Undignified Death

Death sucks. That's why most people are afraid of it. Some people die of old age, or gradually succumb to one of a number of illnesses. When death comes, the lucky among us will go out peacefully with dignity. Some of us might go out fighting the good fight, saving the lives of some unfortunate person whom our consciences cannot ignore and force us to help. They'll all die "good deaths" (and in some cases, heroic deaths).

This trope is not about those people.

Undignified Death is about the people who die in ways that are, to put it completely bluntly, ridiculous and embarrassing. The manner of their demise are the things you read about on websites dedicated to the Darwin Awards. The kind of death that ends up the punchline of a joke told by a standup comedian who specializes in Black Comedy or Dead Baby Comedy.

This is a somewhat Subjective Trope in that, while we might find the way a person joined the Choir Invisible to be humorous and worth a laugh, to the person's family it is a tragedy. The bereaved naturally think you cruel and inhuman for laughing at such a tragedy. And it is a tragedy... someone has died, after all. But that doesn't stop it from being funny, when you think about it.

While it may be preferable to one, it sometimes overlaps with Cruel and Unusual Death when the death is not just embarrassing, it's also horrific. (In fact, the whole point of many Cruel and Unusual Deaths is to completely humiliate the victim and tarnish his/her name forever.) Often overlaps with Death by Falling Over. Super trope to The Can Kicked Him. Contrast Dying Moment of Awesome, which may well be the exact opposite of this trope, as well as Great Way to Go, which is never combined with this trope.

Anime and Manga

 * Dolf from Nichijou. This guy actually dies as a result of tripping over his own feet while trying to take a wooden cube from a little girl. And yes, it happened in front of lots of witnesses.
 * In the first episode of One Punch Man, the Monster of the Week is the younger brother of a Mad Scientist, whose brother has turned him into a Kaiju-sized monstrosity. Said older brother is directing him from his right shoulder, and then Saitama lands on the giant's left shoulder. The older brother shouts to his sibling, "There's someone on your shoulder! Crush him!" Suffice to say, he really should have specified which shoulder.

Comic Books

 * When Johnny the Homicidal Maniac isn't giving a Cruel and Unusual Death, it's this. In his twitter, he mentions he killed someone with a cheeto.
 * Cypher getting shot in New Mutants had shades of this. He died in the background from a gut shot while a massive battle was being waged.
 * Baron Strucker in Secret Warriors.
 * Few would have called Captain Mar-Vell's death undignified; he died with every important hero in the Marvel Universe, and even his hated enemies the Skrulls at his side, mourning and paying their respects. However, when his spirit was met in the afterlife years later, he was rather upset to have died of cancer and not having fallen in battle, being a Proud Warrior Race Guy.

Film

 * In Amelie, the eponymous character's mother dies when a tourist committing suicide via freefall lands on her.
 * In Hot Rod, Rod had always thought his father died testing a jump for Evel Knievel. In reality, he choked on pie.
 * In the 1966 all-star comic adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson's The Wrong Box, ten of the twenty competitors for the Tontine fall victim to this in a series of vignettes at the beginning of the film. In order:
 * army sergeant Brian Allen Harvey orders his men to fire a cannon, oblivious to the fact that he is standing directly in the line of fire;
 * amateur falconer Sydney Whitcombe Sykes is attacked by his own bird when he gives the order to kill;
 * intrepid explorer Ian Scott Fife plants a Union Flag on a mountaintop which promptly gives way under him;
 * dignitary Leicester Young-Fielding is hit squarely in the face by the ceremonial bottle of champagne at the christening of a ship;
 * army officer Alan Frazer Scrope is sounding the charge on a trumpet when an African native arrow flies down the bell of the instrument;
 * industrialist James Whyte Wragg, investigating claims that his coal mine is unsound, is crushed by falling debris after he taps a support post with his cane;
 * big game hunter Oliver Pike Harmsworth tells his guide that he will not shoot a rhinoceros until it is actually charging, unaware that it is almost on top of him;
 * Vyvyan Alistair Montague, upon dropping a handkerchief to signal the start of a pistol duel, is turned on and shot by the two duelers;
 * elderly, wheelchair-bound industrialist Derek Lloyd Peter Digby is pushed down a hill by his son, who wishes to inherit his fortune early;
 * and newly-knighted Sir Robert Park Collingwood is accidentally decapitated during the conferral of his knighthood by Queen Victoria.
 * "Ditto" Stiles, one of the High School teachers in the The Nick Nolte/Ralph Macchio black comedy Teachers, suffers a fatal heart attack attack at his desk, in the middle of class. What makes his death qualify for this trope is that the class period ends, and three more class periods come and go, before anyone (be it a student or a fellow teacher) notices that he's dead.
 * Pincus of Ghost Town acquired his ability to see ghosts after a near-death experience during a colonoscopy.
 * Donald Gennaro from Jurassic Park getting eaten by a T-Rex while on the toilet.
 * All of the jihadis in Four Lions end up blowing themselves up in stupid ways.
 * In Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 some people made fun of Taserface's name. As Taserface is about to die, he contacts his killer's enemies (The Sovereign) to tell him where his killers are. All he asks in return is for is that they tell his killers the name of the man who sealed their fate, Taserface. The Sovereign person answering his call then laughs at his name as he dies.
 * Jabba the Hutt, from Return of the Jedi, the feared and dreaded gangster who ruled Tattoine with an iron fist and controlled much of the glitterstim trade... Was strangled by a slave girl. Okay, Leia was far from the typical prisoner, but she was tied up, forced to wear a skimpy outfit, and nearly helpless, but still took him out with the chain used to hold her prisoner. A rather pathetic - but well-deserved - end for such a vile creature.

