Aren't You Going to Ravish Me?: Difference between revisions

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{{quote|'''Gourry:''' I guess even a troll knows a ''cute girl'' when it sees it. }}
* In the first episode of ''[[Soul Eater]]'', Spirit at first accuses the title character of having designs on his daughter, Maka, but then when Soul rudely denies having any interest in her, Spirit starts acting like a [[Pervert Dad]] and lists his daughter's "qualities".
* In the ''[[Ranma ½|Ranma One Half]]'' manga, during the "Little Hawaii" story, a bunch of male students from Fūrinkan are infected by the "Aloha virus" thanks to the principal's latest ploy. This makes them act like "honeymooner tourists in Hawaii", the dream of any Japanese. Thus they begin assaulting Female!Ranma, Akane and Ukyō to make them their "wives"... but they twice ignore Hinako-sensei since she looks like a little girl. She feels quite insulted by that.
* Mild variant employed in ''[[Maicching Machiko-sensei|Maicchingu Machiko Sensei]]'' (Studio Pierrot, 1981). Resident trouble-maker Kento frequently [[Panty Shot|flips his classmates' skirts]] to embarrass them. [[Fat Girl|Token fat girl]] Hiromi patiently awaits her turn, but when Kento passes her by, she's so furious she pounds his head into the pavement.
* Played with in the [[Hentai|ero-manga]] ''Tentacle Lovers'': a princess from a magical kingdom botches a summoning spell and [[Baleful Polymorph|turns the protagonist into a]] [[Naughty Tentacles|tentacle monster]] that is best described as a one-eyed [[Kirby]] that can extend [[Squick|more tentacles]] from his smaller ones. It turns out he has need of regular [[Mate or Die|contact]] with women, or else he'll die. The princess offers herself willingly, but the trope comes into play when she realizes that [[Good People Have Good Sex|the protagonist isn't quite ravishing her]] ''[[Covert Pervert|hard enough]]''. The trope gets [[Deconstructed]] when the princess uses a command spell to ''force'' our tentacled protagonist to go the whole hog.
* Played with in ''[[Freezing]]''. [[Sugar and Ice Personality|Sattelizer L Bridget]] has a [[Rape as Drama|difficult]] [[Dark and Troubled Past|backstory]]. As a result, she isn't trusting at all. She [[Hates Being Touched]] and [[Does Not Like Men]] (Or Women, for that matter). At one event, she gets really drunk, and [[Nice Guy|Kazuya]], the [[Single-Target Sexuality|one man she does like]], takes her back to her room. At her inebriated request, he unzips the back of her dress and removes her stockings, but he [[Above the Influence|doesn't go farther than that]]. When she wakes up, she's a bit freaked out by what he could have done, but a little bit disappointed that he didn't, even wondering if she's [[Victim Falls For Rapist|not his type]]. {{spoiler|[[Love Confession|Turns out she is]].}}
* ''[[Clannad (visual novel)|Clannad]]'' teases with a scene where resident [[Tsundere]] Kyou and Tomoya both get locked in an equipment storage shed. At first she's quite upset that this happened (apparently because of a spell cast on him right before this scene), but then goes into full blown dere-dere mode when Tomoya yells that he'll take care of it, says its his first time too, and tells her to turn around while he takes his shirt off. Then it turns out he just did that in order to lift the spell (also taught to him right before the scene), and the door opens right away, as another student opens it from the outside.
* In ''[[Kaguya-sama: Love is War]]'', Kaguya, while sick, forces her crush to be in bed with her (in a literal sense). Kaguya later wakes up with no memory of what happened and finds her crush in bed and lashes out because she thinks he took advantage of her. Her maid inspected the bed and concluded there was no sex, but things like groping wouldn't leave evidence. Kaguya hates both the possibility that her crush would take advantage of her if given the chance ''and'' the possibility that her crush ''wouldn't'' lewd her if given the chance.
 
 
=== Arts ===
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* In one ''[[What If]]'' [[Crossover]] with [[Wolverine]], [[Red Sonja]] is beaten by Wolverine and essentially gives up and waits for him to rape her, but he walks away, disgusted by the idea and saying "Sorry, darlin', that ain't my style." Sonja is both perplexed and slightly insulted, so she follows him. It's only after their next meeting that he warms up to her, and she eventually becomes his queen.
* In ''[[Little Ego]]'', Osin has this reaction when the Green Sheik abducts Ego and leaves her behind.
 
 
=== Fan Works ===
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* One sketch on ''[[Sanity Not Included]]'' featured [[Marvel vs. Capcom|Psylocke being scared that Shuma-Gorath]] was going to rape her, but he doesn't. When she asks why, he [[Lampshade Hanging|asks why would he want to do such a thing, and if he wanted to have sex he'd have sex with his own species.]] [[Double Standard Rape (Female on Male)|And then she tries to force herself onto him...]]
 
