Ejection Seat: Difference between revisions

split "comics" into "comic books" and "newspaper comics", added text, BSG links
(split "comics" into "comic books" and "newspaper comics", added text, BSG links)
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{{trope}}
[[File:eject.jpg|link=Star Wars Expanded Universe|rightframe]]
 
{{quote|"Eject! EJECT! I can't shake him!"
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Distinct from just Abandon Ship; rather than just getting the heck out of (the) Dodge, a machine's helping you out (the door).
{{examples}}
 
{{examples}}
== Anime &and Manga ==
* ''[[Code Geass]]'' has ejector seats as a major feature of the Knightmare Frames. In fact, according to [[All There in the Manual|the backstory]], this trope is the very reason Knightmares exist to begin with.<ref>Britannia looked into putting Ejector Seats in traditional war machines like tanks, but then they added legs so they could escape the battlefield and it kind of snowballed from there</ref> The fact that the [[Super Prototype|Lancelot]] doesn't have one is made out to be a big deal.
** [[Failsafe Failure]] is mostly averted, but there are a couple of moments. In one episode, we see a character ({{spoiler|Kewell}}) die when the [[Super Prototype|Guren Mk-II's]] radiant wave fries his machine's internal computers. In another, Lelouch is badly injured because the seat activates when he doesn't have a clear vector of escape, making it bounce off the ground and nearby objects like a rubber ball; it's frankly quite amazing that he didn't get whiplash.
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* [[Axis Powers Hetalia|Italy and Poland]] both of them used it in different moments. Sadly, they got stuck in a tree immediately after.
 
== Comic Books ==
 
== Comics ==
* Given its appearance in no fewer than two other media, it is a pretty safe assumption that every iteration of [[Batman|the Batmobile]] has an ejector seat.
** The same goes for the [[Cool Plane|Batplane/Batwing]].
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* In ''[[Green Lantern]]'', an airplane went down and Hal Jordan thought that maybe the pilot had forgotten where the lever was. He himself had managed to persuade Kyle Rayner to take a flight—without his ring—and after Kyle had double-checked everything, he had asked how to trigger the ejection seat, and Hal hadn't remembered.
* In one ''[[Archie]]'' comic book, Jughead as Captain Hero faces a courteous villain who left his own car via ejection seat, while the car is in motion.
* ''[[Dilbert]]'' had some fired employee [http://dilbert.com/strip/2009-07-31 leave a meeting]. Also, [https://dilbert.com/strip/2011-05-28 CEO panic button].
 
== Films -- Animation ==
* At the beginning of ''[[The Incredibles]]'', Mr Incredible uses the ejector seat to get Buddy out of his car.
* ''[[Yellow Submarine]]''. Ringo is steering the sub as they pass through the Sea of Monsters. Old Ferd tells him "Whatever you do, [[Schmuck Bait|don't touch that button]]." Of course Ringo does so, and is ejected out of the submarine.
 
 
== Films -- Live-Action ==
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{{quote|"This is the end of Devil 505, say goodbye asshole! Eject eject eject!"
"Goodbye asshole!" *ejection seats fire* }}
 
 
== Literature ==
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* Averted in ''[[The Laundry Series|The Jennifer Morgue]]'' by [[Charles Stross]], which goes into some detail as to why an ejection seat in a car is an insanely bad idea; when Bob Howard presses the eject button on his [[Cool Car]], the ''entire car ejects'', which is only slightly less so. It's made clear that only time you should press the button is if ''not'' pressing it is ''definitely'' going to kill you. The explanation also deflates the idea of the "easy eject"; Bob describes how, due to the G-forces involved, the pilot is likely looking at weeks in traction ''at best''.
* As in the games on which they're based, the ''[[Wing Commander (novel)|Wing Commander]]'' novels occasionally feature ejection seats. In ''End Run'', it's noted that there's a mechanism that's supposed to prevent an ejection while on the carrier, but that has a reputation for not always functioning. [[Chekhov's Gun|Later in the novel]] it fails for one pilot, smashing him against the landing bay overhead.<ref>for those not familiar with naval terminology, the ceiling</ref>
 
 
== Live-Action TV ==
* The Vipers in ''both [[Battlestar Galactica (1978 TV series)|the original]] and [[Battlestar Galactica (2004 TV series)|2004 reboot]] of ''Battlestar Galactica'' have ejector seats, although ejecting usually means that you'll either be in a [[Whole-Episode Flashback|flashback episode]], or have a long, ruminating episode full of wangst while you [[Rule of Drama|contemplate your slow demise]].
* When Wendy Watson flies to rescue ''[[The Middleman]]'', [[Ridiculously Human Robot|IDA]] triggers the Middlejet's Ejection Seat remotely, much to Wendy's horror.
* Fighters in ''[[Babylon 5]]'' are often equipped with ejector seats, though rescue is a bit of a crapshoot in space.
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{{quote|'''Harm:''' "Punching out is the last thing a pilot ever wants to do. People think you get in trouble, pull the magic handle, and float safely to the ground? Every time you punch out you end up an inch shorter."}}
 
== Newspaper Comics ==
* ''[[Dilbert]]'' had some fired employee [http://dilbert.com/strip/2009-07-31 leave a meeting]. Also, [https://dilbert.com/strip/2011-05-28 CEO panic button].
 
== Tabletop Games ==