Anachronism Stew: Difference between revisions

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** And there are cell phones used by people who look like they're in the mafia.
** And [[Video Game|video games]] existed.
** And [[Queen VickyVictoria]] wears [[Cool Shades]]. Whether or not these anachronisms are intentional is far from clear.
* [[Osamu Tezuka]] loved to throw in gross anachronisms into his historical works. The first volume of ''[[Phoenix]]'', for instance, has an ancient Japanese general leave to read a [[James Bond]] novel (which may be a [[Woolseyism]] on the part of the translator), and things like televisions and refrigerators are worked into other volumes of the series via [[Bamboo Technology]].
** A phone conversation occurs in one volume set in Feudal Japan without even ''that'' [[Hand Wave]]. (It's worth noting that ''Phoenix'' works regardless, because [[Rule of Cool]], [[Rule of Funny]] and [[Rule of Drama]] are all somehow in effect.)
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* John Madden's ''[[Shakespeare in Love]]'', which sports 16th century theatre production riddled with movie-producing Hollywood stereotypes.
* Stephan Elliott's adaptation of ''Easy Virtue'' is set in the 1930s and includes songs such as "Sex Bomb" and "When the Going Gets Tough, the Tough Get Going".
* ''The [[Casino Royale (1967]] film)|1967 ''Casino Royale'' film]] stars [[David Niven]] as the original James Bond, whose name and number were appropriated after his retirement for morale purposes. It's mentioned he'd been awarded the Victoria Cross at Mafeking, a siege that took place in 1899-1900. Niven is in his late 50s here, but this would date Bond as around 85 at least. Bond had an illegitimate daughter by [[Mata Hari]], who was executed in 1917. The daughter is played by a 25-year old Joanna Pettet, but she would have to be 50 at least. But then, this movie is not at all logical or linear.
* In ''[[Who Framed Roger Rabbit?]]'', the Singing Sword sings "Witchcraft," which was written in 1953. The movie takes place in 1947. Also, Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote appear in the film despite debuting in 1949.
** In regards to cartoon characters that debuted after 1947 appearing in the film, the filmmakers [[Hand Wave]] it as them "not having made it in films yet".
* In ''The Princess Andand The Pirate'' (1944), [[Bob Hope]] is a '''walking anachronism''', being his fast-talking, wisecracking 20th century persona in the middle of a swashbuckling pirate movie.
* [[Woody Allen]], who has stated his appreciation of Hope, played some period roles the same way, as in ''Love And Death'', and the segment of ''Everything You Always Wanted To Know About Sex'', where his medieval court jester is trying to seduce the queen - he quips "I must hurry because soon it will be the Renaissance, and before you know it we'll all be painting!"
* ''[[Your Highness]]'', a fantasy comedy set in medieval times and starring [[Natalie Portman]], [[James Franco]], [[Zooey Deschanel]], [[Danny McBride]], and Justin Theroux, aims for just this. The f-bomb gets dropped several times throughout the red-band trailer, including a use of the word "buttf**k". Natalie Portman also wears a modern-looking getup of a bikini top and thong when she bathes in the river. McBride's character, Thadeous, tells his brother, "handle your shit Fabious, please."
* ''[[Shanghai Knights]]'' is filled with this. A young [[Charlie Chaplin]], [[Queen Vicky|Queen Victoria]], and [[Arthur Conan Doyle]] are all in this same film. Also, you get a gatling gun and a 1930s automobile, plus [[Jackie Chan]] asking Owen Wilson "[[Kojak|who loves you, Roy?]]" And finally, Roy talks about making movies in Hollywood, when at that point Hollywood had not yet existed as a filmmaking hub.
** Machine guns [[Older Than They Think|did exist back then]]. They were brand new tech, gigantic, and had to be moved around on carts because of their weight, but they did exist.
* ''[[Kung Pow]]: Enter the Fist'' does this intentionally and constantly, such as Betty using a cigarette lighter, or a medieval Chinese town having a Hooters, a Taco Bell, a Radio Shack, and a place that sells <s> [[No Indoor Voice|A LOTTA]] </s> nuts, and also apparently french fries. It is one of the saner things in a film that delights in taking [[Refuge in Audacity]] though, so they are often barely noticeable.