=== TheaterFilm ===
 
=== Films -- Animation ===
* This is what happens pretty much exactly in Disney's ''[[Oliver and Company]]'' when Dodger breaks into Georgette's room, [[Getting Crap Past the Radar|though it's not outright stated what she thinks he's going to do,]] she is quite offended when he says he's not after her.
 
 
=== Films -- Live-Action ===
* In an early ''[[Little Big Man]]'' scene where the narrator/protagonist is first captured by the Cheyenne, his sister is shown worrying and complaining about what all these natives might be planning for her in the strange language they're speaking and saying "They're going to rape me for sure!" As time passes and nothing happens to her, however, we see that they're planning no such thing, and that she's actually getting rather annoyed because no one's paying very much attention to her at all. She at least sees some humour in the situation when she finds out that it's because the Cheyenne, unfamiliar with women wearing short hair, thought she was a man.
* In the comedy western ''[[The Villain]]'', Ann-Margret keeps hinting that [[Arnold Schwarzenegger]]'s character should do this, but the [[Chaste Hero]] keeps [[Comically Missing the Point|missing the point]]. Eventually she's so annoyed she hooks up with the title Villain instead.
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* In ''[[Kaamelott]]'', [[King Arthur]] is tricked by his father-in-law Léodagan, while they conquer a town, into having to respect the tradition, which involves raping [[The Chief's Daughter]]. Not very fond of this, he finds out however that said daughter, Aelis (who's not the eldest daughter, but convinced the latter that it was her turn) is quite psyched up for the deed and expecting it eagerly. Arthur tries to negotiate with Aelis for her to pretend he raped her without doing so, but she insists. He ends proposing to bring her home as a mistress, and she's interested... but nonetheless, she almost threatens to rape ''him''.
{{quote|'''Arthur:''' I'm warning you: I'm going to scream.}}
 
 
=== Literature ===
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* A similar situation possibly occurs in ''[[Tender Is the Night]]''. {{spoiler|Nicole}} was sexually abused by her father when she was young, and is mentally troubled as a result, but her sister was not, and yet she also has some fairly serious issues. Whether these are directly connected to her mixed feelings about why her father abused {{spoiler|Nicole}} rather than her is unclear; the family was pretty dysfunctional anyway, so it could just be that.
* ''[[Discworld]]''
** In the novel ''[[Discworld/Mort|Mort]]'', when he comes to Ysabell's room in the middle of the night, she adjusts her nightgown to show more cleavage and tells him, "I hope that you have not forced your way in here in order to take advantage of your position in this household." (He works for [[The Grim Reaper|her father]].) He tells her that she's overflowing and to put something more sensible on.
** In ''[[Discworld/The Fifth Elephant|The Fifth Elephant]]'', Sam Vimes (who [[It Makes Sense in Context|isn't wearing pan-]] er, [[Insistent Terminology|trousers]] at the time) meets three women living alone in a house in the woods, who ask him "Are you here to ravish us?" When he replies that he's being chased by werewolves, they ask "Will that take all day?"
** In ''[[Discworld/Unseen Academicals|Unseen Academicals]]'', Glenda, while being carried by a crowd is at first glad she was wearing her most protective undergarments. This happiness went away when she realized nobody tried anything anyway.
** Variation in ''[[Discworld/Jingo|Jingo]]'' when the women of Ankh-Morpork are trying to encourage the men to go to war:
{{quote|'''Older Woman:''' What will you do when the Klatchians are ravishing us in our beds?
'''Nobby:''' I'd say that'd be jolly brave of the Klatchians. }}
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* ''The orb of Xaraz'', second novel in ''[[Le Donjon De Naheulbeuk]]'' verse, has the whole party hiding into the "filles pompoms" (ridiculous word-for-word translation of "pompom girl") locker room. The girls are really offended not to get raped.
* [[David Drake]]'s ''The Spark'' invokes this when the [[Knight in Shining Armor|hero]], Pal, is escorting a lady searching for her kidnapped sister. The vessel they travel aboard has electronically lockable cabins, and she's activated the lock whenever she was in her cabin, as well as mentioning a time or three that she carries a knife. And then [[Nice Guy|Pal]] politely tells her that for real security, she should use the manual lock, because no one can override that the way '''he''' could at any time have opened the electronic lock (the vessel's artificial intelligence is very ready to cooperate with him because of how he's been repairing centuries' worth of neglected systems). The lady doesn't '''say''' "Aren't You Going to..." but the realization that he certainly isn't clearly takes her down a peg.
 
