Suicide as Comedy: Difference between revisions

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(moved new example to end of section per standard guidelines, replaced redirect in it, added italics markup to the work name. Also standardized section heads and eliminated excess white space)
 
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{{trope}}
[[File:Too Real by Dan Kim.png|400px|thumb|alt= Panel 1 Dan Kim is asking his character Cupcake what she wants to be for halloween. Panel 2 Cupcake says "Real. I wanna be real, daddy." Panel 3 Cupcake is giving a hopeful smile. Panel 4 is Dan Kim sitting at his desk, gun hanging in his right hand and the top of his head splattered on the left wall. There are police investigating the room. If you look closely, the art on his desk is the the same as the comic as a whole, with the exception of the 4th panel of the desk comic being blank.|link=Dan Kim]]
[[File:Too Real by Dan Kim.png|400px|thumb|link=Dan Kim]]
{{quote|'''Finn:''' "Thanks guys. Your blood oath is now fulfilled."
'''Balloons:''' "YAY! To the Mesosphere! '''FINALLY, WE CAN DIE!"'''|''[[Adventure Time]]''}}
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{{deathtrope}}
{{examples}}
== [[Anime]] and [[Manga]] ==
 
== Anime and Manga ==
 
* Nozomu from ''[[Sayonara, Zetsubou-sensei]]'' attempts to kill himself [[Once an Episode]].
** In the beginning, anyhow. The suicide jokes decrease over time (though don't disappear entirely) as other forms of comedy pop up (like Chiri's increasing homicidal tendencies).
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* Grelle Sutcliff from ''[[Black Butler]]'' tended to attempt suicide over the littlest mistakes she made in the earlier episodes. At first the cast is willing to stop her, but it annoys them so much they decided to no longer do so.
* ''[[Saint Young Men]]'', playing up the Christian and Buddhist stories on how animals like quails and rabbits were willing to sacrifice themselves for the sake of the higher power, has Jesus and Buddha constantly being plagued by animals willing to give themselves up for food whenever one of them makes so much as a small comment on how hungry they are. Cats jumping on plates while carrying matches, turtles trying to dive into boiling pots, turkeys knocking on the door while they were preparing a Christmas feast...
* {{spoiler|Ai Ebihara}}'s suicide attempt [[Spurned Into Suicide|over a broken heart]] in ''[[Persona 4: The Animation]]'' the Animation is played almost completely for laughs. {{spoiler|Almost, because after Narukami (the MC) talks her out, we learn her [[Freudian Excuse]] as an ex-[[Fat Girl]] who was harshly bullied in the past, and liked Kou because he treated her well.}}
* [[Lupin III/Recap/S2/E60|This episode]] of the second ''[[Lupin III]]'' series featured a "Suicide Beam" used as the main weapon against Lupin and his gang. Lupin gets hit with the beam and continues to lightheartedly attempts suicide, only to be stopped by Jigen or Zenigata each time. Zenigata also gets hit with the beam two times and tries to shoot himself in the head. He misses. ''Both times''.
 
== [[Comic Books]] ==
 
* The British adult comic ''[[Viz]]'' has the character Suicidal Sid who is suicidally depressed and in every story continually tries to kill himself only for every single attempt to fail. [[Death by Irony|It isn't until he regains the will to live that he finally dies.]]
* There was a [[Mickey Mouse]] comic story (Yes, that Mickey Mouse) where Minnie leaves him and as a result shows him making a number of failed suicide attempts.
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* In one ''[[Spirou and Fantasio]]'' story the stockmarket crash suicides are milked for every possible laugh. First a Chinese peddler sets up a shop outside the New York stockmarket, selling lucky charms, and when the place closes later, he moves to the backdoor selling revolvers. Another joke from the same album informed an ex-millionaire intending to shoot himself, but learning that the debtors already took his revolver. His butler, suddenly rich from his own stock investments suggests that they switch parts. A bit later on the ex-butler is in turn bankrupt, and the ex-millionaire, now a butler informs that rather than wasting his money on stocks, he invested it on a revolver, and lends it to his master.
 
== [[Film]] ==
 
* ''[[Meet the Feebles]]''.
* One of the running gags in ''[[Airplane!]]'' was the people who were [[Driven to Suicide]] rather than listen to Ted Striker reminisce about his past.
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* In the film version of ''[[The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy]]'', {{spoiler|Zaphod tries using the gun hidden by Deep Thought on himself, after learning he's responsible for obliterating his own chances at fame and fortune from discovering the Ultimate Question}}. Ford wrestles it away but accidentally aims it at himself {{spoiler|at which point it's revealed that the gun's not designed to kill, but [[Mind Manipulation|to force the target to think from the shooter's perspective]]}}.
* In ''[[Without a Clue]]'', Kincaid bungles it badly when he tries to hang himself when he believes that {{spoiler|Watson is dead.}}
* In ''[[Monty Python's Life of Brian]]'', the Judean People's Front's suicide squad shows up when the protagonist is in peril. They chase off romans, then open up the window in the center of their armor and stab themselves through it.
{{quote|That showed 'em, huh?}}.
 
