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Kill'Em All: Difference between revisions

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{{quote|''"Deaths for all ages and occasions. Deaths of kings and princes ... and nobodies."''
''"The bad end unhappily, the good, unluckily."''
|'''The Player''', |''[[Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead]]''}}
 
When [[Anyone Can Die]] becomes "Everyone ''Will'' Die", you have 'Will''Kill'Em All''' Die."
 
Many series are noteworthy for the extremely high body count among the main cast that they rack up in their last few episodes. In some cases, ''all'' of the heroes make a [[Heroic Sacrifice]], or otherwise find themselves wearing the [[Red Shirt]]. Occasionally, the protagonists simply fail to prevent [[The End of the World as We Know It]], resulting in a [[Downer Ending]]. (Possibly [[Dying Alone]] to cap it all.)
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* Zombie's ''[[Halloween (film)|Halloween]] II'' has everyone die... including Dr. Loomis, Michael Myers, ''and'' Laurie!
* The two ''[[Count Yorga]]'' movies ends with all the characters either dead or turned into vampires (most of the female cast for the latter).
* In Uwe Boll's ''[[GoodA TroiDay Episodein the Limelight|Tunnel Rats]]'', only two soldiers survive the Viet Cong massacre of their camp... only to be killed when the Air Force levels the place. A third soldier that had nearly escaped the VC's labyrinth of tunnels was buried alive and slowly suffocated.
* ''Next Day Air'' ends with a [[Mexican Standoff]] that [[Blast Out|goes bad]] and kills half the cast (and almost kills half the rest).
* ''[[The Ice Harvest]]'': Charlie and Pete are the only main characters to survive.
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