Who Dunnit to Me?: Difference between revisions

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{{trope}}
{{quote|'''Frank Bigelow''': I'd like to report a murder.<br />
'''Captain''': Sit down. Where was this murder committed?<br />
'''Frank Bigelow''': San Francisco, last night.<br />
'''Captain''': Who was murdered?<br />
'''Frank Bigelow''': I was.|''[[D.O.A.|DOA]]'' }}
|''[[D.O.A.]]'' }}
 
This is where the protagonist has been murdered and is either [[Dead to Begin With|dead]] or [[Your Days Are Numbered|soon will be]]. The rest of the story concerns their efforts to solve the crime in the time they have left. A subplot can also be their trying to protect a loved one from the killer who did them in. This can be supernatural or non-supernatural depending on whether the protagonist is already dead or dying slowly but inevitably. If he or she is already dead, may involve [[Near-Death Clairvoyance]], otherwise may be considered a form of [[Death Byby Origin Story]].
 
A common science-fictional version involves characters who have the ability to back themselves up, through [[Brain Uploading]] or some similar technology. This is often used as a way to get around the issue that most victims know who murdered them: the version of the character that's trying to solve the murder is only as up-to-date as their most recent backup, which means they naturally have no memory of the murder or anything immediately before it.
 
{{deathtrope}}
'''As a [[Death Trope]], all Spoilers will be unmarked ahead. Beware.'''
 
{{examples}}
 
== Already Dead ==
=== Anime and Manga ===
* Lia in ''[[Le Chevalier d'Eon]]'', who possesses her living younger brother to find out who murdered her.
 
 
=== Comic Books ===
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* This was the whole idea behind the DC Comics character [[Deadman (Comic Book)|Deadman]], who died in his first story - and became a superhero as a result, fighting crime in spirit-form while investigating his own death. At one point, it looked like his killer was the same thug who had murdered Batman's parents.
* This was part of the title character's original motivation in ''Ghost'' from [[Dark Horse Comics]].
 
 
=== Film ===
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* ''[[The Crow]]''
* Treat Williams does this in ''Dead Heat''. Note that he's a cop who was investigating the bad guys ''before'' he's killed; becoming a zombie just lets him see the case through till the end.
* The '50s movie, ''[[Film/You Never Can Tell|You Never Can Tell]]'' tells the story of a murdered dog who was sent back by 'dog heaven' as a human to investigate his own murder.
* The movie ''[[Film/Oh Heavenly Dog|Oh Heavenly Dog]]'' reverses this, sending back a murdered human in dog form to investigate his death.
 
 
=== Literature ===
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* ''Ghost Story'', Book 13 of ''[[The Dresden Files]]'', has this as its plot, with a {{spoiler|ghostly Harry trying to find out who killed him, and the more important question of who ordered it done. As it turns out, the answer is...[[Memory Gambit|himself]]. Also, he's still alive.}}
* James Herbert's ''Nobody True'' is told from the POV of a ghost seeking his killer ... who can astrally project to oppose him.
* In ''[[Who Censored Roger Rabbit? (Literature)|Who Censored Roger Rabbit?]]'' (the novel from which the film ''[[Who Framed Roger Rabbit?]]'' was adapted), Roger is dead, and a doppleganger he created using his toon abilities hires Eddie Valiant to investigate his murder.
 
 
=== Live-Action TV ===
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* One episode of ''[[CSI]]'' has the corpses of murder victims talking about their murders (as the CSIs solve the cases).
* The first episode of ''[[Randall and Hopkirk Deceased]]'' - original and remake.
 
 
=== Radio ===
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=== Tabletop Games ===
* Ratik Ubel, an NPC revenant from ''[[Ravenloft]]'', has been acting out this trope for years. Normally a D&D revenant exists just long enough to eliminate its killer, but Ubel never saw his murderer's face and has been relentlessly pursuing one lead after another, seeking whichever of his (many) old enemies was responsible.
 
 
=== Video Games ===
* ''[[Shadow of Destiny]]'', although he's trying to reverse his death as well.
* The Flash adventure game ''[http://www.newgrounds.com/portal/view/173654 The Dead Case]''
* ''[[The World Ends With You]]'' {{spoiler|Most of the plot of Joshua's week was about Neku trying to figure this out.}} By the end of game it becomes clear that {{spoiler|this was becuase Joshua himself was the murderer.}}
* Sissel's motivation as the eponymous ghost in ''[[Ghost Trick: Phantom Detective]]'' is not only to find his killer, but to find out who he is in the first place.
* The eponymous character of the PC game ''[[Ghost in The Sheet]]'' starts the game by getting run over by a bus. He's not quite satisfied with the "it was an accident" theory, but he has to put it on the back burner in favor of the job his new boss has given him. At the end it's revealed that {{spoiler|his boss arranged for it to happen for reasons that aren't clear (at least, not clear as to why GITS specifically) but appear to revolve around a need for a lackey of some kind}}.
* Sonny, from the flash game series of the same name, died prior to first game's start. He cannot remember what happened to him or anything about his life prior death, and wonders who resurrected him and why.
 