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* ''[[One for the Morning Glory]]'' Where it is [[Lampshade Hanging|lampshaded]] as well; when Sir John drinks tea, he wonders whether it is really suitable to be drinking tea, and the Duke dismisses that as a consideration only for those lands that are merely actual.
* Gene Wolfe's ''New Sun'' series of novels take place a ''looong'' way in the future (the techno-fantasy "post-historical" era where Stone-Age Man, the Modern Era, and the Galaxy-Spanning Imperial Era are all lumped together as the "Age of Myth"). The basic technology and society is late medieval. But at some point time travel had been commonplace, so remnants of all eras of history are common - military energy weapons right along with swords, antigravity craft and ox-drawn wagons, sabretooth tigers and starships, electricians organized like a medieval craft guild, medical men just as likely to use genetic engineering as an herbal infusion, etc. One of the appendices even points out that there are three separate levels of technology: the "smith" level (basically medieval), the "Urth" level (roughly 20th century plus some genetic engineering) and the "stellar" level (highly powerful artifacts that can only be obtained from extraterrestrials.) It's all justified by the fact that [[Scavenger World|the planet has been exhausted of most resources]] and can no longer sustain a technological society or educate most of its inhabitants, but the old knowledge remains in a few places.
* Using its [[Everyone Is Jesus in Purgatory|metaphorical nature]] as an excuse, ''[[Stationery Voyagers]]'' doesn't even try to get around the fact that 21st-century values [[Deliberate Values Dissonance|are clashing]] with 50's values in [[The Seventies]] in a culture war on a 70's-themed world that has [[Every Car Is a Pinto|Ford Pintos]] [[Decade Dissonance|next to]] aliens with [[ClarksClarke's Third Law|muellexic]] [[Magitek|technology]], and Mosquatlons dressed like it's still [[World War II]]... in ''[[Ruritania|Bulgaria]]''; where [[Our Angels Are Different|angels]] and [[Depraved Homosexual|gay militants]] open fire on each other in the streets while blocking traffic, [[Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking|in a time before power windows and power steering]]. And [[Fox News Liberal|non-militant ones]] trying to keep the main protagonists from getting hurt.
* ''[[The Aeneid]]'' features Aeneas, fleeing the destruction of Troy, landing at Carthage...which wasn't founded until hundreds of years later.
** Understandable as the whole thing was pretty much literate propaganda. Also, the Cyclops and things did better in Hellenic Greece when a lot of the Mediterranean was still only vaguely known, as compared to the 'salty lake' of Roman times.
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** Also acknowledged in ''[[GURPS]] Camelot'', the Arthurian sourcebook. There are ''three'' Arthurian settings mentioned - the Mythic one (Geoffry of Monmouth style, with plenty of anachronism), a Realistic one (as close as research can get us), and the Cinematic one (based on movies, with chrome armor and French castles and all the other goodies - not so much Anachronism Stew as an Anachronism Smoothie).
* ''Mythic Russia'' has a few that are [[Lampshade Hanging|pointed out]] and [[Justified Trope]] in the book. The Russians drink vodka even though it hadn't yet become popular historically, because "what is a game in Russia without vodka?" The Mongols are Tengrist pagans even though the Golden Horde had converted to Islam by the time it was set, partly because it's easier to handle in the game's [[Religion Is Magic]] system and partly because of plain old [[Rule of Cool]].
* The ''Pirates Constructible Strategy Game'' by Wizkids is a naval combat game set sometime before, during, and after the American Revolution/War of 1812 era. When the first set came out, things were fine, but with each new expansion, they seem to be intent on adding a new crazy mechanic. They get alright [[Justifications/Handwave|HandwavesHand Wave]]s most of the time, but it is still silly. They are currently{{when}} halfway between this and [[Fantasy Kitchen Sink]]. Some of these include:
** Sea Monsters/Titans
** Cursed pirates
** Submarines (based off [[Jules Verne]])
** Vikings ([[Hand Wave|Handwaved]]d as being northerners who believe [[Norse Mythology]])
** Bombardiers (Ships with long-range and ''flame cannons'' attached to their decks)
** Turtle ships (which at least existed around the time)
** "Switchblades" (metal ships with giant pincers attached to the sides)
* The old Atlantean Trilogy by Bar Games mixed Anachronism Stew with [[All Myths Are True]], and came up with an alternate Earth where Atlantis coexists with Avalon, Amazons rub shoulders with gypsies, and you can sail from Hyperborea to Nazca. Never mind it's supposed to be set in 15,000 BC, and the continents' geographies are radically different?{{verify|reason=The question mark indicates we aren't sure.}}
* The defunct trading card game ''[[Anachronism]]'' was built on this trope. The idea was that you could play as, say, Ivan the Terrible while wielding a claymore, wearing Japanese armor, and with Aphrodite on your side.
 
 
== Theater ==
* Anachronism Stew is common in the works of [[William Shakespeare]], because theatre of that time took a completely different approach to historical drama. Regardless of when or where a play was set, costumes and patterns of speech from the (then) present day were used, and there was never any attempt at historic realism as we understand it today. Some examples:
 
** ''[[Julius Caesar (theatre)|Julius Caesar]]'', which contains references to striking clocks despite the fact that the first mechanical clock would not be invented until the mid-13th century.
** Also of note, ''Julius Ceasar'' makes reference to a doublet, a close fitting jacket that wasn't around in Roman times.
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** One filmed version had a scene in which Judas was chased by helicopters and tanks.
* Although it's set in 1587, the male (and one female) characters of ''Mary Stuart'' wear relatively modern outfits (e.g. business suits), as well as speaking in contemporary [[British Accents]].
 
 
== Video Games ==
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** This is more of an example of [[Schizo-Tech]] or [[Mad Science]]. The Venom Gun is a [[Gatling Good]] weapon that would have to be mounted on a vehicle to be used today, and the [[Shock and Awe|Tesla Gun]] is just plain impossible. Most of the [[Stupid Jetpack Hitler|Nazi science]] in the game is as fantastic as the zombies and undead knights.
* ''[[Shadow Hearts]]: From The New World'' causes problems with its attempt to jump on the "What really happened in Roswell" bandwagon... as the game is set in 1929, 18 years before the Roswell incident. Not that this is anything ''new'' for ''[[Shadow Hearts]]'', or that the series has ever tried for historical accuracy in the first place. Let us put it this way: one of the people in the crashed vehicle is a [[Magical Girl]] vampire.
** The historical inaccuracies start in the first game, with [[Mata Hari]]'s bikini and cell phone. Not to mention my history textbooks have all failed to mention Japan had combat robots during WWI.
** ''[[Shadow Hearts]]'' IS this trope. We've got the heroes zipping around in a giant nuclear-powered flying ship which can circle the globe in no time flat. We've got Anastasia (yes, [[Anastasia|THAT Anastasia]]) running around taking Polaroids. We've got Johnny wielding a cellphone (whereas Mata Hari's was a clunky 80's model, his is a modern fliptop phone with viewscreen). We've got people going into outer space. We've got supercomputers popping up everywhere. We've got genetically enhanced apes with human intelligence and laser guns. All before 1930. [[MST3K Mantra|Not that any of this is a problem.]]
* The ''[[Monkey Island]]'' series has this in spades, cheerfully throwing vending machines, electric devices and Elvis pins into the 17th century [[Welcome to The Caribbean Luv|Caribbean]]. Of course, given the tone of the series, this is often cheerfully [[Lampshade Hanging|lampshaded]], as when Guybrush complains about the shoddy, 17th century electrical wiring.
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* ''[[Call of Duty: Black Ops|Call of Duty Black Ops]]'' is especially anachronistic in regards to its weapons due to it featuring many modern firearms despite being set during the Vietnam War in the 1960s, with entire guns and configurations appearing far before they're supposed to. The game [[Hand Wave|handwaves]] it by claiming that all the weapons are 'prototype versions', despite things like the Kiparis only being developed in 1978, the SPAS-12 shotgun only entering production in 1979 despite being used in 1968 in-game, and worst of all, the inclusion of the FAMAS F1 FELIN (the base weapon was only developed in 1978 and the FELIN variant only came into existence in the late 1990s). Strange in some cases, in that an earlier version of an anachronistic gun would have existed for some time at points in the game.
** This isn't entirely new to the series. Some missions in earlier ''[[Call of Duty]]'' games feature the STG-44 chronologically before it was actually produced. ''[[Modern Warfare|Call of Duty 4]]'' also had one section where Russian mercenaries in 1996 had frequent access to the G36, which hadn't even entered service anywhere yet at that point.
* There's one of these in ''[[Raidou Kuzunoha vs. the Soulless Army]]'', in a bit of optional dialogue. Talk to Dr. Tsukumo after Ep. 9, and give the second answer to make him reference [[SchrodingersSchrödinger's Cat]]. The game is set in 1931 - four years too early for that! Whoops. Not too egregious, thanks to the pun ("Now, I know you like cats...", [[Don't Explain the Joke|referencing the fact that Gouto follows Raidou everywhere.]]) and the fact that it's ''optional''.
* ''[[Fable III]]'' has quite a bit of this sometimes bordering on [[Steampunk]]. It seems that the creators just threw in everything and anything associated with the Industrial Revolution (a nearly 200 year long period) whether they really did existed at the same time or not. Of course Albion is a made-up land where magic exists, so they can get away with it though it is still kind of jarring to see a [[Sherlock Holmes]] [[Expy]] placed in such an environment.
* ''[[Prince of Persia|Sands of Time]]'' is supposed to take place around the ninth century. But the capital city, Babylon, has the famous Hanging Gardens... which were destroyed around a thousand years before that point. Must be all that time travel.
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* ''[[Kid Icarus: Uprising]]'' takes place in ancient Greece, and among Pit's arsenal are gun-blades, [[Magitech]] lasers, and cannons. Health recovery items include hamburgers, sushi, and chocolate. Never mind that Pit can't seem to stop [[No Fourth Wall|referring to the story as a game]].
 
=== [[Visual Novels]] ===
* ''[[Shikkoku no Sharnoth]]'' can't do this with technology as it's basically [[Steampunk]] [[Victorian Britain]], however, it portrays multiple real and fictional characters as contemporaries. For example, [[Charlotte Bronte]] and Heinz Heger were separated by a good half century.
* ''[[Higurashi no Naku Koro ni]]'' is set in [[The Eighties|the early eighties]] but has multiple references to products that won't exist for over a decade. Mostly due to [[Rule of Funny]].
 
 
== Web Comics ==
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** There's anachronisms in ''every'' strip: The third panel has T-Rex about to step on a house that's next to a car, and the fourth panel has T-Rex about to step on a person.
{{quote|'''Utahraptor:''' [[Hypocritical Humor|History for you is a big party where everyone just hangs out together, isn't it?]]}}
* ''[[The Perry Bible Fellowship]]'': [http://pbfcomics.com/?cid=PBF209-Now_Showing.jpg this strip] shows a technologically advanced future civilization for whom the history of the second millennium seems to be a big blur.
* In ''[[The Order of the Stick|Order of the Stick]]''{{'}}s Azure City, not only are there sewers, but there are three tunnels, clearly labeled "Ocean," "Anachronistic Sewage Plant," and "Obligatory Sewer-Themed Labyrinth." Such things have been [[Lampshade Hanging|lampshaded]].
** And in Cliffport, there's a ''municipal park''. Amid ''high-rise buildings''.
{{quote|'''Vaarsuvius''': I'm simply saying that the architectural motifs found here in the city of Cliffport are inconsistent with the presumed medieval time period.
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** The C.C.P.D., complete with sirens (on the horses), sketch artist and mayor yelling at [[Da Chief]] for failing to catch the murderer when elections are coming up, and underlings being yelled at by said cigar-smoking, coffee downing chief. One double serving of Anachronism Stew, coming right up.
** It's subtle, but look at [http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0692.html this comic.] Where did Hayley get a metal detector? And more importantly, where the hell was she keeping it? (Same questions apply to Roy and his [[Newer Than They Think|sextant]]...)
*** Being set in the world of [[Dungeons & Dragons|D&D v3.5]],{{verify}} I'd imagine they kept them in their always-present-but-never-seen [[Hyperspace Arsenal|backpacks]], capable of holding as many items of any dimensions as there are spaces on their character sheets and with the ability to protect their contents from damage of any kind, be it fire, water, acid, sudden force, etc. Would that all backpacks were D&D backpacks.
* In ''[[Gunnerkrigg Court]]'', Ms. Jones' students watch [http://www.gunnerkrigg.com/archive_page.php?comicID=582 a documentary hologram] about the founding of the Court. The characters in the hologram include a guy who looks like he stepped out of [[The Cavalier Years]] or [[The American Revolution]], and another fellow wearing a modern trench coat, an article of clothing which wasn't introduced until [[World War I]]. Shortly afterwards, Jones points out that "this simulation is an artistic representation".
