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{{quote|''"People of Earth, we come in peace. However, most of you will not survive these next 24 hours."''|'''Gallaxhar,''' ''[[Monsters vs. Aliens]]''}}
{{quote|''"A typical alien film is either we come and embrace them because we love them or we have to say we must fight them because they are attacking us"''|'''Korey Coleman
[[Space Alien|Alien]]s' [[First Contact]] with Earthlings will go one of two ways, usually.
# [[Innocent Aliens|Peaceful aliens]] will be met with fear and greed, as humans try to kidnap, interrogate, dissect them, etc. They'll usually think the aliens want to attack. Said aliens may gain one or two human friends (the main characters) but most of the human race is shown to be primitive fools. [[Humans Are
# [[Aliens Are Bastards|Evil aliens]] will either outright attack, or manipulate themselves into positions of power over humanity, made more easy by the hordes of naive humans who just want to be friends, which shows most of the human race to be primitive fools. Only a few will know the truth, and try to convince everyone else that [[To Serve Man|"it's a cookbook!"]] This is a [[Sub
It's a [[
A subversion of [[I Come in Peace]]. Aliens who try this should read [[How to Invade An Alien Planet]].
{{examples
== Anime & Manga ==
* In ''[[Soukou no Strain]]'', {{spoiler|the peaceful Emilies are dissected for their psychic power, leading them to attack; we learn from the two Emilies in the series that [[Last of His Kind|it doesn't go well]].}}
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==
* In [[Archie Comics|Archie's]] ''[[Sonic the Hedgehog (
* ''[[Superman|Action Comics]]''. [[Crystal Spires and Togas|An ancient and wise race]] is doomed by [[Earthshattering Kaboom|planetary destruction]]. Their greatest scientist [[Ignored Expert|is ignored by his peers]], so he sends his infant son, the [[Last of His Kind]], to Earth, where his ship lands in a field outside a town called Smallville ... And because this is the [[Fantastic Racism|institutionally anti-alien]] Earth of the 31st century, Jun and Mara blast the infant with a laser-rifle and bury the remains behind the barn. They're still talking about how right they were to do so some months later, when they get killed in passing by a deranged [[Alternate Universe]] Superboy. [[Karmic Death|That's karma for you]].
** Pretty much the same thing happens, without the [[Karmic Death]], in an issue of ''[[Planetary]]''. Except that the killer in question was a government operative there to salvage technology who showed no signs of considering the kid a threat, and simply thought that his boss wouldn't want to have to deal with it. Ironically, just after he did the order came in to bring the child in for study.
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== Films ==
* Displayed quite nicely in ''[[Independence Day]]'', in which a [[Strawman Political|horde of
** This is not only a darkly funny [[Take That]] to ''[[Close Encounters of the Third Kind]]'', but a [[Shout
* Subsequently parodied in ''[[Mars Attacks!]]!'' The Martian ambassador comes up to a podium and speaks into a translation device, translating his words as "We come in peace". Then they whip out the rayguns and incinerate everyone in sight- at first, seemingly in response to a "cultural misunderstanding" where "dove means war", but it quickly turns out they are just doing it [[For the Evulz]]. Later, during the full-scale genocide, one of the Martians is carrying the translation device, which now broadcasts "Do not run! We are your friends!" over and over.
* ''[[The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951 film)|The Day the Earth Stood Still]]'' (the original) is the quintessential movie for demonstrating how badly humans would treat [[Innocent Aliens]].
* ''[[Starman (
* ''[[Gamera]]: Guardian of the Universe'' (1995) featured a variation. Although not aliens, the army incorrectly decides that Gamera, a benevolent [[Anti
** The third movie, ''Revenge of Iris'', has an interesting variation: while Gamera is shown in his darkest portrayal yet (a fight at the start of the movie with a Gyaos in downtown Tokyo causes at least 12000 casualties, at least half from Gamera's [[Breath Weapon]], and he's proven to be an incarnation of [[
* ''Invasion of the Astro Monster'' has evil aliens claiming they need help to get rid of a giant monster known to the aliens as "Monster Zero" (it's {{spoiler|King Ghidorah}}) in exchange for your average intergalactic secrets. The earthlings are only too happy to send [[Godzilla]] and [[Rodan]] to stop Monster Zero. And, evil aliens being evil aliens, it turns out that they were controlling Monster Zero the whole time and they then use [[Mind Control]] on [[Godzilla]] and Rodan as well and unleash all three monsters unto Japan.
