Jump to content

Everyone Is Armed: Difference between revisions

no edit summary
(Rescuing 3 sources and tagging 0 as dead. #IABot (v2.0beta9))
No edit summary
Line 13:
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3ZcNXe20dXI&feature=related This XBOX 360 ad] is an amusing play off of that idea.
 
== [[Anime]] and [[Manga]] ==
* [[Played for Laughs]] (just like every other trope) in the first episode of ''[[Miami Guns]]'', where even the baby in the baby carriage is packing heat. [[Mugging the Monster]] ensues.
 
== [[Comic Books]] ==
* ''[[Buck Godot: Zap Gun for Hire]]'' has the planet New Hong Kong, where this is the norm thanks to the planet's only law being "There Are No Laws on New Hong Kong". Even EMTs whose job it is to '''help''' people who've been shot go armed.
** Specifically happens in the graphic novel ''PSmIth'':
Line 23:
** Also New Hong Kong is invaded in the uncollected short story "Field of Screams"; it goes very badly for the invaders
 
== [[Film]] ==
* In the 1985 [[Chuck Norris]] movie ''Code of Silence'', two armed robbers attempt to hold up the bar where all the off-duty cops hang out. [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3GAgIBgOA3M It does not end well.]
* In ''[[The Fast and the Furious|Fast Five]]'', Dom reminds Hobbs that they are no longer in the United States and states "this is Rio". Suddenly everyone in the crowd pulls out a gun.
Line 34:
* In ''[[Blazing Saddles]]'', this was the reception Sheriff Bart received upon entering Rock Ridge for the first time. Even the schoolmarm was packing!
 
== [[Literature]] ==
* The ''[[Dean Koontz]]'' novel ''Frankenstein: Lost Souls'': an attempt to {{spoiler|begin assimilating the townsfolk en masse}} at a gathering goes awry when it turns out that almost every adult in town carries a firearm, and the villains encounter significantly more resistance than they had planned on.
* ''Healer'' by F Paul Wilson. One of the planets in this fictional universe is Flint, basically the Planet of the Anarchist Gun Nuts. '''Everyone''' there is armed. Invaders who have been using a portal technology to launch terror raids try this on Flint only to instantly come under fire by everyone they encounter. (Thanks to Der Trihs of the Straight Dope Message Board)
Line 40:
* In ''[[Artemis Fowl]] and the Eternity Code'', Artemis and Butler walk into the bystander Mooks version.
* [[Terry Pratchett]]'s [[Discworld]] novels
** ''[[Discworld/Feet of Clay (novel)|Feet of Clay]]'' has a bunch of robbers burst into a tavern frequented by the City Guard: "As their eyes grew accustomed to the gloom, they received a general impression of armorality, with strong overtones of helmetness." They try to take a hostage, but [[Mugging the Monster|make a poor choice]].
** In [[Discworld/Hogfather|Hogfather]] there is an attempt to coerce cooperation out of the patrons of Biers. This was also a poor choice.
* Averted by Barrayarans in the ''[[Vorkosigan Saga]]'', surprisingly for a [[Proud Warrior Race]]. Only Vor and their retainers(including servicemen who are all of course the retainers of the Emperor) are allowed personal arms and Counts are only allowed a personal bodyguard of twenty armsmen. Police don't seem to count in this calculation although they are certainly armed. The reason for this is chaos in the past which makes Barrayarans willing to endure a more-or-less enlightened absolutism.
**Similarly Averted in ''[[Honor Harrington]]'' the Steadholders on Grayson are limited in the number of armsmen ''they'' can field, for the same reason, that there had been a civil war in the past.
* In [[1632]] if not everyone, a sizable portion of the town of Grantville was armed. As this was supposedly a typical American rural town(the number of badasses it had was rather above-average of course) it only carried what the twentieth century considered good for hunting. In the seventeenth century it could give pause to an army.
* In [[Technic History|A Knight of Ghosts and Shadows]] a border world has a dispute with [[The Emperor]] about this. No disloyalty is intended, not least because the local monarch would rather have the emperor's military protection then not. But local military tradition is not only a necessity on the border but the military has a large influence on social life which would be hard to change. The dispute is in point of fact a mere difference of opinion but there is an [[Evil Plan]] to escalate it into a civil war.
 
== [[Live-Action TV]] ==
* The opening scenes of ''[[Burn Notice]]'' shows Michael running away from the bad guys which involves a car chase through busy streets. When they stop and pull guns on him, however, about two dozen bystanders whip out firearms of their own, allowing Michael to escape.
** Michael [[Lampshade Hanging|lampshades]] this by noting Nigeria as the "gun running capital" of Africa, and that it wasn't a good place to have a car chase.
Line 54:
* The TV series ''[[Turks]]'''s pilot episode featured an attempted robbery of a cop bar.
 
== [[Video Games]] ==
* A cheat code for ''[[Grand Theft Auto|Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas]]'' causes all pedestrians to be armed, carrying everything from handguns to [[RPG]]s.
* Due to a glitch in ''[[Grand Theft Auto|Grand Theft Auto: Vice City]]'', attacking certain pedestrians and then standing on a car would result in the pedestrian running confused into the vehicle for a few seconds before pulling out a pistol and attacking you with it.
 
== [[Web Comics]] ==
* This page of the ''[[RH Junior]]'' webcomic highlights [https://web.archive.org/web/20110508130821/http://www.rhjunior.com/FoH/00056.html the brief career of a would-be supervillain.]
* ''Escape From Terra'' , the webcomic by Big Head Press features an anarchic Belter society centered on the minor planet Ceres [http://www.bigheadpress.com/eft?page=50 where virtually everyone carries a gun or a knife]
* ''roswell, texas'' by L. Neil Smith and Scott Bieser also from the big headed press [http://www.bigheadpress.com/roswell?page=80 tops this.]
 
== [[Web Original]] ==
 
== Web Original ==
* The world of Remnant in ''[[RWBY]]'' at first glance ''looks'' like this, but the sample is biased by virtue of the story being focused mostly on professional warriors, military, students and staff of combat schools, and criminals. The average person in the street does not ''appear'' to be armed, at least in the protected Kingdoms. Settlements in the wilderness, however, may be a different story.
 
== Video[[Western GamesAnimation]] ==
* A cheat code for ''[[Grand Theft Auto|Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas]]'' causes all pedestrians to be armed, carrying everything from handguns to [[RPG]]s.
* Due to a glitch in ''[[Grand Theft Auto|Grand Theft Auto: Vice City]]'', attacking certain pedestrians and then standing on a car would result in the pedestrian running confused into the vehicle for a few seconds before pulling out a pistol and attacking you with it.
 
 
== Western Animation ==
* ''[[Rango]]'', where the title character asks if anyone has guns to contribute, and they all pull out multiples, even the cute little mole girl.
* ''[[The Simpsons (animation)|The Simpsons]]''
Line 77 ⟶ 74:
* In the ''[[Batman: The Animated Series]]'' episode "Almost Got 'Im", various Batman villains meet in a club and tell tales of how they almost killed Batman once. Turns out one of them is Batman in disguise trying to get critical info. When he reveals this they all pull out guns; but then every patron in the club pulls out a gun pointing at the villains - they were all undercover Gotham police, making this an example of the bystanders being the '''hero's''' mooks.
 
== [[Real Life]] ==
 
== Real Life ==
* In early human history the men of most families were expected to be proficient with arms, first for hunting then later for defense against beasts and each other. Some cultures also let women carry defensive weapons like knives to protect themselves and their children and some places even considered it acceptable to arm ''the children''. After standing armies became common, bladed implements like knives and machetes were still widely carried as all-purpose tools until modern regulation of lethal and potentially lethal weapons. People in several Asian and African countries as well as more remote areas of developed nations still wear their knives openly.
* Some historical social classes, such as gentlemen in Europe and samurai in Japan, carried weapons as a symbol of their station. In Europe, when swords went out of style, walking sticks took over, which were essentially fancy clubs. Thus, when you were rubbing elbows with the elite, everyone was armed.
Line 103 ⟶ 99:
* It was perfectly true in the Old West (and in some parts of the modern West) that practically everyone owned a firearm. It was ''not'' true that there was a shootout everyday or that everyone was a gunslinger or indeed that it was routine for any given person to fire on any other given person. They were used more often to deal with dangerous beasts and gather food then to have [[Showdown At High Noon|showdowns at high noon.]]
**Pack and wagon trains along the Santa Fe Trail (roughly between the Missouri river and richer settlements in the American Southwest) were known to take ''field artillery'' with them. [[It Makes Sense in Context|Quite sensibly,]] as they carried a lot of stuff someone else might want to relief them of.
 
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Guns and Gunplay Tropes]]
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Guns and Gunplay Tropes]]
Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.