Literature

 * In The Tomorrow Series, Chris goes missing for most of a book. At the end of said book, the group find his totalled car and decomposing body, and it becomes apparent that he got drunk and rolled the car. Most of the other main characters die from Heroic Sacrifices.
 * Machine of Death has at least a couple.
 * Many of the villains in Carl Hiaasen's novels. The stand-out is one who drowned by being held underwater by a sexually-deviant dolphin that wanted to have its way with him.
 * Adrian Mole once met a somewhat mentally disturbed woman whose father died because a dog fell on his head in Torremolinos. Of course, everyone she tells this story will laugh about it, Adrian included.
 * In one Warhammer Fantasy Battle novel, an empire soldier is killed by the way of being impaled on the spikes of an ork warboss helmet. As in, the ork warboss discarded the helmet and it just happened to land on the soldier.
 * The Graham Greene humorous story "A Shocking Accident" involves a young man whose father died in an embarrassing manner- a pig fell out of a window and hit him on the head. The story describes the man's futile efforts to describe the circumstances of his father's death in a way that won't cause the listener to crack up with laughter. At the end of the story, he realizes that his girlfriend is the right partner for him when she listens to his description and responds seriously and with empathy. In a case of Strange Minds Think Alike, she inquires about what happened to the pig, which is the first thing the guy wondered when he was first told about his father's death.
 * In Anansi Boys, Mr. Nancy's was singing karaoke at an island bar at the time of his death, and as he dies, his last act is to pull off the bikini top of a comely audience member. It's clear that Nancy thinks of this as a great joke, but when his son, the protagonist learns about it, he sees it as yet another example of his father being embarrassing.
 * This occurs frequently in Michael Dorsey's Serge Storms books.
 * In David Eddings' The Shining Ones, a hit is put out on one Avin Wargunsson: diminutive and little-loved heir to the Thalesian throne who was abusing his power and was a general embarrassment to his country. The people assigned to the job decide on a whimsical method. They bring in a barrel of expensive red wine, claiming it is for him, open the barrel, then proceed to stick him inside and nail the lid shut. Given the general dislike of the guy, he isn't found until several days later. He was described as still being significantly purple during the funeral, and despite their best efforts, the entire congregation ended up breaking down in laughter. Anyone else who heard the story eventually ended up doing the same; it was that funny to them.
 * There was some regret by at least the two killers. They wasted a perfectly good barrel of wine!
 * In A Song of Ice and Fire, Tyrion kills his father while the latter is on the privy. Making it worse, he killed him by shooting him in the bowels with an arrow. It's still preferable to what his incestuous grandson Joffrey Baratheon goes through though.
 *  The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe: When the titular Aslan surrenders himself to the titular witch Jadis to save Edmund, she doesn't just stab him in the heart (like her minions wanted to do), she decides to shave off his mane first. And she doesn't even honor her bargain.

Live-Action TV
""You know how hard it is to stop after just one peanut!""
 * In the classic The Mary Tyler Moore Show episode "Chuckles Bites the Dust", While dressed as "Peter the Peanut", Chuckles the Clown is killed by a rogue elephant who tried to "shell" him.

"Dean: (on getting hit by a car): Did it look cool, like in the movies? Sam: You peed yourself. Dean: Of course I peed myself! Man gets hit by a car, you think he has full control over his bladder? Come on!"
 * In Monarch of the Glen, an eccentric elderly character is pike-fishing with dynamite, when his dog (which he was training to fetch unsuccessfully all episode) decides he wants the explosives back. His last words are, if I remember correctly, "Oh."
 * In the very first episode of Dead Like Me, George dies after getting hit by a toilet seat that broke off of Space Station MIR as it reentered Earth's atmosphere.
 * Dead Like Me had more than just George's death. The Gravelings caused Rube Goldberg-esque chain reactions that caused bizarre, comical, and very undignified deaths for many of the show's victims.
 * News Radio: A coworker no-one can remember, "Ted", is asphyxiated after hours when his tie gets caught in the copy machine.
 * In The X-Files episode "Clyde Bruckman's Final Repose," there's a psychic who can see how people are going to die. When Mulder asks how he's going to die, the psychic won't give a straight answer, but comments, "You know, there are worse ways to go, but I can't think of a more undignified way than autoerotic asphyxiation."
 * Miss Blankenship dropping dead at the desk during Season 4 of Mad Men.
 * Lane Pryce tries to kill himself by pumping car exhaust into his brand new Jaguar but the car will not start. He ends up hanging himself on his office door and is not discovered for 12 hours. The other partners have to force his body aside to open the door so they can cut him down. It's definitely not how the dignified British gentleman would want to be remembered.
 * 1000 Ways to Die frequently showcases this trope, as the show is all about deaths that are unusual, gruesome, or both. Examples include men being killed in toilet-related accidents, and other people being killed by or during sexual acts.
 * Supernatural has this exchange while Sam is stuck in a Groundhog Day Loop in which Dean dies everyday:


 * Gigi Cestone from The Sopranos; he suffers a heart attack while constipated on a strip club toilet and surrounded by porn magazines.

Recorded and Stand Up Comedy

 * In a Kat Williams stand-up comedy routine, he says that his neighborhood is so bad that even the squirrels are dangerous and that if he does ever get killed by a squirrel, please lie about it.

Video Games

 * In Disgaea, Laharl's father King Krichevskoy apparently dies by choking on a black pretzel. This turns out to be a subversion; Krichevskoy was severely wounded from fighting Baal, the absurdly overlevelled Bonus Boss of the entire franchise, and was in the middle of his snack when he finally succumbed.
 * In the Japanese version, he dies by choking on a dark manju; the localization change to pretzel is an obvious Shout-Out to the incident when US President George W. Bush choked on a pretzel and fainted.
 * There are a couple of these in Ghost Trick but the prize has to go to Lynne for being crushed to death by a giant roast chicken.
 * And that's not even going in to the ways you can make some deaths into this, such as reclining a driver's seat, leaving him flailing helplessly on his back while his truck plows into a building, and Cabanela dying from a hard hat launched towards his face at the speed of a bullet.
 * Halo: Reach. We should remember the Reach in this regard. Some Spartans sacrifice their lives to blow up enemy motherships. Some kill their slayers back while impaled on power sword. And some... get shot in the head running from cover to cover. Ooops!
 * If you're rude to Conrad Verner in Mass Effect 2, he eventually storms off. A later news report states that while attempting to catch some youths riding the top of a bus, he fell off, struck several cars, and fell into the turbine of a bio-mass recylcing center. That may or may not be a euphemism for a sewage treatment plant.
 * Fatalities in Fighting Games can be brutal and bloody at the least, but some are downright humiliating:
 * Bo Rai Cho's fatality in Mortal Kombat: Deception is a blazing Fartillery. Possibly better that the foe doesn't survive it, because they'd never live it down.
 * Sophia's Critical Finish in Soul Calibur IV is to knock her opponent to the floor using her behind, then use it again on the face. Twice.
 * In Primal Rage, Chaos is the embodiment of filth and decay, so he has a few attacks that involve puking and farting, but his fatality involves peeing on the foe. This was so disgusting, it was removed in a chip upgrade.
 * Story-wise, Scorpion's (thankfully non-canon) ending in Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance has him killed by Moloch and Drahmin. Yeah, we're supposed to believe two of the most ill-conceived Dumb Muscle thugs in fighting game history took down the renown leader of the Shirai Ryu. Most fans would agree this was worse than outright omitting him from the third game.
 * In Bayonetta, the Big Bad (or so we assume) might well be the first villain in video game history to be winked to death.

