End of an Age: Difference between revisions

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{{trope}}
[[File:DruidsLoseInterest.jpg|frame]]
{{quote|''On the green bank near to the very point of the Tongue the Lady Galadriel stood alone and silent. As they passed her they turned and their eyes watched her slowly floating away from them. For so it seemed to them: Lorien was slipping backward, like a bright ship masted with enchanted trees, sailing on to forgotten shores, while they sat helpless upon the margin of the grey and leafless world.''|'''[[J. R. R. Tolkien|JRR Tolkien]]''', ''[[The Lord of the Rings|The Fellowship of the Ring]]''.}}
 
There was a time our lives and the world were new and [[Here There Were Dragons|full of wonder]], when innocence and curiosity led people to explore, trust each other plainly, make amazing discoveries, invent amazing technologies, or simply make awe inspiring works of art.
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{{examples}}
== [[Anime]] and [[Manga ]] ==
* Throughout ''[[Lone Wolf and Cub]]'', it's both expressed and strongly implied that Feudal Japan is about to come crashing down and that Itto is "the Last True Bushi."
* ''[[Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou]]'' shows the "age of the calm evening" before "the night of humanity". This is paralleled in Alpha's own development.
* The end of ''[[Legend of Galactic Heroes]]'' is the end of one era of human history.
* Many of the works by Miyazaki evoke this trope (''[[Laputa: Castle in the Sky]]'', ''[[Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind]]'' and ''[[Princess Mononoke]]'' to name just three).
* ''[[Spice and Wolf|Holo]]'': Holo decides to leave the villagers she helped because they say that they don't need a harvest god anymore. While she initially helped them by making the crops grow, she occasionally had to do the opposite to prevent the growing village from being struck by the [[wikipedia:Tragedy of the commons|Tragedy of the Commons]], which made them resent her. In the first episode, before she leaves, we see her portrayed in the village harvest festivities as an oppressive force and a thief instead of as a wise benefactor.
* ''[[One Piece]]'' is starting to look very much like this as of recent{{when}} events, with the romantic "Great Pirate Era" coming crashing down, as Portgas D. Ace, {{spoiler|who was revealed as the son of Gold Roger, the legendary "Pirate King", is killed by Admiral Akainu, providing the first death of a major character}}, and Edward "Whitebeard" Newgate, who held the title of the "World's Strongest Man", {{spoiler|meeting his end shortly afterward, with the almost certainly series [[Big Bad]] Blackbeard and his crew killing him, and stealing his devil fruit power}}.
** [[What Do You Mean Its Not Symbolic|Both of these could serve as symbolic sacrifices]] [[Growing the Beard|of an innocent age gone]], ushering in the [[Darker and Edgier|chaotic new age of pirates]] {{spoiler|with Blackbeard, at the epicenter}}.
** This is lampshade by many characters who believe that the world is now in the New Age. thought most of they have different conception about how it will be.
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* ''[[Turn A Gundam|Turn a Gundam]]'' has this as its distant backstory. They even have a name for it: The Black History. That backstory happens to be {{spoiler|the entire ''[[Gundam]]'' franchise up to that point; [[Word of God]] adds in most later Gundam series to backstory}}.
 
== [[Comic Books]] ==
 
== Comics ==
* ''[[Crisis on Infinite Earths]]'' is very much about the end of the multiverse and the birth of the universe. Several other comics came out at the same time dealing with each hero's personal End of an Age:
* Alan Moore's ''[[Superman]]'' story "[[Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow?]]" is about the end of the [[Silver Age]] Superman legend and all the myth surrounding him.
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** Even more common is to describe "[[The Night Gwen Stacy Died]]" (''Amazing Spider-Man'' #121) as the story that marked the end of the Silver Age and the beginning of the Bronze Age of comic books.
* This is also the idea behind the ''Malibuverse'' comics. The superheros were [[Human Popsicle]]s from the last "golden age" of men. Or [[Nineties Anti-Hero|demons]]. By the way, we are the tenth generation, while they were the ninth.
* ''[[Gold Digger (Comic Book)|Gold Digger]]'': - magic and magic users still exist but the age of magic is over and most magical beings retreated to other realms some time ago.
 
 
== [[Film ]] ==
* This was touched on in the ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean]]'' sequels. In ''Dead Man's Chest'', Cutler Beckett had a speech about how the world was changing and there would soon no longer be a place for pirates like Jack Sparrow. In ''At World's End'', Sparrow and Barbossa had a similar conversation; the point gets driven home when they stumble upon the body of the Kraken.
{{quote|'''Barbossa:''' The world used to be a bigger place.
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* ''[[Sunset]]'' is about both the end of the Old West and the end of silent movies.
* As of 2014, this is reputedly the theme of the upcoming ''[[How to Train Your Dragon (animation)|How to Train Your Dragon 3]]''—the film is supposed to explain how the world went from full of dragons (and Vikings who ride them) to no dragons at all.
* ''[[Top Gun: Maverick]]'': "Drone Ranger" Cain, who wants to take the Darkstar funding for his drones, tells Maverick after the Mach 10 test run that "Your kind is headed for extinction" and that all he's done is delay the inevitable future without manned aviation.
 
== [[Literature ]] ==
* David Wingrove's ''[[Chung Kuo]]'' series takes place in the last years of the world-spanning Han Empire. One of the main protagonists has made it his life's calling to forestall the end.
* Part of [[C. S. Lewis|CS Lewis]]'s ''[[Narnia]]'' stories is that only children may enter it, so as the cast ages they become excluded from coming back. However, by the last book {{spoiler|all the children, most now grown, who held faith in having gone to Narnia and Aslan in particular, are allowed to come back for the final showdown.}}
** {{spoiler|How was that before the final showdown, exactly?}}
** {{spoiler|None of the children return to Narnia. The children appear in the Narnian version of heaven, on the other side of the stable's doorway.}}
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* The novelization of [[Revenge of the Sith]], which is generally considered to be very, very good, brings up the concept in its introduction, which gives brief rundown on the situation of the Republic as it stands, how important Anakin and Obi-Wan are to it, and then finishes with a single sentence:
{{quote|Though this is the end of the age of heroes, it has saved its best for last.}}
* In ''[[Discworld]]''
* In ''[[Discworld]]'',* ''[[Discworld/Sourcery|Sourcery]]'' might be considered the last gasp of the age of, well, sourcery. Magic, and the humans who wield it, have been considerably scaled down since then, making things less wondrous but a hell of a lot safer.
*** The events of ''Sourcery'' also killed off many of the most powerful and dangerous wizards which lead to Ridcully becoming Archchancellor and ending the age of [[Klingon Promotion]] among the wizards. The wizards become more laid back, less aggressive and more scholarly wizards were able to rise to positions of power.
** ''[[Discworld/Men At Arms|Men Atat Arms]]'' started the transformation of the City Watch into a modern police force and ended the age of the police being marginalized by the guilds, palace guards or the army. Old school coppers like Colon and Nobby don't really fit into it anymore and are nostalgic about how things used to be.
** ''[[Discworld/Interesting Times|Interesting Times]]'' features the last gasp of Cohen the Barbarian and his band of geriatric heroes - a literally dying breed of men on the Disc whose days, like the Red Indians of North America, are soon to be ended by the "Telegraph" and encroaching civilization. The silver horde elect to go out with a very big bang, first here and in the loose "sequel", ''[[Discworld/The Last Hero|The Last Hero]]''.
** ''[[Discworld/Jingo|Jingo]]'' and ''[[Discworld/Going Postal (Discworld)|Going Postal]]'': as incidental detail in both books, the ferocious and savage non-human species called the Gnolls, who like rogue Apache Indians terrorised the overland trade routes through the wilderness in ''[[Discworld/Equal Rites|Equal Rites]]'', are seen to capitulate to ''realpolitik'' and give themselves up to encroaching civilization, like reservation Indians in 1890. ''Jingo'' sees their debased remnant entering Ankh-Morpork to take up the bottom rung on the social ladder, as scavengers and rubbish-pickers. In ''Going Postal'' there is a strong hint, from the coachmen who are relieved the former hunting grounds of the Gnolls are suddenly so empty, that the last wild gnolls were victims of a sudden and mysterious genocide akin to the defeat of the Native Americans.
{{quote|And we never knew what caused it, Mr Lipwig.
Though gnolls are literally living compost heaps, they actually like being sweepers and garbage-men, they have a ready source of food all to themselves. }}
** ''[[Discworld/Unseen Academicals|Unseen Academicals]]'' ended the old, very brutal way of playing football and many of the old movers-and-shakers are not happy with it.
* Jack Kerouac's ''[[On The Road]]'' uses this trope symbolically when Sal finally settles with his wife and leads a peaceful life, leaving Dean, the embodiment of his reckless youth, to wander behind.
* Robert Jordan's ''[[The Wheel of Time]]'' series includes an effectively infinite number of these, including one explicitly described, and with most fans convinced that a second is coming any book now:
** The events in the present were set in motion by the huge battle and subsequent [[The End of the World as We Know It]] catastrophe 3 milleniamillennia ago.
** Since time in the series' is circular, the world must go through at least one more end of an age to become the "real" world.
** There's also the implied end of our modern age that prepared the world for the Age of Legends in the first place.
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* John's reign is the downfall of the immortal land Pentexore in ''[[A Dirge for Prester John]]''.
 
== [[Live -Action TV]] ==
 
== Live Action TV ==
* The last episode of ''[[Dinosaurs]]'' brings this theme home after suggestively dancing around it for most of the series.
{{quote|'''Earl''': Dinosaurs have been on this Earth for 150 millions years, and it's not like we're going to just... disappear.}}
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* ''[[Upstairs, Downstairs]]'' depicts, through the changes in the Bellamy household, Victorian England slowly yielding to modern Britain.
 
== [[Music ]] ==
 
* The [[Blue Öyster Cult|Blue Oyster Cult]] anthem ''Golden Age of Leather'' is about the last stand of old unrepentant Hell's Angels for whom the world has got too small, who choose to go out and die in a blaze of glory:
== Music ==
* The [[Blue Öyster Cult|Blue Oyster Cult]] anthem ''Golden Age of Leather'' is about the last stand of old unrepentant Hell's Angels for whom the world has got too small, who choose to go out and die in a blaze of glory:
{{quote|''There passed from man to man/A wanton child, too dead to care,/ That each would find his pleasure as he might;/For that fantastic night was billed/As nothing less than the '''end of an age''',/ A last crusade, a final outrage...''}}
* ''[[Puff the Magic Dragon]]'' is about the end of childhood innocence and imagination, {{spoiler|[[Everyone Is Jesus in Purgatory|not pot]]}}.
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* [[The Eagles|Don Henley]]'s "End of the Innocence" and "Boys of Summer".
 
== [[Oral Tradition]], [[Folklore]], Myths and Legends ==
 
== Mythology and Religion ==
* ''[[The Bible]]'' has several examples:
** The loss of a "[[Golden Age]]" in this case is the "fall of man", and being cursed with sin and death.
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** Similar to Ovid, the Book of Daniel compares the four ancient empires around the Mediterranean (which reigned over the Israelites) area to metals: Babylon is gold, Media is silver, Persia is bronze, and Greece/Macedonia is iron.
** According to some interpretations, inverted in Revelation, where the result of the [[Battle Royale With Cheese]] between [[God]] and [[Satan]] will result in the [[Dawn of an Era]] that restores humanity to its former glory.
 
 
== [[Tabletop Games]] ==
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*** Also, subverted by the epoch of Myth Dranor. It's known as a lost Golden Age (magical Renaissance and goodwill festival). But with all its wonders, it wasn't completely idyllic, nor was its technology ''absolutely'' superior—for example, some Myth Drannan magic items are vulnerable to [[Phlebotinum Overload|explosive overload]], while modern counterparts aren't. As well, the end of the age led to a proliferation of the arts.
** The default "[[Points of Light]]" setting of 4th Edition takes place 100 years after the collapse of Nerath, the last great human empire. Towns and villages are pretty much states unto themselves and there's no central government, so the heroes are usually all that stand between a community and the dangers of the wilderness. The history of the setting also has other collapsed empires, making the rise and fall of nations cyclical.
* In ''[[Magic: The Gathering|Magic the Gathering]]'', the ''Time Spiral'' block concluded with almost all of the original, godlike planeswalkers dying or becoming human to save [[The Multiverse]], and more limited, mortal planeswalkers rising to take their place.
* ''[[Warhammer 40,000]]'' has the Dark (or Golden, if you ask the [[Machine Cult|Adeptus Mechanicus]]) Age of Technology, when mankind first colonised other planets and created amazing technological advancements. Most of the fanciest stuff used by the Imperium are barely-understood and often nearly irreplaceable relics of this time.
** The general underlying theme of humanity in 40k is that it is doomed to die a long, slow death from not only its own beliefs but also the vast hordes of unimaginably strong aliens, traitors and daemons. But that is very far away and right now has lots of explosions and chainsaws.
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* "[[Secrets of the Third Reich]]" has this as a backdrop for the setting. Albeit the world is slowly turning more and more into this as WWII drags on and on.
 
== [[Theatre]] ==
 
* A heartbreaking moment towards the end of ''[[Dirty Rotten Scoundrels]]''. The main characters realize that as thrilling and exciting as their adventures and lifestyles were, they have to accept the fact that they're over and they need to move on. {{spoiler|Or do they? The show ends on a high note.}}
== Theater ==
{{quote|''[We] must accept the con is done,
* A heartbreaking moment towards the end of [[Dirty Rotten Scoundrels]]. The main characters realize that as thrilling and exciting as their adventures and lifestyles were, they have to accept the fact that they're over and they need to move on. {{spoiler|Or do they? The show ends on a high note.}}
''But now and then you may recall,
{{quote|[We] must accept the con is done,
''the moments when you had it all.
But now and then you may recall,
the''You momentshad whenthe charm, you had itthe all.talent--
You''and had theby charmgod, you had thesome talent--fun.
''It was a ball, it was a blast,
and by god, you had some fun.
It''and wasit's a ball,shame it was acouldn't blastlast,
''but every chapterschapter's got to end you must agree! }}
and it's a shame it couldn't last,
but every chapters got to end you must agree! }}
* [[Richard Wagner]]'s opera cycle ''[[Der Ring Des Nibelungen]]'' chronicles the end of an age. In ''Das Rheingold'' Wotan is warned that a dark day is dawning for the gods. By the end of ''Siegfried'', Wotan's power has been broken by the destruction of his spear and also the last of the giants is dead. In ''Götterdämmerung'' the gods are finally destroyed, the dwarf Alberich who made the ring of power can only appear in his sons dreams and the ring itself is cleansed by fire and returned to the Rhine from which it came. Humanity are left alone in the world to make their own fate free of the corruption of supernatural beings.
 
== [[Video Games ]] ==
 
== Video Games ==
* The end of ''[[Tales of Vesperia]]'' had the protagonists forced to destroy all blastia, a material people are dependent on for magic and everyday life, in order to prevent the world's destruction. However, the tradeoff is that they create Mana and Summon Spirits.
* Several of the ''[[Final Fantasy]]'' games:
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* ''[[Mass Effect 3]]'' has this trope connected with [[Dawn of an Era]]. The game consists of Shepard cleaning house and tying up all kinds of galactic-scale loose ends in preparation for the final battle. It's possible to cure the thousand-year [[Depopulation Bomb]] inflicted on the krogan, and the centuries-long animosity between the quarians and the geth will come to a head one way or another. But all possible endings involve {{spoiler|the destruction / disabling of the entire mass relay network, and potentially most of the other advanced tech as well, pushing the galaxy into a new dark age.}}
* ''[[Asura's Wrath]]'' {{spoiler|Has the final ending VIA DLC be the end of an Era for the Shinkoku Race.}}
 
 
== [[Web Comics]] ==
* In ''[http://www.yoshsaga.com/latest.php Yosh!]'', the magic in the world was sealed away in the distant past after the Magi abused it and were beaten down by a unique individual who was completely immune to magic. The story begins in a world that looks much like our own, a few years after some of the sealed magic was released, causing a world-spanning magical event. The results of that event include [[Catgirl|Cat Girls]], [[Talking Animal]]s, and [[Functional Magic]], among other things.
* In ''[[Linburger]]'', the Cyll were once were the typical [[Our Elves Are Better]], with long lives and high class. Unfortunately, some strange, catalclysmic event happened in the distant past, stripping the Cyll of their long lives, and now they live in slums with the other [[Demihuman]] races.
 
 
== [[Web Original]] ==
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* The first two years of ''[[The Questport Chronicles]]'' take place in the [[City of Adventure|millennia-old]] [[Fantasy Kitchen Sink|eponymous village]]. Then a [[From Nobody to Nightmare|jealous]] [[Evil Sorcerer|magician]] destroys the village, and the next two years of the Chronicles are concerned with [[The Remnant|the survivors]] searching for a new home.
 
== [[Western Animation]] ==
 
== Western Animation ==
* Spoofed in an episode of ''[[The Simpsons]]'' where a couple of hippies say that the 60s ended the day they sold their VW Bus—December 31, 1969.
* The [[Aardman Animations]] short ''Stage Fright'' is about a stage performer struggling to get by as his assistant leaves to star in moving pictures.
 
 
== [[Real Life]] ==
 
=== Pre-History ===
* One of the earliest examples of this would be the meteorite collision that ended the Mesozoic era, and hence the extinction of the dinosaurs.
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** "Oh look. Here comes the last wave."
** This tends to run in cycles, as the last big thing becomes more and more dominated by label-created groups that are focus grouped to death until the stage is set for the next revolution in music (movies follow the same pattern). The fact that most of what we remember from past eras is the cream of the crop and ignores [[Sturgeon's Law]] is also a big part of it.
* Pretty much every generation laments for their respective "good old days". Those born in the 20's1920s wished for the days before rock'n'roll; those born in the 50's1950s wishwished for the days of ''[[Leave It to Beaver]]''; those born in the 60's1960s keep telling those born in the 80's80s that "we didn't do that sort of thing when we were your age"; and those born in the 80's1980s bitch about how kids have it too easy now, and are growing up soft. Early 2000s kids are joining in on this as they approach adulthood during the 2020s and miss the days before smartphones. It's happened since the dawn of time and will keep happening until the end of mankind as we know it.
** [[Nostalgia Filter|The brain is more or less "use it or lose it", and people often don't rehash unpleasant memories, meaning they forget the bad things and remember the past as being better than it was.]]
** ''[[The Daily Show]]'' lampooned this and said it was because everything seems less complicated when you're a child.
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