** Also, ''Godzilla: Final Wars''.
** The [[So Bad
** While technically not aliens, the Futarians from the 1990s film ''Godzilla VS King Ghidorah'' qualify here. They act as if they're helping Japan by [[Temporal Paradox|removing Godzilla from history]], but, in reality {{spoiler|They just need to get rid of Godzilla so they can replace him with their own monster Ghidorah}}.
* Played as allegory in ''[[District 9]]'', where despite evidently superior firepower the "prawns" take on the role of African refugees and generally accept their poor treatment.
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== Literature ==
* A somewhat clever twist occurs in one ''[[Maximum Boy]]'' novel where alien cows decide to visit earth: The cows state that they ''come'' in peace, but state that how they ''leave'' depends on what they find. [[Alien Invasion|Sure enough.....]]
* ''[[The Holy Land]]'', in which the [[Eagle Land|fundamentalist American government]]
* Skewered in George Alec Effinger's hilarious 1984 short story, ''The Aliens Who Knew, I Mean, Everything'': the aliens who visit, called the Nuhp, really do come in peace, and really are willing and able to help solve at least some of Earth's problems. Unfortunately, they're also such an ''annoying'' bunch of know-it-alls, that their presence gradually becomes more curse than blessing. Eventually, humanity leaves Earth in droves to get away from the Nuhp... and the resultant population reduction solves the ''rest'' of Earth's problems by default. Turns out this happens on ''every'' planet the Nuhp visit, and space is filled with species that left their homeworlds to get away from them.
* [[Stanislaw Lem]]'s novel ''Fiasco'' features a human starship on a mission to "peacefully make contact" with the inhabitants of the planet Quinta. This proves difficult when they discover that Quintan civilization is consumed with an internal conflict that has led the antagonistic factions to garrison their entire solar system with powerful automated war machines. Despite the humans having a substantial technological edge over the Quintans, a series of misunderstandings, miscommunications, and double-crosses ensues, accompanied by escalating shows of force {{spoiler|that culminate in the humans blowing up the entire planet}}.
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* The first encounter between humans and the the Kzinti (in the first ''Man-Kzin'' Wars collection) was the peaceful human explorers on an unarmed ship being slowly roasted by an Kzinti warship to test human tolerances... and then the captain basically says "screw it" and cuts the attacking ship in half with [[Weaponized Exhaust|concentrated engine exhaust]] and loots the weapons off the wreck. The tag for the series was that humans had decided to study war no more because [[Humans Are Warriors|we're too good at it]].
* Used as a cover story by the Grigari in ''[[Deep Space Nine]]'''s ''Millennium'' trilogy. The Grigari "mistook Earth's intense sensor scans" for an attack, then "fired a warning shot" that they "didn't realize would overwhelm the planetary defenses". Result: [[Earthshattering Kaboom]].
** According to Diane Duane's ''[[Star Trek]]'' novels, the Vulcans were once invaded by Orion Pirates who "came in peace." Since then, the Romulans (which left Vulcan after that ... [[
*** To explain what happened: first the ''USS Carrizal'' arrived, and, after verifying that the Romulans were space-capable, did everything they could to be seen, show they came in peace, broadcasted their intentions and the basic first contact data, and when the Romulans didn't answer they left; three years later the ''USS Balboa'' arrived to make another attempt, but survived only long enough to see that the Romulans had built a powerful net of war satellites and launch a desperate distress call before being disintegrated by the guns of [[No Kill Like Overkill|fifty small warships]] out of the [[Up to Eleven|''seven thousands'']] they had built; when the ''USS Stone Mountain'' answered the distress call, the Romulans captured it, killed the whole crew and started taking it apart, improving their technology and getting warp capability in case the Federation didn't understand their message of 'leave us alone or die'.
