Less Disturbing in Context



"* p4 has joined #hynes So i stroke and stroke and stroke, and it does nothing then all of a sudden it goes nuts and puts white shit all over my work i wont ask"

- qdb.us #33726 (abridged)

Sometimes, when you walk in at the climax of something, it appears disturbingly violent and brutal. And then, when you watch it in the proper order, it actually seems less disturbing, if possibly still brutal.

What's going on here?

Answer: The violence is built up to; the Villain is shown to be Ax Crazy, and the hero is shown to be acting relatively sanely, and the point you walked in was the Despair Spot.

In other words, it's Less Disturbing In Context.

Note: If the film/show you're watching contains only one such scene, then your parents/grandparents/significant other/etc. will, with 100% certainty, walk in on you just when it happens to be on.

Contrast Fridge Horror.

Anime and Manga

 * In Higurashi no Naku Koro ni, is quite disturbing taken out of context, but in the context of the series, it becomes a Crowning Moment of Awesome. A disturbing Crowning Moment of Awesome, but at least a less disturbing one. This is deliberately invoked, because the infamous scene appears at the beginning of the fifth episode, before the opening sequence, with absolutely no context, and it's not until the second half of the season that we see the events leading up to that scene.
 * Inverted in the first episode with a Cold Opening that may be shocking, but isn't quite disturbing until seen in the context of the arc. And then becomes more disturbing the more context is revealed after the arc.
 * The plot of Sayonara, Zetsubou-sensei: A suicidal teacher wins the love of his students by asking them to commit double, or possibly collective, suicide with him. How is it less disturbing in context? 'Cuz it's played for laughs, that's why.
 * The fact that you will laugh at it is probably the most disturbing thing about it all, you seriously disturbed person, you.
 * Young man mutating into a monster and ripping a little girl's head off with his teeth? Even those who had read/watched Dance in the Vampire Bund up to that point probably flinched a little over that scene, seeing it out of context....
 * The key thing that makes this less disturbing in context is that this is one of the main characters doing it and he's done this kind of thing before (albeit usually to those who look like they could put up a fight).
 * Ax Crazy heroin addict trying to kill classmates because they're standing there? He's actually The Messiah picking up garbage from the school grounds. Villain with Good Publicity seducing three girls for his demonic rituals? He's actually a Chaste Hero who loves them Like Brother and Sister. In Angel Densetsu the stuff In-Universe is always horror ... but for the readers it's always hilarious or heartwarming.

Film

 * In the Once Upon a Time in China series, Wong Fei-Hung has a romantic relationship with his own aunt... who is not a blood relative, only a relative through marriage.
 * There are one or two scenes in Love Actually that look like porn. In actuality the characters are lighting doubles and the director needs to make sure "everything" will be visible (while the characters just sit there and chat about the weather and politics). When watching the movie alone, it is practically guaranteed that someone else will enter the room during that scene.
 * If you haven't seen Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me, the scene in Austin Powers in Goldmember where Austin beats up Mini-Me probably looks pretty brutal and unfair. Unnecessary misunderstanding? Yes. But hardly unfair.
 * This trope is played with in Grosse Pointe Blank. The trained assassin, Blank, kills someone because this person is trying to assassinate him. However, Blank's girlfriend, who witnesses this, treats it like he's a serial killer and would kill anyone for no reason. Luckily, It Got Better.
 * I Love You Phillip Morris: About twenty minutes in, the movie suddenly cuts to Stephen having sex with a mustached man, complete with a barely covered, sweaty Jim Carrey (read: it's so graphic, it had a very limited release in American theaters). Granted, it's about a closeted Invisible to Gaydar conman and the scene is completely unprecedented, but failing to have any knowledge on the premise can give the impression that softcore gay pornography is being viewed.

