Breaking the Fourth Wall: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
(replaced list of subpages with Examples on Subpages template)
(Most of that info was already present. Condensing and rewriting slightly)
 
(6 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{trope}}
{{trope}}
{{cleanup|Some examples have already been moved to subpages by media. The rest need to follow suit (with "Opera" being moved to "Theatre").}}
[[File:ff-v-fourthwall.jpg|link=Final Fantasy V|frame|Yes, [[You Talkin' to Me?|they're talkin' to you]]. ''And [[Mind Screw|so are we.]]'']]
[[File:ff-v-fourthwall.jpg|link=Final Fantasy V|frame|Yes, [[You Talkin' to Me?|they're talkin' to you]]. ''And [[Mind Screw|so are we.]]'']]


Line 10: Line 9:
Anyway, the Fourth Wall is the fact that in any work of fiction is that the characters are unaware of the fact that they're fictional characters in a work, the audience observing them, and whatever medium conventions occur in between the two.
Anyway, the Fourth Wall is the fact that in any work of fiction is that the characters are unaware of the fact that they're fictional characters in a work, the audience observing them, and whatever medium conventions occur in between the two.


The term "fourth wall" comes from the days when sitcoms were filmed on a soundstage in front of a studio audience. [[Three-Wall Set|The sets of these sitcoms had three ''actual'' walls]], but nothing separating the stage from the viewing audience; for example, if Archie Bunker were watching TV in an actual living room, the "fourth wall" of the room would be in front of him, but as it was a soundstage, the "fourth wall" is not included in the set and only exists in the minds of Archie himself and his family. Were he to break character and address the audience, he would acknowledge that there is no fourth wall to the room.
Breaking the fourth wall is when a character acknowledges their fictionality, by either indirectly or directly addressing the audience. Alternatively, they may interact with their creator (the author of the book, the director of the movie, the artist of the comic book, etc.). This is more akin to breaking one of the walls of the set, but the existence of a director implies the existence of an audience, so it's still indirectly Breaking The Fourth Wall. This trope is usually used for comedic purposes.


'''Breaking the Fourth Wall''' is when a character acknowledges their fictional status by either indirectly or directly addressing the audience. Alternatively, they may interact with their creator - the author of the book, the director of the movie, the artist of the comic book, etc. This is more akin to breaking one of the walls of the set, but the existence of a director implies the existence of an audience, so it's still indirectly Breaking The Fourth Wall. This trope is usually used for comedic purposes.
It should be noted that other sources will refer to any fiction that draws attention to its fictionality as "Breaking The Fourth Wall". Our definition is a bit narrower: Breaking The Fourth Wall only occurs if the characters acknowledge the audience or the author, whether directly or indirectly, got it? It's not enough that I recognize my status as a wiki page, it's the fact that I'm commenting to you about it!

Named for the theatrical convention of building sets with [[Three-Wall Set|right, left and back walls]], while the audience observes the action through an imaginary "fourth"<ref>or sometimes "third", depending on if or how the designers chose to number their walls</ref> wall located at the front of the stage. Breaking the fourth wall would occur when the actors would step through where the virtual fourth wall should be and address the audience directly.


[[Older Than Feudalism|This is a very old trope]]: [[Shakespeare]]'s characters often addressed the audience. They broke it regularly in [[Ancient Greece|Ancient Greek]] theater, too, pretty much as soon as they'd ''invented'' the [[Fourth Wall]] - or, arguably, [[Unbuilt Trope|''before'']] inventing the [[Fourth Wall]].
[[Older Than Feudalism|This is a very old trope]]: [[Shakespeare]]'s characters often addressed the audience. They broke it regularly in [[Ancient Greece|Ancient Greek]] theater, too, pretty much as soon as they'd ''invented'' the [[Fourth Wall]] - or, arguably, [[Unbuilt Trope|''before'']] inventing the [[Fourth Wall]].

It should be noted that other sources will refer to any fiction that draws attention to its fictionality as "Breaking The Fourth Wall". Our definition is a bit narrower: Breaking The Fourth Wall only occurs if the characters acknowledge the audience or the author, whether directly or indirectly, got it? It's not enough that I recognize my status as a wiki page, it's the fact that I'm commenting to you about it!


