victim of an Incredibly Obvious Tail? Experts suggest the best way to shake your stalker is to jump into traffic. The confusion ensures everyone is paying attention to you, and your stalker won't act with witnesses abound. Plus, if you really cause enough trouble, police might take you into (protective) custody. Of course, you might just get mowed over by a car.
 * Inverted with a safer alternate recommendation: Stop for an extended period at a green light. People who follow this are suspicious.