 
=== Live-Action TV ===
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* A variation occurs in an episode of ''[[Oliver Beene]]''; Jerry and Charlotte are invited to dinner with a couple in another apartment, who they spy with another couple and realise that they swing. They spend the whole evening awkwardly trying to avoid insinuations and figure out how to politely express disinterest, only for the couple to say goodnight without incident, causing the two to angrily wonder what's wrong with them.
* Played seriously in an episode of ''[[Cracker]]'' where a killer's spree is motivated by the fact that she was only one of her family '''not''' molested by her father.
 
 
=== Music ===
* In [[50 Cent]]'s "Ski Mask Way", the narrator is a drugged-out stickup man that laughs off one his victims who thought he wanted to rape her.
 
 
=== Newspaper Comics ===
* ''[[Beetle Bailey]]'' has several times used the milder version "Aren't you going to inappropriately flirt with me? You're a soldier!" And it even did "Aren't you going to inappropriately flirt with my sister? You saying she's not pretty enough?"
 
 
=== Recorded and Stand-up Comedy ===
* The [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UnXtGINeDK0 stand-up routine] from [[Louis CK]]'s [[HBO]] special ''Chewed Up''.
 
=== Theatre ===
 
=== Theater ===
* From the first act of ''[[Camelot (theatre)|Camelot]]'':
{{quote|'''Guinevere:''' I suppose you're going to throw me to the ground and have your way with me!
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{{quote|'''Tracy:''' Was I so unattractive or forbidding or something?}}
* ''[[Annie Get Your Gun]]'': Dolly prepares herself to be ravished (even shouting "Molest me, violate me, ravish me!" when caught) as punishment for tampering with Annie's guns. While Charlie does not take her up on the offer, he does comment on how attractive she is and they basically end up together at the end.
 
 
=== Video Games ===
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* The book ''Thief of Virtue'' in ''[[The Elder Scrolls]]'' games tells of a wealthy but bored baroness, and a handsome dashing thief out to steal one of the baron's treasures. Subverted because while the thief initially had no intention to, the baroness presented the question as a suggestion, and that she'd help him escape if he obliged her.
{{quote|''Now, it should be noted at this point that Ravius was noted for his handsome looks, and the Baroness by her plainness. Both of these facts were immediately recognized by each of the pair. "Dost thou come to plunder my virtue?" asked the lady, all a tremble.''}}
 
 
=== Web Comics ===
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* ''[[Robot Chicken]]'' has a sketch with a bunch of teenagers (''Scooby-Doo'') looking around an old mansion. The two guys are subsequently raped by the "Rape Ghost". One ugly heavy girl isn't and this upsets her because she actually wants it.
* In the ''[[Batman: The Animated Series]]'' episode "Fear of Victory", the hero crashes through the window of an apartment belonging to an attractive woman in a bathrobe. She seems a little disappointed when he simply apologizes and leaves. Incidentally, this was based on a similar scene in ''[[North by Northwest]]''.
* From the ''[[Rick and Morty]]'' episode "Rickfending your Mort", one of the flashbacks shows Rick and his family watching a news report claiming alien "Hottie Snatchers" are [[Mars Needs Women| invading and grabbing the most attractive-looking Earthlings]] who venture out of their homes. [[Bad Liar| Claiming she thinks it's a hoax]], Summer wanders outside, witnesses them grab two of her neighbors... But not her. She falls on her knees, sobbing. This is only made worse when Principal Vagina (who is an old, unattractive man) walks by and tells her she'll get used to it.
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* In ''The Invasion of Sandy Bay'', which takes place in the [[War of 1812]], one American fisherman is insulted he is isn't being [[Press-Ganged|drafted]] into the British navy after they abduct him.
 
=== Live -Action TV ===
* ''[[Key & Peele]]'': The sketch Auction Block.
* In the "Weekend Update" segment of the Febuary 13, 2021 episode of ''[[Saturday Night Live]]'', Colin Jost said that a 117 year old nun survived a COVID-19 infection and was insulted that god didn't want to meet her.
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* The villain in the two-part ''[[DC Super Hero Girls]]'' episode "#TheFreshPrincessofRenFaire" is Ember, a dragon who preys on princesses, and spends most of the episode chasing after Zee, who is cosplaying as one. However, Zee is not a true princess, and Ember is nauseated when trying to eat her. Oddly, when Zee manages to free herself and assume the Zatanna guise, she is ''much'' less upset about almost being devoured than the way Ember called her ''"Disgusting! Revolting! Barf-tastic!"'' when trying to.
* The ''[[Miraculous Ladybug]]'' episode "The Pharaoh", Alya is at first justifiably frightened when she realizes the Akumatized villain intends to use her as a sacrifice, but when Pharaoh changes his mind and wants to use Ladybug instead, Alya... Takes it a little personally.
 
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[[Category:Absurdity Ascendant]]
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[[Category:Example as a Thesis]]
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