When a series breaks the fourth wall on such a regular basis that there may as well not be one in the first place, then you've gone straight into [[No Fourth Wall]].
When a series breaks the fourth wall on such a regular basis that there may as well not be one in the first place, then you've gone straight into [[No Fourth Wall]].
Line 31: Line 30:


{{Examples on subpages}}
{{Examples on subpages}}

== Opera ==
* In Sergei Prokofiev's ''Love For Three Oranges'' the action is frequently interrupted by a [[Greek Chorus]] (or rather, four or five separate Greek Choruses) of opera fans and stagehands. This on its own doesn't ''quite'' break the fourth wall. But when the stagehands decide to intervene in the plot by kidnapping the main villain, you've got to feel like some kind of line has been crossed. Relatively rare in that the fourth wall is broken from the OUTSIDE: rather than one of the characters in the play turning to address the audience, characters from the "audience" reach in and start mucking about in the play.

== Professional Wrestling ==
* There was this [[Sarcasm Mode|gem]] from [[Hulk Hogan]] on a November 2010 episode of ''[[TNA]] ReAction'':
{{quote|"Well, brother, we're lightening the load around here. We're trimming the fat. We're thinning the herd. I mean, you know, it's pathetic. It's pathetic, that Dixie would let this company get in the shape it's in. It's her train of thought! Raven? Who hasn't had a damn shower or bath? Y'know, with RVD, and that whole crew out there? They meant to professional wrestling what Hulk Hogan, who sold out Shea Stadium? who put 94,000 people in the Pontiac Silverdome? who slammed a 700-pound giant? They mean to professional wrestling what Hulk Hogan means?
"No wonder this company ''was'' in the shape it's in. It's time to get rid o' the trash, the garbage, the worthless piece of crap out here, and we started with Dixie Carter. Yeah, we're gettin' ''very'' real around here. We are so, real, it's unbelievable. Because, if you don't get over like I said, you're fired. If you don't draw number, if you don't entertain, if you don't put asses in seats, if you don't put the coinage in the piggy bank, you're fired. No more games. No more, "[[Fourth Wall|Kayfabe]]." "It's a work." "I've won 34 tag team belts." Who gives a damn, how many…fake belts you won!? If you don't draw money, you get fired around here. If you don't put asses in seats, you’re gone." }}
* [[Professional Wrestling]] as a whole exists in a weird space where there is no fourth wall...but there is. The universe portrayed in the ring is considered "real", for all intents and purposes. The people who enter the ropes, be they the living undead, obliviously narcissistic, or rich beyond belief; that's who they ''actually'' are. The audience has to believe that they exist both on and off the clock just as you see them. Likewise, they are constantly aware they are on television and performing before a live audience, so the concept of a fourth wall in the traditional sense is not there. The ''actual'' fourth wall is [[Kayfabe]], which is something you generally do ''not'' want to break (as the notion is almost critical to the concept of pro wrestling making sense at all; even admitting its existence, like the above, is a surefire way to throw [[Willing Suspension of Disbelief]] out the window and even the audience knows it).
** CM Punk, through his scathing shoot promo, has created an on-screen character for himself where he can fly between the fourth wall and reality.
*** In that initial promo, he even explicitly mentions that he's breaking the fourth wall.
* [[Dwayne Johnson|The Rock]] does this a lot. For example, in reference to the brief [[John Cena]] / [[Zack Ryder]] / [[Eve Torres]] love triangle in early 2012, Rock pointed out that Cena is married in real life.

== Puppet Shows ==
* The Cashore Marionettes do this occasionally; one of the most significant instances is the skit "The Quest", in which a puppet scales his own puppeteer like a mountain, accompanied by triumphant music.

== Radio ==
* [[Firesign Theatre]]: There's a fourth wall?

== Real Life ==
* There's no better way to mess with your friends than by breaking the fourth wall in conversation. That way, if there's ever a movie made of your life, you can include fourth-wall breaking scenes without having to fictionalize anything.
** So that's what you've been doing. Knock it off, Derek! {{color|white|Yes, this is an attempt to mess with the heads of every Derek in the world. Don't spoil it}}
* Thanks to the existence of wiretaps, it is now possible to break the fourth wall by giving a friendly, or not so friendly, hello to the FBI/DHS/NSA/SRI/etc. This is customarily done after making a particularly seditious comment, as exemplified by [http://xkcd.com/525/ this xkcd] comic and ''[http://www.gigaville.com/comic.php?id=415 another] from ''[[The Last Days of Foxhound]]''.
** Can you say that directly into the microphone please? ''* Prominently displays shirt pocket or some other mundane place a microphone could be hiding* ''
** [[George Carlin]] once told a story about a friend of a friend who, while under investigation by the FBI, took to answering his phone with "Fuck Hoover" instead of "Hello".
** If your boss is prone to listening in on staff you don't even need the FBI.
** On online games, some savvy players do this to moderators who might be monitoring the chat.
* Have you ever had a homework in which you have to write X amount of sentences? Now how many times have you (or classmate) written: "I am doing my homework" or "I am learning [insert subject] at school". (This is more frequent in a foreign language class.)
* You know when you're waking up and half-dreaming still, and you say something utterly surreal that makes complete sense at the time but makes no sense later, until you realize that it was actually a very profound remark, as if someone were narrating your life? [[Mind Screw|You just broke the fourth wall.]]
** Bonus points if you just turn your head away (usually towards left side) and give a look worth of [[Deadpan Snarker]] and make a mental note over the situation.