 
=== Web Comics ===
* ''[[Slightly Damned]]'' begins with Rhea already in purgatory, ready to be judged, with no idea how she got there. [[Unexplained Recovery|She got better]], and there's only so many places that her killer can be...
* {...} in ''[[Hanna Is Not a Boy's Name|Hanna Is Not a Boys Name]]'' has been dead for a while now, and recently been shown that he was murdered. He doesn't actively pursue his killer [[Laser-Guided Amnesia|(he doesn't like to dwell on the past)]], but the point stands that {...} died, he came back and his killer is still presumably at large. He may not care [[Who Dunnit to Me?|whodunnit]], but the readers and other cast members seem to.
* [http://www.missmab.com/Demo/undead.php Rachel-Rebecca the Third] from ''[[Dan and Mab's Furry Adventures|DMFA]]'' was a law school student who got murdered. After getting reanimated, she got her own murderer convicted and went on to establish legal rights for [[The Undead]].
* ''[[Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal]]'' once [http://www.smbc-comics.com/index.php?db=comics&id=297 pointed out] one of problems with vengeful ghosts.
* In ''[[No Songs for The Dead]]'', the main protagonist Hector wakes up to find himself undead and unable to remember anything about what happened to him or his identity. The story revolves more around Hector trying to figure out his past and why he is now back, than his death.
 
 
== Not Dead Yet ==
=== Film ===
* ''[[D.O.A.|DOA]]'', both the 1950 original and the 1988 "remake".
* ''[[Crank]]'': Chelios doesn't need to figure out ''who'' poisoned him, as the culprit leaves him a gloating video that admits and even shows the act. Rather, he needs to track him down for revenge.
 
 
=== Literature ===
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* Partially subverted in [[G. K. Chesterton]]'s short story ''The Resurrection of [[Father Brown]]''. The titular priestly detective is supposedly murdered and is just about to be buried before he wakes up in his coffin. It turns out he was fed a poison which caused him to go into a coma almost resembling death. The remainder of the short story concerns Father Brown's efforts to discover who did this to him.
* According to ''[[More Information Than You Require]]'', ninth US president [[William Henry Harrison]] was given a slow-acting poison at his inauguration that would kill him in thirty days, and told he would be given the antidote if he could figure out who poisoned him. As the book puts it, "Harrison was a great Indian-killer, but not much of a sleuth".
 
 
=== Live-Action TV ===
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** "Dead Man Walking". [[Genre Savvy]] Tony makes a comparison by name to ''DOA''.
** Also when Tony gets pneumonic plague.
* ''[[Homicide: Life Onon the Street]]'', episode "Subway".
* ''[[Starsky and Hutch (TV series)|Starsky and Hutch]]'', episode "A Coffin for Starsky".
* An early [[CSI: Miami]] was about a woman who was poisoned with radioactive materials by a [[Corrupt Corporate Executive]] ([[Red Herring|or rather]] {{spoiler|a low level employee who she seduced to get information}}) because she happened to be the lawyer working the joint lawsuit against their illegal dumping practices.
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* ''[[The Mentalist]]'': Code Red.
 
=== Video GameGames ===
 
=== Video Game ===
* The Flash game ''[http://armorgames.com/play/4966/sixty-seconds-to-live Sixty Seconds To Live]''. The title is fairly self-explanatory here.
 
 
== Restored From Backup ==
=== Literature ===
* ''[[Who Censored Roger Rabbit? (Literature)]]''. Unlike ''[[Who Framed Roger Rabbit?|Who Framed Roger Rabbit]]'', Roger is dead, and his doppelganger (a temporary copy of himself) goes to Eddie to find out who iced the original.
* ''[[Down and Out Inin Thethe Magic Kingdom]]''
* ''[[Umineko no Naku Koro ni]]''
** Drawn to an epic [[Mind Screw]] at the end of Umineko Ep4 with this gem:
{{quote| '''Beatrice''': "{{color|red|Battler Ushiromiya, at this time, I will kill you. And right now, there is no one on the island other than you. The only one alive on this island is you. Nothing outside the island can interfere in any way. And of course, I am not you. However, I am here now and will kill you.}}"<br />
'''Battler''': "Like a souped up version of the mystery with Doctor Nanjo's murder...... .........So......?"<br />
'''Beatrice''': ".........Who...aaam I...?" }}
** Especially since it is said in red ([[Language of Truth|which means it must be true]]) and that he (and the reader) is supposed to figure who that person is.
* The whole point of ''[[Higurashi no Naku Koro ni]]'' {{spoiler|is Rika finding out who kills her every June, and consequently destroys the town.}}
* ''To Live Again'', novel by [[Robert Silverberg]]
* ''[[The Takeshi Kovacs Series|Altered Carbon]]'' by [[Richard K. Morgan]] is a [[Film Noir]] style thriller, with an investigator hired by the restored backup of an apparent suicide. The victim does not believe that he could have possibly wanted to kill himself; indeed it would be futile given that he was backed up and brought back to life in under 48 hours and instead believes he was murdered and demands justice.
 
 
=== Live-Action TV ===
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* The [[John Varley]] story, ''The Phantom of Kansas'', opens with the protagonist awakening and discovering that this is the ''third'' time she's been restored from backup. The original, and the two previous backups, have all been killed.
* Pextel in ''[[Stationery Voyagers]]'' wants justice on the drug runner who ran him off the road and required that he be mechanized. Laura Herrante, under the Crimson Owl protection, [[Attending Your Own Funeral|has buried herself on occasions]]. Fortunately for her, it's usually no mystery who killed her.
 
 
=== Tabletop Games ===
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{{reflist}}
[[Category:Who Dunnit To Me{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:WhoMystery Dunnit to Me?Tropes]]
[[Category:Death Tropes]]
[[Category:This Index Asked You a Question]]