** Although she said that in regards to an indistinct glow, represented as such because they didn't know what it was. And present was also the man who designed robots. Maybe the others just liked to dress that way.
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** And again [http://xkcd.com/771/ here.]
* ''[http://www.harkavagrant.com/index.php?id=139 Hark, A Vagrant!]'' is all about this.
* ''[https://web.archive.org/web/20131026235625/http://www.hellbastardcomix.com/ Hellbastard Comics]'' starts with an alien war that interrupts [[Satan]]'s viewing of ''Bridezillas'' in what is later revealed to be the pre-Napoleonic era and just [[Rule of Cool|gets better]] from there.
* ''[[Blade Bunny]]'' takes place in a historical mashup of feudal Japan and ancient China, with {{spoiler|robots}} one of which has {{spoiler|futuristic guns}} and a [[Bunny Girl]] in a microskirt.
* [[San: Three Kingdoms Comic|San Three Kingdoms]] has no problem using modern machine guns.... [https://web.archive.org/web/20121202234310/http://san.paulguo.com/?id=150 in 208 AD]. Or [https://web.archive.org/web/20121202230905/http://san.paulguo.com/?id=19 sniper rifles (Cao Cao is sexy...)]
* [http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2000/8/25/ This] [[Penny Arcade]] comic has a flashback to 1988 showing characters using a Powerglove (introduced in 1989 and quickly flopped), reading ''Nintendo Power'' #31 (December, 1991), talking about ''[[Thundercats]]'' (ran from 1985–89), and drinking a New Coke (introduced in 1985 and quickly flopped). To be fair, the date is only implied, and everybody didn't immediately quit drinking New Coke, playing with Powergloves, or referencing cancelled cartoons. But the overall impression is a mishmash of things associated with the '80s, regardless of which part of the '80s (or early '90s) they actually came from.
 
 
== Web Original ==
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* The time setting of ''[[Alfred J Kwak]]'' is considerably vague. In general it seems to take place somewhere during the 20th century, but among other things Professor Paljas has access to advanced supertech, and a mediaeval Middle Eastern kingdom also seems to exist.
* The actual time period of ''[[Samurai Jack]]'s'' birth was never stated, thought presumed to be Feudal Japan but his youth had quite a few inconsistencies. He learned mounted combat from the Mongols, wrestling from Roman gladiators, and archery from [[Robin Hood]] himself! The time periods here are all over the place and impossible from a purely historic perspective.
* ''[[Turning Red]]'' is ostensibly set in 2002 (when the director grew up) in [[Vancouver]] (where the director grew up) yet most hair styles and dress seem to come from the early 2020s of its production. This is particularly noticeable with the large number of hijabed background characters in a work ''allegedly'' set months after 9/11.
 
== Real Life ==
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*** Not to mention Sci-Fi, what with the occasional incursions of groups of people in ''[[Star Trek]]'' uniforms pretending to be an Away Team.
**** Or the obligatory Imperial Stormtrooper in a kilt, with a sword on his hip.
* Cowboy Action Shooters love this [[Trope]]. While costumers are encouraged to wear appropriate costume, there is no rule forbidding (for example) a Confederate soldier from using an M1887 Winchester shotgun. Part of this is because the governing organization permits and encourages Western movies to be used as inspiration, and classic Westerns are notorious anachronism stews.
appropriate costume, there is no rule forbidding (for example) a Confederate soldier from using an M1887 Winchester shotgun. Part of this is because the governing organization permits and encourages Western movies to be used as inspiration, and classic Westerns are notorious anachronism stews.
* During the 2008 campaign, then-Senator Joe Biden said "Now, when this country entered the Great Depression, our president, [[Franklin D. Roosevelt|Franklin Roosevelt]], went on television and spoke of how to get this country out of it." ''[[The Daily Show]]'' had a lot of fun with this, since 1) [[Herbert Hoover]], not [[Franklin D. Roosevelt|Roosevelt]] was President at the time, and 2) Television barely existed...
** Hoover did appear on an early television broadcast, though. (And yes, this was either while or just before he was President, not at some point before he died in 1964.)
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