Web Comics

 * This Irregular Webcomic strip.
 * In "[S] Wake", in Homestuck, Dream Feferi barely has time to notice Jack before he unceremoniously slices her in two and leaves her for dead. The look on her face "kind of" diminishes the impact.
 * In the same Flash (and the pages afterward), we also have Tavros, who challenged God Tier Vriska to a fight and lost immediately, despite being given a free shot—then was impaled on his own lance and pitched into an abyss to land hard enough to burst his new robo-legs with a look of dumb shock on his face.
 * Equius himself died with the most idiotic look on his face after being strangled.
 * Jade may well have topped all of the above: she was effectively killed by several tonnes of shaving cream. SHAVING CREAM.
 * Well technically, it was the bombs that were attached to the shaving cream that did her in.
 * No amount of bombs will ever change that they were attached to and delivered by way of several tonnes of shaving cream.

Web Original

 * The Darwin Awards, as noted, are pretty much built on this trope. With the added criterion that it has to be self-inflicted.
 * A piece called Australia: The Confusing Country (widely suspected to have been written by Douglas Adams) advises against putting your arm down a wombat's burrow as the wombat will think its burrow is collapsing and push up; crushing the arm between the wombat and the burrow roof and causing you to bleed to death. It then adds that "This is considered the third most embarrassing known way to die, and Australians don't talk about it much".
 * "Undignified Deaths" is a category in Chuck Shepherd's News Of The Weird column.
 * Survival of the Fittest has had a few of these over its run. The most notable example would be that of Carson Baye's in v3, where he stops to take a dump... only to learn that the area he's in has become a dangerzone. Cue Oh Crap.
 * On Death Battle, Starscream was not only done in by  Rainbow Dash, she swallowed his Spark, even as he was ranting that she couldn't kill him. (Technically, he's correct, but this suggests he'll be trapped in her stomach forever.) No matter what one's opinion is of either show, it was kind of humiliating.  Though, not exactly undeserved.

Western Animation

 * South Park loves this trope. In a recent episode a woman dies by falling down the toilet when the lid is left up.
 * Nemesis Enforcer from the G.I. Joe cartoon, specifically the animated movie. He was supposedly the champion of Cobra-La, the favored enforcer and bodyguard of their ruler Golobulus for centuries. Stories about vampires, lycanthropes, and other monsters were inspired by his actions that were witnessed by humans. So even though Sergeant Slaughter was one of the toughest of the good guys, it was a pretty sorry end for Nemesis Enforcer when the Sarge beat him to a pulp, broke his wings, and threw him into a spiked pit.
 * Phineas and Ferb: While it doesn’t actually happen, Doofenshmirtz’s death trap for Perry in Raging Bully is designed for him to be buried alive in Doonkelberry Cake. It’s still a scary way to die though. But at least Doofenshmirtz has the decency to allow Perry to try some.

Real Life

 * There are more rumors surrounding the death of Attila the Hun than fan-rumors about deaths on Game of Thrones. Most historians agree he died during his wedding feast to his last wife, Ildikó. (Far from his first.) While some claim she murdered him and as a result, was killed by his soldiers, this is unlikely. (Given the ruthlessness the Huns show to traitors, her fate would have been far worse.) A more likely reason was that he ate and drank too much at the feast and later suffered from internal bleeding or choked on his own blood, or maybe injured himself while drunk and bled to death. The most undignified rumor, however, was that he was into Casual Kink, and that Ildikó playfully punched him in the nose during sex, causing a nosebleed which made him choke until he choked to death. If true, this means one of the most dreaded and feared barbarian lords in history died after being punched in the nose. By a girl. During sex.