Personal Effects Reveal

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

Sometimes, the character is really Killed Off for Real. Corpse and Meaningful Funeral and everything.

Someone has to go through their belongings, packing them off to their family or what have you. There are surprises, usually -- of every stripe, from the good to the horrifically bad—though sometimes it just grieves the character doing it. Perhaps because so little is left of the dead person, which may make him reflect that he will never know him now, perhaps merely because of the reminder.

Often contains a photograph, similar to the Fatal Family Photo, but in this case, the character will obviously be unable to ask who is in it. Adds a bittersweet note to the discovery.

Another version of this trope is when someone is searching a dead enemy soldier and discovers his family photo, reminding him (and the audience) that these people were something other than Faceless Mooks.

Contrast If You Die, I Call Your Stuff—this trope demonstrates the respect Due to the Dead.

As a Death Trope, Spoilers ahead may be unmarked. Beware.

Examples of Personal Effects Reveal include:

Anime and Manga

  • It's not death (she's just been fired) but a very important scene in RahXephon is when Megumi is sent to pick up Haruka's old stuff from her office, and finds a certain picture there...
  • Although there's no reveal, Mobile Suit Gundam Seed gets great effect from having Natarle order Sai to pack up the personal effects of Kira and Tolle after they are declared MIA following a mid-series Wham! Episode.
    • Also, in Destiny, Lacus has an experience similar to this trope with the photo of the pre-plastic surgery Meer, after the latter dies.
  • Rurouni Kenshin: After the death of his first wife Tomoe, a depressed Kenshin reads through her diary and comes across an entry that explained the death of her fiance, Akira. Seeing that name reminds Kenshin of the man he had slain months earlier as Tomoe's first love - and that Kenshin himself was the man who had killed her first shot at happiness, which makes him all the more depressed.
  • In C: The Money of Soul and Possibility Control, Kimimaro was looking through his father's things and found a book. This book revealed that his father had been an Entre and has a picture of his mother holding him as a baby. It showed that his father did care for him.
  • In Mai-Otome, after Erstin dies when Nina destroys her Slave while trying to attack Arika, Miss Maria finds a letter in her possessions addressed to Arika and Nina, and gives it to Nina. The letter reveals that while she was a Schwarz agent at the school and her mother warned her not to get close to anyone, she found herself becoming close to her friends. She then says that despite this, she couldn't go against them in the end, but believes that Arika and Nina are stronger than she is. Nina, disagreeing with this, breaks down in tears.
  • In Bleach, Sosuke Aizen, after apparently being killed, leaves a letter behind for his lieutenant Momo Hinamori, which Ranguku says is a great honor for a lieutenant. He's actually trying to manipulate her into getting killed by Hitsugaya, since (he claims) he can't bring himself to kill her himself.
  • In the 2003 anime version of Fullmetal Alchemist, two Ishvalan boys have one of their mother's effects in their possession for a while before realizing what it is. The revelation that eye medicine is inside her locket gives her running into their room when soldiers came an entirely new meaning; she was unable to see them and was trying to confirm that they were safe when she was killed.
  • In Code Geass: Nightmare of Nunnally, after defeating Rolo, Alice finds his locket, showing Lelouch, Nunnally and Marianne; he's an Artificial Human conditioned to think that he's Lelouch's long-lost twin brother.

Comic Books

  • In one issue of the Avengers, Jarvis remembers going through the dead Swordsman's effects and finding a picture of a couple. He presumed it was his parents, but he could not even tell if they were alive or dead.
  • In the "Sin-Eater" story of Spider-Man, Spidey is checking out the home of his murdered friend, police captain Jean DeWolff, for clues and finds her collection of Spider-Man photos. He's quite cut up to realise that she apparently had something of a crush on him and this fuels his anger when he finds her murderer and comes this close to beating him to death.
    • In Ultimate Spiderman, Gwen Stacey meets an untimely death at the hands of Carnage, and Peter and MJ clear out her high school locker shortly after the situation is resolved.
  • In Sandman arc Brief Lives, Bernie Capax's son realizes he didn't know his father at all when he discovers his stash of expensive art, drugs, weapons, and fake passports after his death.
  • Variation in Watchmen: Rorschach's rooting around in Edward Blake's apartment after his murder turns up the fact that he was the Comedian. The plot kicks off from there.