{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Abridged Series Tropes]]
[[Category:Abridged Series Tropes]]
[[Category:Webcomic Tropes]]
[[Category:Fourth Wall]]
[[Category:Tropes of Legend]]
[[Category:Lit Class Tropes]]
[[Category:Metafiction Demanded This Index]]
[[Category:Metafiction Demanded This Index]]
[[Category:Lit Class Tropes]]
[[Category:Older Than Feudalism]]
[[Category:Post Modern Tropes]]
[[Category:Rule of Funny]]
[[Category:Rule of Funny]]
[[Category:Older Than Feudalism]]
[[Category:Self-Demonstrating Article]]
[[Category:Self-Demonstrating Article]]
[[Category:Post Modern Tropes]]
[[Category:Tropes of Legend]]
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Webcomic Tropes]]
[[Category:Fourth Wall]]

Latest revision as of 22:41, 21 December 2020

Yes, they're talkin' to you. And so are we.

80s Raphael: (to the camera) Some people just can't handle change.

Hun: (follows his gaze) Why do you keep doing that? Who are you talking to?! There's no one there!

Hey! How're you doing out there? It sure is nice to be the Breaking The Fourth Wall page on All The Tropes. Sure, I don't get as much attention as some of the other pages, but I try my hardest.

Anyway, the Fourth Wall is the fact that in any work of fiction is that the characters are unaware of the fact that they're fictional characters in a work, the audience observing them, and whatever medium conventions occur in between the two.

The term "fourth wall" comes from the days when sitcoms were filmed on a soundstage in front of a studio audience. The sets of these sitcoms had three actual walls, but nothing separating the stage from the viewing audience; for example, if Archie Bunker were watching TV in an actual living room, the "fourth wall" of the room would be in front of him, but as it was a soundstage, the "fourth wall" is not included in the set and only exists in the minds of Archie himself and his family. Were he to break character and address the audience, he would acknowledge that there is no fourth wall to the room.

Breaking the Fourth Wall is when a character acknowledges their fictional status by either indirectly or directly addressing the audience. Alternatively, they may interact with their creator - the author of the book, the director of the movie, the artist of the comic book, etc. This is more akin to breaking one of the walls of the set, but the existence of a director implies the existence of an audience, so it's still indirectly Breaking The Fourth Wall. This trope is usually used for comedic purposes.

This is a very old trope: Shakespeare's characters often addressed the audience. They broke it regularly in Ancient Greek theater, too, pretty much as soon as they'd invented the Fourth Wall - or, arguably, before inventing the Fourth Wall.

It should be noted that other sources will refer to any fiction that draws attention to its fictionality as "Breaking The Fourth Wall". Our definition is a bit narrower: Breaking The Fourth Wall only occurs if the characters acknowledge the audience or the author, whether directly or indirectly, got it? It's not enough that I recognize my status as a wiki page, it's the fact that I'm commenting to you about it!

When a series breaks the fourth wall on such a regular basis that there may as well not be one in the first place, then you've gone straight into No Fourth Wall.

Can be expressed using Medium Awareness. When done literally, it's Camera Abuse. See also: Narrator (this trope is their job), Post Modernism (loves this trope), Aside Glance and Aside Comment (particular kinds of this), Animated Actors (an animation-specific subtrope), and Who Would Want to Watch Us? (characters lampooning the premise). He Knows About Timed Hits often involves breaking a videogame's fourth wall through necessity. For a detailed discussion of the line between this and No Fourth Wall, see Sliding Scale of Fourth Wall Hardness. If the creator of a work, the audience, or you, personally, interact with characters in a way that isn't Audience Participation, it may well be From Beyond the Fourth Wall.

Often used for Lampshade Hanging. But if a character lampshades without addressing or acknowledging the audience, it's just Lampshade Hanging. Similarly the fourth wall can be broken with no lampshades in sight.

If somebody is not in the break and doesn't understand who the ones breaking the wall are talking to, see Audience? What Audience?.

Leaning on the Fourth Wall is related.

Anyway, thanks for your time... on to a couple examples, in which I shall kindly stop smashing your computer screen with a hammer:

Examples of Breaking the Fourth Wall are listed on these subpages: