It's Always Sunny At Funerals: Difference between revisions

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{{trope}}
{{quote|Bakugou stood off to the side as the funeral came to a close. He and the other members of 1-A had been asked to attend by the Iida family. It was a [[Mood Dissonance|mockingly sunny day]] with clear skies and a slight breeze.|''Everything, Yet Nothing''}}
''This is too beautiful a day to have to bury someone.''
 
 
Weather has always been used symbolically when it comes to death. When characters die it's often a perfect day outside, with nary a cloud in the sky. There are several reasons for using the dichotomy between the bright, cheerful, cloudless sky as a counterpoint to the sadness of death. [[Irony|Ironic contrast]], perhaps, or to show that, even in the midst of our grief life does go on. Maybe its just to give the resident [[Deadpan Snarker]] something to gripe about, or maybe the sunny day is an excuse for the characters to feel that much worse about the death of a loved one.
 
Tends to be a type of [[Mood Dissonance]]. This trope is usually part of a [[Meaningful Funeral]] scene.
 
If you're thinking about putting an [[Averted Trope|aversion]] or a [[Subverted Trope|subversion]] on this page, why not put it on [[It Always Rains At Funerals]] instead, where your Subversion or Aversion can be a straight example.
 
{{deathtrope}}
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== [[Comic Books]] ==
* In ''[[All Fall Down]]'', both funerals are held on bright, sunny days.
 
== [[Fan Works]] ==
* Bakugo thought the weather was basically mocking Iida's death in ''Everything, Yet Nothing''.
 
== [[Film]] ==
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[[Category:Weather and Environment]]
[[Category:Funeral Tropes]]
[[Category:HeliotropesSolar Tropes]]
[[Category:Precipitation Index]]
[[Category:Sadness Tropes]]