Literature

 * A major plot point of the His Dark Materials trilogy involves the two main characters killing the Christian God. People hearing this without context probably imagine this as quite different from how it was actually portrayed. Technically, he dies of old age, and the two of them just happened to be there when it happens, and while they may have had a role in it they didn't do it intentionally, in essence making it a Mercy Kill. And under one interpretation, God is really The Dust, while the antagonist is an impostor.
 * Piers Anthony's Firefly has several stories-within-a-story told by a character of dubious sanity with a lot of hangups about sex, at least two of which would be pretty freaky if they were simply described to someone who hadn't read them. One's about two (prepubescent!) children discovering sex and an older woman who overhears their failure at their first try—she leaves a bottle of lubricant where they can find it, which in the context of the narration sounds charming rather than creepy. The other's about a man on trial for statutory rape who turns out to have been talked into the act by the (again, prepubescent!) girl—even in context that one's a little off, but not quite as off given that the man was reluctant every step of the way and clearly cares about the girl. Then again, the latter gets more disturbing given some context that's given later:
 * Nobody ever said everything on this page had to be a lot less disturbing in context.
 * There's a Babysitters Club book that does this in-universe: Jessi goes to visit Stacey in NYC and overhears two guys discussing their plan to commit a robbery. She and her pseudo-boyfriend then spend the whole book following them around trying to get more concrete evidence, before overhearing hearing a repeat of the same scene, except this time with the two men bursting into laughter partway through and one exclaiming "Check your script!"

Live-Action TV
"Rachel: I am so going to miss watching you freak people out like that!"
 * Lampshaded in Castle (TV): "There are two kinds of people who sit up all night dreaming of ways to kill people: Psychopaths and mystery writers."
 * Friends: When Phoebe goes to the hospital in labor, she tells the receptionist that "The father is my brother." She's acting as a surrogate for her brother and his wife, but the receptionist doesn't know that, and gives her a very strange look.

"Kelso: ...And yet, for some reason I'm not wearing a party hat sitting bare-ass on the hospital's copier machine. You know why? It's not because I have "Johnny" tattooed on my butt. He was an old navy buddy and if you went through what we did you'd understand... It's because your little theory is way off."
 * Scrubs: The following conversation between Dr. Kelso and Carla:


 * Everything Larry David does in Curb Your Enthusiasm, due to the other characters misinterpreting what Larry has done. An example being the episode in which Larry puts a water bottle down his pants to sneak it into a theater, and a little girl hugs him. He feels the water bottle, then runs into the lobby screaming, "MOMMY! MOMMY! That bald man's in the bathroom and there's something hard in his pants!" Larry has no choice but to escape through the window.
 * You can watch the entire scene here.
 * A common trope is to introduce a character who initially seems friendly, then have them do something shocking that appears to be an out of character moment. Then their back story starts getting revealed and it becomes clear why these things have been done. An example being Gus in Breaking Bad who seems friendly considering his position as a drug dealer. But then we see him brutally murder Victor for the sole reason of scaring Walt and Jesse. Soon we see a flashback where Gus's friend Max is killed in a similar manner.

Video Games

 * Not violent, but there are some scenes in Mother 3 that are... questionable. When Lucas gains PSI powers, it involves another character (that just so happens to look like a transvestite) holding his head under the water of a hot spring. Out of context, it could easily be mistaken for some kind of weird rape scene.
 * The creator didn't clarify things when he was asked about it either.
 * It's rather amazing how many people will quote one line from Silent Hill 3: "Monsters? They looked like monsters to you?" Check this wiki's Fridge Horror page for the usual reaction. What they leave out is the follow-up: "...kidding! Just kidding." In the context of the series, the monsters of Silent Hill really are monsters. Although, arguably, it'd just be like Konami to not be kidding.
 * In Devil May Cry 4, Nero's special Devil Bringer move against : brutally pummeling an old man in the gut with his giant demonic arm, repeatedly. If you know what that old man was up to it's a bit less unheroic to be doing that, but it's still hard to watch.
 * Due to foreign MMOs sometimes having been through Blind Idiot Translation, we get some weird terms that most bystanders would be freaked out by. Namely in RF Online, you could get someone saying something like "I'm killing hobos for money!". Hobo is actually a type of enemy that is good farming material for lower levels.
 * The way Evokers (handgun-shaped devices needed for summoning Personas) are used - by putting it to your head and pulling the trigger - can be disturbing even to those who know that they don't shoot bullets. This is especially jarring during the opening cutscene (when you aren't supposed to know about it yet), where one of the characters seemingly tries to kill herself. Strangely enough, a lot of people find Evokers one of the coolest things in the franchise.
 * Not only is Super Paper Mario about an Omnicidal Maniac trying to destroy the the multi-verse, an entire chapter of the story is dedicated to the heroes' murder and their descent into the underworld. It's actually presented in a humorous tone, and the characters actually make it to heaven before continuing on with their quest.
 * In the Mass Effect 2 DLC Overlord, a Paragon Shepard has the option to pistol whip Dr. Archer for . In any other context this might come off as a Jumping Off the Slippery Slope moment since Shepard, who's fully armored and makes a habit of taking out species destroying monsters is attacking an unarmed man, and as a Paragon isn't supposed to do stuff like that, but in context you'll probably be cheering instead.

Web Comics
"Bristlecone: Xeno team discovered intelligent life and used it to hide from missiles. Field surgery blew up [crewmember]'s body, bottled his brain, and airburst a five meg as a distraction ploy. Captain Tagon: (Face Palm)"
 * This Sluggy Freelance strip. It's amazing how quickly you become desensitized to kittens slaughtering half-naked people.
 * More 'Less Poignant In Context', but this Minus strip. It becomes less hopeful and more reasonable with the knowledge that
 * A straight example is the last arc.  The reason it isn't a full-on Downer Ending is because   It's still pretty gloomy, though.
 * In terms of Squick rather than brutal violence: in the epilogue to Act 4 of Homestuck,.
 * Also, later on this part, showing an an angry glowing vampire chainsawing a clearly terrified guy in half. If you read the events leading up to that point, you would be cheering on the vampire with the chainsaw. (click the ==> button a few times)
 * Freefall (see page picture) features a romantic subplot between a veterinarian and his patient. She is smart enough to handle fusion reactors, legal informed consent goes without saying.
 * Goblins: "I'm nine years old and I'm still a virgin!"' Goblins, in the comic, only live thirty years, and therefore age much faster than humans.
 * Wapsi Square tends towards this rather frequently. For example, this strip is much less frightening if you know that the woman on the beach is essentially indestructible.
 * Schlock Mercenary has a lot of this, including a few in-Universe.
 * Tagon requests a high-level report:


 * Sorlie gave Yaeyoefui a brief summary on what Iafa (ancient Oafan AI) was doing.

Web Original
"NH Boy I broke my G-string while fingering a minor :( rycool ... NH Boy I was trying to play Knocking on Heaven's Door. NH Boy Oh well, time to buy new strings."
 * The first line of this bash.org quote.


 * This short story from rec.humor.funny has this happening to two people playing multiplayer Doom on a plane.
 * Just try talking about Survival of the Fittest without people giving you strange looks. Just... try. This includes talking about the premise of teenagers being kidnapped by terrorists and forced to fight to the death. And specific scenes can fall into this as well; to most people a scene where a teenager pins another teenager to a tree with a sword and carves words into his chest would be disturbing, for example, but once you know the context it's a Crowning Moment of Awesome.

Western Animation
"Zim:"The Dib! THE DIB! I don't care how delicious he is, he's evil!"
 * In Invader Zim...


 * The My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic episode "Lesson Zero"
 * That same episode has a driven-to-insanity Twilight approach three very young girls and saying "Hi, Girls..." slowly and with a really creepy face. Anyone who saw this without realizing what it was would just scream "RUN, CHILDREN! RUN!"
 * Well, let's be honest; if you saw the rest of the episode you saw what a petty little issue drove her to madness in the first place, so "RUN, CHILDREN! RUN!" is still a pretty reasonable reaction.
 * Der Fuehrer's Face has many of these moments. It takes place in the . Donald Duck preforms hails Hilter multiple times over the course of the episode.

Real Life

 * Some computer scientist lecturers have to consciously remember to shut the doors and windows to the classroom before starting a lecture about UNIX Processes. Topics like "Forking children and then killing them," "Killing the parents so the children become orphans" or "What to do to prevent dead children from becoming zombies" tend to raise eyebrows of passersby that aren't familiar with the jargon. If you're curious about what the kind of computer jargon would involve infanticide, it's more innocuous than it sounds.
 * It's even worse if you're talking about it in a language which lacks neutral pronouns, "just kill him if he misbehaves" comes out pretty disturbing out of context, even if the unwary listeners assume you're talking about animals (squid, tomcat, gnu ... ).
 * Truth in Television for many kinds of gamers: talking about what happened in role-playing game of any kind that is Darker and Edgier enough in public can get you anything from strange looks to arrested...
 * Just be careful never to related what your character did in the first person...
 * In Norway, a role-player had lost a note he'd written in first-person during a Modern Day game on the bus in Trondheim, and was pulled out of class in Olso by policemen who wanted to know why and how the hell he was going to do with a list of explosives, weapons and a plan to blow up an oil platform, and who he was working with, and who he was working for...
 * As shown in Penny Arcade
 * Try walking down the street and holding a conversation about a game with buckets of Video Game Cruelty Potential and watch the weird looks from passers-by.
 * Anthony Trollope overheard some people discussing the latest installment of his novel which was being published a chapter at a time in a magazine. One reader said, "I wish he'd kill off that horrible old woman!" Trollope interrupted to say, "That's an excellent idea. I'll kill her this afternoon!" (The same story is told about Charles Dickens and some other popular authors of the day.)
 * Richmal Crompton used this as the plot of one of the Just William stories: William eavesdrops on a man telling his friend that he's planning to kill a woman, but he turns out to be a writer talking about one of his characters.
 * More than one geologist has received an evil eye (or worse) when someone overhears part of a conversation that may include words such as "dike", "thrust", "bedding" and "cleavage".
 * David Cameron unveiling Margaret Thatcher's bust at Conservative Party headquarters.
 * Again, doesn't have to be a lot less disturbing.
 * An advice columnist once advised a victim of frequent eavesdropping to have a little fun with the situation by loudly debating where to hide the drugs, what girl to send on the next call, or the like. A policeman wrote in to ask the column to print a correction, as he foresaw wasting time investigating calls from frightened gossips!
 * If you study typesetting, you will learn how to eliminate widows and orphans.
 * In his famous collection of dispatches The Desert War Alan Moorehead describes Vichy prisoners as being sent to British "Concentration Camps". At the time of writing the word simply meant prison camp in this case for POWs. Rather then the associations it came to have.
 * The original concentration camps were places where civilians were concentrated to keep them from supporting Boer Partisans. They were more then brutal enough especially as they often did not have the most competent of bureaucrats. But it was the word British invented, for a rather nasty practice but a common enough one in guerilla warfare and not the thing we now remember as concentration camps. The Nazi camps were for exterminating or working to death (rather then confining) people who had not even considered resisting before they found themselves on cattle cars, and were not by any stretch of the imagination a military or political threat. It was one of those words that becomes Darker and Edgier with time like "stormtrooper" (originally "assault infantry"), or holocaust (originally "burnt offering") because the Nazis managed to give it more ominous associations.
 * When Muslims slaughter a sheep they say, "In the name of Allah, the merciful and compassionate" which sounds both paradoxical and bloodthirsty, However what they really mean is, "Thank you for this food."