It Was Here, I Swear: Difference between revisions

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* In the backstory of ''[[One Piece]]'', probably the grandest and [[Tear Jerker|most tragic]] example of them all happened to the explorer Montblanc Norland, where he finds a legendary gold city on the island of Jaya, but when he goes back with the king of his homeland in tow, the ''island'' is gone (most of it, at least), having been knocked into the cloud kingdom of Skypeia by the Knock-Up Stream some time ago. Which leads to Norland being executed, and him and his descendants becoming the subject of ridicule for ''centuries''.
* Kanoko's corpse in episode 4 of ''[[Ookamikakushi]]''. Unusually, the person Hiroshi tells about it believes him anyway.
* A Misaka clone's corpse in episode 11 of ''[[ToA AruCertain Majutsu noMagical Index]]'' disappears by the time the police arrive. The police then berate Touma for "prank calling" them. Touma later finds that the other Misaka clones cleaned up the crime scene while he was busy calling the police.
** In the expanded version of the same story told in ''[[A Certain Scientific Railgun]]'', the audience (but not Touma) sees one police officer receive a call immediately before they dismiss Touma's actions, implying that one of their superiors is in on the coverup of the murder.
* One episode of ''[[Devilman]]'' TV has a man doing this when he sees a severed head. As is typical, it's not there when he brings someone to look at it.
 
== Film ==
* In the film ''[[In the Line of Fire]]'', Clint Eastwood is a Secret Service Agent, on the trail of someone determined to assassinate the American President. His first encounter with him is when a landlord notices her tenant has a "shrine" of sorts to other assassins. He visits the room, but when he comes back with a search warrant, the pictures have been replaced by a single one of him standing behind JFK, a president he failed to protect, a sign that [[It's Personal]].
* Used repeatedlyrepeatedly—and -- and relentlessly -- inrelentlessly—in the ''[[I Know What You Did Last Summer]]'' franchise.
** The scene where the murderer cleans a dead body and a hundred living crabs from a car's trunk in five minutes without leaving a trace of their being there has prompted a joke that he could have started a very successful cleaning company if he hadn't gone [[Ax Crazy]].
*** [[Required Secondary Powers]] [[X Meets Y|Meets]] [[Mundane Utility]] [[Trope Overdosed|Meets]] [[Cut Lex Luthor a Check]].
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** Oh, it's worse than that: the lab is replaced with a huge, opulent office. No explanation is ever given for how this happened.
*** The lab was smaller than the office, so presumably one had been kit-assembled inside the other.
* Subverted in the ''[[Get Smart (film)|Get Smart]]'' movie: Smart discovers a secret uranium production facility in a bakery. 23 tells him that all that's actually found is a simple (though remarkably exaggerated) bakery scene--despitescene—despite the fact that Smart, despite his failings, is an agent who pays attention to detail. This is used to imply that Smart is a double-agent {{spoiler|23 in fact turns out to be a mole, who lied to both the Chief and 99 to discredit CONTROL. And even though the evidence is easily disposed off, he can't get rid of the tell-tale background radiation he's covered with so easily...}}
* ''[[North by Northwest]]'' provides a slightly more low-key example in which Cary Grant's character is mistaken for a government agent and interrogated with the aid of lots of carelessly poured bourbon; when he alerts the police and tries to convince them of his story, they return to a room devoid of any evidence of alcohol -- oralcohol—or anything confirming what happened.
* Used straight in ''The Number 23''.
* The conspirators in ''[[Day Of Wrath]]'' have the hero doubting his sanity by committing grisly murders, allowing him to come across the scene of the crime, and then cleaning it all up before he can show anybody.
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== Video Games ==
* In the first chapter of ''[[Higurashi no Naku Koro ni]]'', Keiichi stayed home from school because he was starting to get suspicious of some classmates. Two of the girls from his school showed up that night to bring him some food and tell him they hoped he was feeling better. While eating the food, he choked on a sewing needle baked into a pastry. After having a talk with the police, the half-eaten snack containing the needle was nowhere to be found. Its unexplained disappearance would be creepier if it weren't the sort of thing his parents could've reasonably thrown out with the garbage.
** The hypodermic syringe is another, slightly creepier case in this arc, although at that point, of course, no one was left to actually say [[It Was Here, I Swear]].
** This trope is arguably subverted in both cases since {{spoiler|the sewing needle and hypodermic syringe actually ''were'' paranoid delusions}}.
* ''[[Arcanum]]'''s (in)famous X-Files quest ends this (as well as [[You Have to Believe Me]]) way: when you try to expose the conspiracy, you realize your proof was just, let's say, stolen. For added trauma, when you return to the secret facility where you found it, there's nothing, not even a brick.
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== WebcomicsWeb Comics ==
* Referenced - with an unusual level of [[Genre Savvy|Genre Savviness]] - by Ivan Bezdomny in ''[[The Wotch]]'', when he [http://www.thewotch.com/?epDate=2006-09-19 finds a cult of militant feminists in a secret sub-basement of the school].
{{quote|Ivan: Forget it; if I go back for my camera, this will ''all'' be gone when I get back.}}
 
 
== Western Animation ==