Film

  • Used as part of The Reveal in The Usual Suspects.
  • Done very clinically in Equilibrium, with Errol Partridge's stuff, although the main character later grieves for him.
  • Maverick packing up Goose's stuff in Top Gun.
  • Told in a giant flashback, this trope is what starts off The Bridges Of Madison County
  • In the beginning of Memphis Belle, the airmen go through a dead crewman's effects to make sure nothing embarressing gets sent back to his wife (like adult books or letters to a mistress).
  • On Who Framed Roger Rabbit?, as Eddie Valiant remembers his late brother Teddy, the camera pans over Teddy's desk, perfectly preserved since his death. On it are items like a scrapbook of news clippings of their cases involving toons and photos of them acting goofy, which contradict everything the audience knows about Valiant up to this point. (Note that in this case, it's the audience doing the discovering, not another character, and that the revelations also apply to a living character, not just the deceased.)
  • This happens in Bullitt as Bullitt and Del go through the dead couple's suitcases and realize why both were killed.
  • Happens twice in Taking Chance: First when the mortician takes all of the items Chance had with him when he died and carefully cleans the blood off, and again later when Chance's family receives the belongings.
  • A brutal one in Once Were Warriors. After the daughter Grace hangs herself, her mother finds the notebook Grace uses as a diary, which her father had ripped in half in a rage. The mother pieces it back together, and reads in it that shortly before her death, Grace had been raped by one of her father's friends.

Literature

  • Much of what prompts Michael Noonan in Bag of Bones to suspect that his late wife was keeping secrets from him came from various personal effects of hers (a home pregnancy testing kit, plastic owls, desk calendar entries) he finds after her death.
  • In Dan Abnett's Warhammer 40,000 Horus Heresy novel Horus Rising when Captain Loken goes through Jubal's effects, he finds a badge of a lodge. Loken deeply disapproving of the notion of lodges, this leads to some complications.
    • In James Swallow's The Flight of the Eisenstein, Garro finds that the bolter given to him had belonged to his dead comrade Pyr Rahl; he reflects on how the Death Guard pass on their effects from one man to the next, to remember the dead. Then he sees the belongings of his dead housecarl Kaleb, which no one else would want to claim. Though tempted to throw it all out and so be free, that would be ignoble. He goes through it, and finds that Kaleb belonged to the cult that worshipped the Emperor. It makes a great many things about him make sense.
  • In Faulkner's short story A Rose for Emily, inhabitants of a small Southern town find her husband's possessions (she bought for him for their wedding) after her death. Their long since deceased owner is still technically present...
  • All Quiet on the Western Front has a couple of these - one where Paul Bäumer goes through the wallet of a French soldier he killed, and the other where he returns home and his old room, and it's like it belongs to a completely strange person who in effect is no more. And near the end he also goes through Kat's stuff after he dies.
  • In the Hercule Poirot mystery Murder in Mesopotamia, Anne Johnston, cleaning up papers in the office after the murder of Louise, discovers early drafts of the death threats sent to Louise. The drafts were obviously written by Louise's husband.
  • Subverted in Lords and Ladies when Granny Weatherwax dies fighting the Queen of the Elves. Nanny Ogg and Magrat go through the box of stuff she left for such an occasion and find a message addressed to Nanny: I ATEN'T DEAD
  • Looking for Alaska has Pudge and the Colonel going through Alaska's room in order to throw out her alcohol and try to invoke this.
  • In The Five People You Meet in Heaven, one of the main character's coworkers has to go through his stuff and notes how empty his apartment was.