== [[Literature]] ==
 
* In some versions of ''[[The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy]]'' Marvin manages to kill off the trigger-happy cops who are shooting at the heroes. He does it by explaining his philosophy of life to their life-support computer, as a result of which it commits suicide.
** He's good at this. Rare is the occasion when a machine enters a conversation with him and doesn't come out the other side at least severely cynical or depressed. In fact, the one occasion this didn't happen, the machine in question instead got driven into a rage by poor Marvin's general situation, and blew out the floor beneath it, falling to its death. All Marvin has to say about it is, "What a depressingly stupid machine."
* Arto Paasilinna's ''Collective Suicide'' is a whole novel about some people arranging to kill themselves together in a neat, organized fashion. [[Hilarity Ensues]] (no, really, it does).
 
== [[Live-Action TV]] ==
 
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CaE6CMuT5qc An early episode] of the classic kids varieties show ''[[You Can't Do That on Television]]'' had [[Motor Mouth]] [[Ditz]] Lisa sent to the principles office as punishment ‘’for him’’ because according to the teacher it was the closest thing to hell the school board could think of. She later came back and said the principle had pulled out a gun while she was talking to him and shot himself so he would not have to hear her. While she was talking the teacher and other students pulled out guns and pointed them at there own heads, until the teacher seemed to have an epiphany decide to put their guns to a different use which could probably be classified as Homicide as Comedy
* Ted the lawyer, from ''[[Scrubs]]'', falls in the [[Interrupted Suicide]] category. He occasionally gets up on the hospital roof, trying to build the courage to jump. However, he is actually TOO pathetic for it to be taken serious, putting him clearly in this trope.
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* One episode of ''[[Cheers]]'' had Woody making a film to send back to his parents to convince them to let him stay in Boston. One segment was filmed in Frasier's office, and upon replay they see someone falling past the window. Frasier notes that he'll have to tell one of his colleague's, whose office was on a higher floor, that he needs to keep the windows in his office locked.
 
== [[Music]] ==
 
* Given the silly title of Da Vinci's Notebook's ''Window Washing Cowboy'', you don't expect it to be the story of a guy who met the girl of his dreams, found her already in a relationship when he got up the nerve to ask her out, and committed suicide over it... But it's alright, it's [[Played for Laughs]]. And with a [[Feghoot|bad pun]] at the end.
* [[Frank Zappa]]'s "Suicide Chump", "Be sure to get it right the first time, cuz nothing's worse than..."
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* [[Insane Clown Posse]]'s Violent J as a suicide hotline phone operator encourages a caller to kill himself and insulting him, in a skit preceding their song "How Many Times?" on the album ''The Great Milenko''. We hear a gun go off, but it turns out the caller missed when he tried to shoot himself.
 
== [[Newspaper Comics]] ==
 
== Newspaper Comics ==
 
* ''[[Pearls Before Swine]]'' used to have Alphonse the depressed porcupine do this, but author Stephen Pastis discontinued the character because of too many [[Dude, Not Funny]] responses. (Despite the fact that the window Alphonse was threatening to jump from was, visibly, on the first story, and barely any taller than the character himself. And yes, he only had time to try it once before the fandom backlash forced him out of the strip.)
 
== [[Professional Wrestling]] ==
 
* The Tim White suicide sketches. WWE never bothered to air these on television (network censors would have had [[Vince McMahon]]'s head) airing one at the Armageddon 2005 PPV and streaming the rest on their website. Considered by some to be [[Too Soon]] with the sudden death of [[Eddie Guerrero]] a month prior to the first sketch.
 
== [[Radio]] ==
 
 
== Radio ==
 
* One Christmas episode of ''[[The Jack Benny Program]]'' had Jack shopping for presents. A [[Mel Blanc|clerk]] helps him with a gift and message, but Jack keeps recalling the gift so he can change the message. Finally, Jack decides to return the gift and get a cheaper version. The increasingly frazzled clerk ([[Mel Blanc]], at his hysterical over-the-top best) ultimately leaves to shoot himself. [[Crowning Moment of Funny|Jack hears the gunshot, then realizes he'll have to make his own change from the register.]]
** In another Christmas episode, the same clerk tries and fails to do it again.
{{quote|'''Mel:''' Look't what you made me do! You made me so nervous, ''I missed!!!''}}
 
== Theatre ==
 
== [[Theatre]] ==
* [[The Musical]] version of ''[[The Full Monty]]'' has a scene where Jerry and Dave sing "Big Ass Rock," a [[Lyrical Dissonance|lilting tune]] about how they'll help Malcolm kill himself, because they're his friends.
* "On the American Plan" by George S. Kaufman and Howard Dietz, a comedy sketch about a suicide hotel. Some guests complained about not getting rooms high enough to make a fatal leap from, or that their cyanide was too bitter to drink. Others were just [[Leave Behind a Pistol|given a pistol to take to their room]], which would be marked unoccupied after the offstage shot was heard.
 
== [[Video Games]] ==
 
* Clem and Crystal, the [[Yandere|perpetually peppy borderline insane definitely obsessive]] cheerleaders from ''[[Psychonauts]],'' are trying to commit suicide together. Apparently as part of some ritual.
* In ''[[Soul Calibur 2]]'', there's Yoshimitsu's suicide attack. Completely hilarious.
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* A depressed novelty salesman in ''[[Day of the Tentacle]]'' attempts to kill himself by shooting himself in the head, except he's using a flag gun instead of a real one. He then gets more depressed, saying he can't even properly kill himself.
 
== [[Web Animation]] ==
* In "Suicide Face," a cartoon series on ''[[Something Awful]]''{{'}}s Flash Tub, an [[Too Dumb to Live|idiotic]] woman beats herself to death with a hammer in order to play a prank on her boyfriend and gets sent to Hell.
 
* In "Suicide Face," a cartoon series on [[Something Awful]]'s Flash Tub, an [[Too Dumb to Live|idiotic]] woman beats herself to death with a hammer in order to play a prank on her boyfriend and gets sent to Hell.
* ''[[Asdfmovie]]'':
** "Quick, shoot me in the face!"
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** The cake jumping off the table.
 
== [[Web Comics]] ==
 
* ''[[Ansem Retort]]'' deliberately invokes this trope when, after being confronted by a patient he turned into a cookie, [[Morally-Ambiguous Doctorate|Zexion]] declared that if he slit his wrists right then, it'd be "the tastiest suicide EVER."
* ''[[Suicide for Hire]]'' occasionally does one-shots that are like this, but the story arcs are more serious (unless the client is a complete asshole).
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* The [[Fan Nickname|Suicide Fairies]] (though that's a misnomer, since suicide is cheating) of ''[[Gunnerkrigg Court]]'' are constantly trying to get people to kill them. It's rather entertaining.
 
== [[Web Original]] ==
 
== Web Original ==
* [[The Nostalgia Critic]] is always seen contemplating suicide as a result of the movie's he's watching, though this usually says more about the movie than the Critic.
** And like Linkara before him, he averted this [[Tear Jerker|tearjerkingly]] near the end of his "Commercials Special". If it hadn't been for his [[He's Back]] moment after, its made pretty clear that he would have died out of depression.
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* Joey from the musical ''[[Me and My Dick]]'' attempts to commit suicide after an embarrassing attempt to propose to the hot little Jewish girl Vanessa. He is about to go through with it when his friend walks in. This wouldn't be funny if Joey's Heart wasn't played by an actual person, but when Heart states in a quiet, devastated voice, "I'm going to squeeze my left carotid artery, Joey" it became hilarious.
* ''Encyclopedia Dramatica'' has an entire portal dedicated to suicide humour, labeled "An Heroes" after Mitchell Henderson.
* [[YouTube Poop|Suicide]] [[Billy Mays|Putty!]] The easy way to kill yourself! Simply knead, apply, and ''die''. And if you act now, you can get six sticks of Suicide Putty, so you can kill yourslefyourself SIX TIMES.
* [[YTMND]]'s [https://wiki.ytmnd.com/MySpace_Suicide "MySpace Suicide"] fad satirised a teenager's suicide note posted on his [[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|MySpace]] profile as well as the [[Emo]] subculture of the mid-to-late 2000s. Some users were understandably uneasy about the idea of mocking the victim's act of self-harm, though.
 
== Western Animation ==
 
== [[Western Animation]] ==
* Scamper the rabbit from ''[[Igor]]''. He often succeeds, but his [[Healing Factor]] prevents him from staying dead for long.
* Moe from ''[[The Simpsons (animation)|The Simpsons]]'', to the point where one of his Christmas traditions is his annual suicide attempt.