* [[John Ringo]]'s ''[[Posleen War Series]]'' starts out with friendly aliens contacting humanity. In a subversion, the contact was ''because'' of [[Humans Are Warriors|humanity's aptitude for violence]], and the Galactics' complete lack of it even in the face of the [[Horde of Alien Locusts|Posleen]] [[Curb Stomp Battle|steamrollering anything in their way]].
** The same is pretty much the case in [[Fred Saberhagen]]'s ''[[Berserker (Literature)|Berserker]]'' stories; the Carmpan, an inherently peaceful race unable to directly fight the titular killing machines, gives humanity just enough help to become expert Berserker-killers.
* A subversion in another [[John Ringo]] work, ''[[Troy Rising
* ''Dreamcatcher'' by [[Stephen King]] involves an invasion by an alien species of telepathic mold ([[It Makes Sense in Context]]). The mold sends out telepathic messages which includes the classic "We come in peace", but the '''big''' lie is "We are not infectious".
** Good thing the [[General Ripper]] in charge decided to attack them anyway, [[The Extremist Was Right|despite them not showing any signs of fiendish behaviour up to that point.]]
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== Live-Action TV ==
* New ''[[
** The Silurians have elements of Category 2, with the Doctor castigating UNIT for being trigger-happy. But the Silurians themselves are conflicted, with some of them wanting peace and others releasing a plague on London.
** The [[Big Finish]] audio drama "Blood of the Daleks" features a beleaguered human colony being contacted by "benevolent aliens". The clue's in the title. (And at the end {{spoiler|they make the same mistake with the Cybermen}}.)
** ''[[Doctor Who
*** There was a great line at the end of that episode.
{{quote|
'''The Doctor:''' It's not an invasion, it's too late for that. It's a victory. }}
* Both variations are common in ''[[The Outer Limits]]'', ''[[The Twilight Zone]]'' and similar anthology shows.
* ''[[V (TV series)|V]]: The Series'' (itself a followup to two miniseries) was about a hostile, sneaky, [[Scary Dogmatic Aliens|Nazi-like]] alien race using humanity's credulity against them.
** Originally conceived as a show about the presidency of a Father Coughlin like American fascist, but [[Screwed
** The 2009 reboot makes it the alien leader's catchphrase: "We are of peace, always." (Major spoiler: {{spoiler|No, they aren't}}.)
* ''[[Stargate SG-1]]'' is often an exception. The aliens they make first contact with are rarely evil, and it's even more rare for the protagonists to try to do them any harm. They're just incredibly unlucky.
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*** Around five. That might be plenty for a normal show, but this thing went on for ten seasons.
** Ba'al in Stargate Continuum does a textbook example of this, even phoning the President to tell him that he comes in peace, knowing that a direct attack would make things much harder. It would have worked if there hadn't been a time traveling [[La Résistance]] waiting for his arrival.
* Subverted quite nicely in ''[[
** Not even ONE gambit, but [[Gambit Pileup|several]], which generally end up anything from failing to being near-cataclysms (having so many of them, often working at cross-purposes, getting in each other's way, or at the least diverting important ressources from each other turns out ''not'' being a great idea. Go figure).
* Subverted by ''[[
* The main characters of ''[[Roswell]]'' are just three (or, for a while, four) teenagers who only want to live in peace until they figure out a way to get home, but they live in constant - and justifiable, given certain events of the first season - fear of the government and other alien hunters.
* Captain Archer of the NX-01 ''[[Enterprise]]'' sets forth on a mission of exploration and derides the need for powerful weapons, but three years of [[Villain of the Week|Close Encounters of the Worst Kind]] and the deaths of 27 crewmen in the Xindi conflict cause him to recommend that the NX-02 be better armed and have a squad of [[Space Marine|MACO's]] as well.
** The prologue to "In a Mirror, Darkly" takes the [[Crowning Moment of Heartwarming|beautiful]] ''[[Star Trek: First Contact|First Contact]]'' scene where humanity meets the Vulcans, flips it inside-out and drops it squarely into Type 1 of this
* On ''[[
* In the [[Twilight Zone]] episode "To Serve Man" (based on the Damon Knight story of the same name), outwardly-benevolent aliens visit us and grant us all of their technological wonders, including indestructible force-domes that protect each nation from nuclear attack by any other nation. We accidentally get hold of their handbook, titled "[[To Serve Man]]". [[I'm a Humanitarian|Guess which kind of "Serve" they had in mind]]?