Live-Action TV

  • Battlestar Galactica does this trope once or twice when pilots are killed.
  • One of the last episodes of Babylon 5 has Zack find a vital clue to catching an assassin in the effects of a security guard killed by the assassin for his comlink: the fake replacement comlink.
    • This is actually done when Franklin goes through Captain Sheridan's effects after he died at Z'Ha'Dum and finds a datacrystal in which Sheridan professes his love for Delenn. It's an extremely moving message, and Delenn quotes from it as she enjoins the Rangers and the White Star fleet to launch a desperate final assault on the Shadow's homeworld: "A friend told me, it you're falling off a cliff, you might as well try to fly. Here, and now, I give you one final chance to fly."
  • Happened on Bones after Zach has been revealed as evil, crippled, and institutionalized. Remarkable in that it didn't involve an actual death, but still a major tear jerker.
  • Happens in Brothers and Sisters. One of the central mysteries to the first season is the identity of a baby found in one of William Walker's photographs. And since they can't ask him (being dead and all), the first answer they get to the question is the wrong one.
  • Parodied in the episode of Strangers with Candy where Jerri's father dies. She goes through his closet looking through his stuff—we see some intriguing things like a huge wad of money, a gun, and a KKK outfit...but Jerri just laments that she's still learned nothing about him.
  • Interesting use in an early episode of Lost: the survivors hold a memorial for those who died in the crash, whom they didn't know. They go through their effects to glean what they can for the service.
  • In an early episode of Stargate SG-1, when it's believed Daniel's been killed (this is before it became a character trait, believe it or not), the rest of SG-1 go through this. Carter ends up finding Daniel's journal from the original movie among other things.
  • Star Trek: The Next Generation: Geordi and Wesley do this for Data, after he's believed killed in "The Most Toys", including working out which possessions go to which crew member. They end up discovering a photo/holograph of Tasha Yar , a book on Shakespeare (a gift from the captain) and a set of playing cards. Wesley is also surprised to discover Data's medals—including several of Starfleet's highest honours. The audience knew about these from an earlier episode, but the characters apparently didn't.

Geordi: Not bad for a walking pile of circuitry and memory cells.

  • Averted in Angel. After Doyle's death, Cordelia tries to do this, but finds that Doyle didn't have any personal effects kept in the office, so she couldn't learn any more about him.
    • But then, it turns out he did leave something behind (albeit not something tangible): his visions. At the end of the episode, Cordelia even frames a drawing she made of her first vision as a reminder that something of Doyle's is still there.
  • Warehouse 13 does this at the end of an episode where they investigated the death of a former Warehouse agent. In his personal effects (untouched since he died), they find an engagement ring, meant for Rebecca. Who previously said that her dead boyfriend/former partner "always chose the Warehouse before me."

Agent Bering, showing her the ring: "Looks like he chose you after all."

  • Occurs in the Doctor Who story Terminus, where it is revealed that new companion Turlough has inherited Adric's quarters on board the TARDIS, Adric having been killed off towards the end of the previous season. This leads to a scene in which artifacts relating to Adric's time with the Doctor make cameo appearances.
  • Parodied in Firefly; when River and Simon are kidnapped in the episode "Safe", Jayne rifles through Simon's belongings, stealing his cash and mocking him in his journal.

"Dear Diary, today I was pompous and my sister was crazy. Today we were kidnapped by hillfolk never to be seen again. It was the best day ever."

  • After Rimmer leaves in Red Dwarf, Lister has to throw out his old things to reduce the weight on the ship and gets teary-eyed at the memories. Kryten then decides to "cheer him up" by collecting Rimmer's old journals and making "The Rimmer Experience" ride on the holodeck. Lister suddenly remembers why he hated Rimmer so much.
  • Happens (sort of) on The X-Files in the hunt for Mulder after he goes missing. While looking through his things, Scully finds that Mulder was keeping a terrible secret: he was dying from a brain disorder, and had never told her. He had a headstone made and was getting his affairs in order.
  • The M*A*S*H episode "Who Knew?" has Hawkeye preparing to eulogize a nurse who died after stepping on a landmine. While going through her personal effects, Father Mulcahy comes across her diary, where she revealed her strong feelings for Hawkeye, with whom she'd spent what he'd assumed to be a casual one-night-stand.
  • After Stringer Bell is killed on The Wire, the cops go through his apartment... and are surprised to realise that they knew nothing about the guy they'd been investigating for years.
  • In the Horatio Hornblower TV movie The Fire Ships, the men are auctioning off the posessions of a deceased crewmate, to send the proceeds home to his widow. The deceased sailor's best friend, stricken with guilt, hands over all of his money for the entire collection and throws it overboard.
  • It's some time after the death, but in Supernatural the boys eventually find their father's storage locker. Although they were actually looking for something plot relevant, they also find some of Sam's old report cards and the first shotgun that Dean sawed off by himself.
  • CSI does this with Warrick, mostly to get something to bury him in, and it's then that Catherine and Greg find the documents and video relating to Warrick's custody fight for his infant son, Eli.

Tabletop Games

  • Happens frequently in Dungeons & Dragons games if a character should die for real. Related would be the practice of looting enemy corpses for treasure and useful goods.

Video Games

  • Twice in Persona 3: after the death of Chidori, the members of SEES assemble at the dormitory and show Junpei her sketchbook, in which she had drawn an apparently photo-perfect and idealized likeness of him. He breaks down immediately upon seeing it, but vows to become that person.
    • The second, optional instance, occurs if the player visits Shinjiro's old room. There will be a box containing the character's belongings and equipment which the player can take and add to his own inventory.
  • Pretty much every case in Ace Attorney features the protagonist lawyer learning about his/her victim through evidence left behind after their death. It turns to Tear Jerker during case 5-4 when looking through Byrne's promise book to Kay reveals his powerful love for his daughter. Kay later finds his diary, which reveals he was the Yatagarasu as well.
  • It's possible to get Barry killed in the first installment of Resident Evil, at which point you obtain a picture of his two daughters, who otherwise are only mentioned when Wesker reveals that he had blackmailed Barry by threatening them.
  • In Elite Beat Agents, the first part of "You're the Inspiration" ends with Lucy and her mother finding a photograph in her dead father's diary. Play it right and it is a picture of them, showing how much he loved them. If you fail... it's a picture of him in a speedo, resulting in Mood Whiplash.
  • After Liara becomes the new Shadow Broker in Mass Effect 2, you gain access to a huge surveillance network, able to covertly peek in on several people around the galaxy. One of these is an Asari bartender named Aethyta, drowning her sorrows and staring at a picture of Liara. Liara doesn't know who her other parent is. All she knows is that it's another Asari. Do the math... Confirmed in Mass Effect 3. She is Liara's father.
    • If you finish the game, romanced Thane and dig through his file, you can find a letter destinated to Shepard after his death. The letter says that Shepard gave him a new will to live despite knowing he'll be dead in a year and that he's ready to spend his last days on life support if it allows him to stay with Shepard a bit longer. It ends with his declaration that he'll wait for her after his death.
  • In World of Warcraft, if you defeat the Lich King with Shadowmourne, you will gain access to a Sealed Chest, containing mementos related to some of the people who knew him. These include Jaina's locket, a sword he used to train with Muradin and a badge that Uther gave him after he was inducted as a paladin; showing them to the respective people will result in them reminiscing about the person Arthas once was before giving players a rare item.
    • Earlier in Wrath of the Lich King, you kill a named mob as part of the quest; as a mage working for a dragon trying to destroy all mortal magic-workers, they are assumed to be the worst kind of traitor. Upon looting them, you discover a letter written to their family that explains they were being blackmailed and were secretly working against Malygos from within the organization.
    • Similarly, in Cataclysm, players who complete the quest to defeat Leyara will receive a locket from one of their allies that, when examined, reveals that Leyara was married to Fandral's son, and after losing him in the War of the Shifting Sands and her daughter to a Horde attack on Ashenvale, joined her father-in-law to get revenge on Malfurion, whom she blamed for the tragedy.
  • In Dragon Age Origins, the Return To Ostagar DLC enables players to find Cailan's secret documents. According to them, he, on the advice of his uncle Eamon, was going to divorce Anora over her inability to have an heir, and marry the Empress of Orlais after Ostagar. In the mage tower, after he was forced to kill a Templar and the Desire Demon controlling him with the illusion he had a family, there is a reference to his being censured for remarks in front of the recruits, which may be related to this desire for a family.

Web Comics