Cliches you'd like to see subverted

In the pilot to the 2016 reboot of MacGyver, this happens. He saves the day anyway.

Or, better yet, forget the whole “countdown” thing:

[QUOTE=Kim Possible, “Rappin’ Drakken”]

Dr. Drakken: While Shego keeps you busy, I shall launch my Hypertronic Devastator Drone! (pushes the button)
Kim: Wait, no countdown?
Shego: No, no, he’s actually learning.
Dr. Drakken: During the time it takes the computer voice to count backwards from ten, you always manage to defeat me. Not anymore!

[/QUOTE]

There was a version of that in Batman: Assault on Arkham – when Batman opened up the Joker’s dirty bomb, it had a note “Cut The Red Wire” and a tangle of all-red wires.

A criminal who does not tell the good guy his entire life of crime before he attempts and fails to kill him.

In Morons from Outer Space, the aliens are trying to escape from an army base. One of them sneaks up behind a sentry, and conks him on the head with a blunt instrument. The guard drops to his knees . . . and starts screaming, “Ow! What did you do that for?”

Not a good movie, but that scene made me laugh.

Not really notable - he’s a Watson character. He’s the sidekick. Sidekicks are usually normal for the times they live in. I don’t know what Jennshark intended, but for me it would be the main character, the person who could not be written out. Otherwise you have a wealth of secondary characters who have nice family lives but could, if it came to it, not be a part of the show.

Marple and Columbo come close but in the former she is not an everywoman and the latter his family are hidden.

I watched that episode just a couple of weeks ago. I never noticed anything feminist about it - that it was a woman noticing the disappearances and a man believing her - but that’s a point in its favour, IMO.

A similar scene happened in the short-lived and cancelled mini-series Drive.

It turned to be a senior citizen with a beard under the black helmet with the tinted visor.

Was that the only one? I always liked the part where Bernard sneezes in his space suit.

Anyway, that entire movie basically subverts the cliché of superintelligent aliens visiting the Earth. There aren’t many stupid aliens in sci-fi—the only other exception that comes to mind is the Pakleds from Star Trek: The Next Generation.

My thoughts exactly.

This happened in Repo Man. The hero ran as hard as he could (chasing a car on foot); he ends up on his knees, puking.

Deadpool.

Also sort of on Firefly:
Mal: Sure. It would be humiliating. Having to lie there while the better man refuses to spill your blood. Mercy is the mark of a great man.
stab
Mal: Guess I’m just a good man.
stab
Mal: Well, I’m all right.

Did it on Family Guy. I think this might be the most subverted trope.

This is another one that I can’t imagine being a trope. Any examples of this one?

There was an early episode in TNG where they stopped a pre-warp planet from going Krypton due to Data’s violation of the PD.
Tucker & Dale vs. Evil was notable for

being pretty much the only movie, ever, where the slightly creepy redneck wasn’t the serial killer.

[duplicate post]

I know I’ve seen this several times, but my memory for episodes and movies is pretty shoddy. The general trope is a family member/friend is visiting, usually unexpectedly, and the protagonist needs to put forward a successful version of life (or live up to a lie he’s told his friends and family) with the cooperation of supporting characters. I’m pretty sure I’ve seen this as “oh, I told mom I have a serious girlfriend, can you pretend to be mine” or something of that sort, as well as of the type “I’m a bigshot here where I am now” when they’re just a regular Joe Schmoe.

Tucker & Dales versus evil is brilliant because it turns a lot of horror movie tropes on their head. It is also a genuinely good movie for those that haven’t seen it.

A married couple are having sex, their kid tries to open their door, but it turns out it’s locked. Same deal when the kid’s masturbating & a parent (or younger sibling) tries to open his door. Or the bathroom door. It’s like door locks don’t exist in sitcoms.

In an episode of the detective series Cannon, the morbidly obese title character (played by William Conrad) chases on foot after a bad guy who’s hijacked a bus. He manages to catch up before it really gets going and pull himself in through the back door, but once on board he’s so whacked out all he can do is collapse onto one of the seats, gasping for breath.

Talking about doors in general, one trope that is present in a lot of comedies is to have a swinging door between the kitchen and living room.
The Dick van Dyke Show
All in the Family
Maude

I know I’ve seen more, but that’s all I can remember right now. I have never seen a house in real life that had such a door. There’s usually no door at all.

Another one that I really hate is that whenever a cast has 4 or 5 main characters, one of them will be REALLY stupid.

Just for once could the petite “martial artist” get their ass handed to them by the hulking guard. Combat sports are segregated by weight. There is a reason Mayweather never fought Danny Williams.

The house I grew up in had no locks on any of the doors other than front and back entrance. Also we had a swinging door between kitchen and dining room. :stuck_out_tongue:

Hey! Our house has a swinging door between the kitchen and living room, too!