** The first version is explored in the lesser known episode "The Gift". An alien makes contact with a superstitious Mexican town and is killed out of fear. The villagers find he had a paper as a gift saying "Greetings to the people of Earth. We come in peace. We bring you this gift. The following formula is a vaccine against all forms of cancer...." the rest of the page burned away.
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== Music ==
* A recurring line in [
* "Star Invasion" by [[
== Newspaper Comics ==
* Doctor Fun has a version where [[Horny Vikings]] with skull and bones on the sail [[Implausible Deniability|try to pull this]]. See [http://www.ibiblio.org/Dave/Dr-Fun/collections/1987/images/df1987-055.gif here].
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* The [[Backstory]] to ''X-COM: UFO Defense'' has humanity repeatedly trying to contact the alien invaders and being ignored. Although the aliens weren't really bad guys at that point (there were UFO sightings, but relatively few abductions), there wasn't much of a problem other than the diplomatic equivalent of getting the cold shoulder. Then the aliens attacked a city. Let's round up a posse and kick their alien asses!
** In addition, in both ''UFO Defense'' and ''Terror from the Deep'', the aliens will try to convince territorial governments of their good intentions. If they succeed, the government ceases funding X-COM and the aliens actually don't attack them any more. If ''all'' governments sign non-aggression pacts with the aliens, then the aliens ''summarily destroy humanity''. Whoops!
** The [[
* ''[[Grand Theft Auto IV]]'': "Republican Space Rangers" mocks this trope to hell and back as part of the [[Anvilicious]] satire.
* The trope title is a criminal offence in ''[[Startopia]]'', which will occasionally show up on criminal peeps that enter your station.
* The Slylandro probes in ''[[Star Control]] II'' appear peaceful, but change their minds when you terminate the conversation. {{spoiler|Turns out [[
== Webcomics ==
* In ''[[Sluggy Freelance]]'', a horde of fleshreaving, soul-devouring, [[
** Justified as this particular dimension has no concept of "evil" and just accepted the ridiculously [[Blatant Lies]] they were told even after the initial slaughter.
* This is one of the two strategies of the invading Martians in ''[[Irregular Webcomic]]'', as explained in [http://www.irregularwebcomic.net/2413.html this strip], and the strip annotation references this very page.
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== Western Animation ==
* There was an episode of ''[[
** This was also an example of [[Ugly Hero, Good
* The various ''[[Transformers]]'' series have had both, at times: The fiendish Decepticons worming their way into humanity's places of power, and the heroic Autobots being hounded as invaders (often after the Decepticons reveal themselves).
* Parodied in the ''[[Futurama]]'' episode "Roswell That Ends Well", when [[Harry Truman|Harry S Truman]] greets Zoidberg with "If you come in peace, surrender or be destroyed. If you're here to make war, we surrender."
* In the cartoon ''[[Garfield and Friends]]'', some aliens landed saying "we come in peace," and Garfield observed that any aliens who say that are actually evil invaders. [[Genre Savvy|His prediction was correct.]]
* In the ''[[
* In ''[[The Simpsons]]'' episode "The Springfield Files", the trope is parodied when an alien (which later turns out to be Mr. Burns, made to look like an alien [[It Make Sense In Context|through various circumstances]]) greets the people of Springfield:
{{quote|
'''Lenny:''' It's bringing love! Don't let it get away!
'''Carl:''' Break its legs! }}
* REGIS in ''[[Megas XLR]]'' gives us this gem:
{{quote|
* [[Inverted Trope|Inverted]] in one old Gumby short. Long story short, Pokey needed to be rescued from a group of Native Americans, so Gumby and some pilgrims storm their camp and send the natives running with gunfire. Immediately thereafter, they claim that they "come in peace."
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[[Category:Alien Tropes]]
[[Category:We Come In Peace Shoot To Kill]]
[[Category:
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