I hate in shows like stranger things where something incredibly horrific happens in the first season, something that would scar a person for life, but next season they’re back o themselves like the beginning of season one as if nothing happened
I mean he was never back to normal He tried his best to fit back in but s2 was pretty much about his trauma and his inability to escape the upside down
@lebowskithor yeah I’m thinking the other characters like joyce who has been through so much and she only cares about magnets falling off her fridge in s3
@@Peacove I mean that’s dumbing down that aspect of her character a ton I would be scared too if all of a sudden all my magnets started falling off of my fridge that I knew held magnets before, especially considering Hawkins’ history, where by season 3 they already have seen plenty of weird and seemingly unexplainable things, so if something extremely unusual happens that could only be possible if some freak phenomena happened (like magnetic fields all of a sudden being shifted/extremely impacted), yeah stressing over it is fair
Another cliche that I hate is in animated films where they have the forced 3rd act breakup between the two main characters who then come back together in the climax
Another one ai hate is when a movie is set in another country and some of the characters there will say something in a language I don't understand then the subtitles go [speaking foreign language].
In the Harry Potter books, Barty crutch Jr has already lost when he tells Harry, because Dumbledore gives him " a truth serum" type thing and he is paralyzed, so he would have had no other choice. Anyways, that's just the movie being dumb. And Fred's death in the books is meant to close out Percy's Arc which isn't even in the movie
One that comes to mind I don’t really hate that much is when in prequel films this one person who becomes the main villain later on stabs his sidekick in the back and say these “we were once brothers” kind of lines instead of just using “friends.”
Don't forget the moment when characters figure out something shocking, and then they, or someone next to them, drop what the audience already knows (Red Skull in Infinity War, Batman in The Batman). Context clues are there for a reason; please don't spoonfeed us.
Or the horror movie cliche where, instead of letting the main characters figure out what's happening, some random old person shows up and explains exactly what is happening.
In the book Dumbledore, Minerva and snape were sitting outside the room wanting to extract as much information as possible from the fake moody. He waited until he was about to kill Harry to step in.
When there's just one character in the film that's just pure exposition and doesn't have any personality or when, just before the climax of the film everyone on a team gives up but the new guy gives a motivational speech which magically fixes everything.
the cliche that annoys the hell outta me the most is the character freaks out with a scream and then the characters screams back and both of them are taking turns screaming
Most of these are overciticisms and overanalyzations it literally doesn't matter if it's a short scene like when someone bursts through the glass and takes no damage. Who cares? Also "They're right behind me, aren't they?" Is overused but definitely overhated and fake deaths can be pretty cool often
NAH NAH, I swear for the Minecraft movie he’s gonna say “He’s right behind me isn’t he?! Creeper!? (Sighed voice) aw man” IM CALLING IT, IM BOT INSANE I SWEAR THEY GOTTA DO IT, THEY GONNA DO IT, If not just “CREEPER? aww man” Or “He’s right behind me isn’t he?” One of those two, I swear
This was a good one! I HATE the one you mentioned about bad dudes waiting their turn to fight our hero 1 by 1 lol Obviously also, you mentioning a 95 pound woman beating up multiple men would bring your channel backlash, but I'll say it so you don't have to. :)
For me it’s the boss villain killing one of his minions for making a small mistake. I get that they do this to demonstrate how evil the villain is, but logistically it makes no sense. So you’re a thug for hire, and you decide to work for this boss that’s known for killing his henchmen for no good reason, because the dental plan is good?
My least favorite are super smart and capable children . Maybe its cause i was really smart back then and now im just insecure about others being better , but like that 10 year old DOES NOT know karate that well , that it can easely defeat a 500pound mountin of muscel. And it CAN NOT save every main charakter by hacking into the SUPER ADVANCED villain tech
Hey?!! I care about Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. it’s one of my all time favorite shows along with Boy Meets World, Doctor Who, The Simpsons, Star Wars: The Clone Wars, Star Wars: Rebels, Star Wars: Ahsoka, and of course South Park
A case where “you and I are not so different” really worked was JJK season 2. Spoilers below. when Mahito telling Yuji that they aren’t so different and then Yuji saying yeah and gives his I am you speech, causing mahito to whimper and cry and extremely satisfying.
I don’t like when a character asks to talk to another person in private and then they walk like 4 feet away and stay in the same room, as if the rest can’t hear them anymore. usually in sitcoms
"Come on we've got him down now. Let's finish the genocidal maniac that killed and slaughtered thousands of people by hand" "No." "Wait.. what" "If I kill, I'm just as bad as him" "You... you just killed 37 bad guys on the way down here" "He's learnt his lesson. Lets go. We're done here" "If you dont do it I will then" *Protagonist raises gun at friend* "Dont make me do this" "What the fuck"
I only watch these to see how much of an outcast i am to the rest of the fandoms (i like the entire mcu except the two hulk projects) but coulsons death was the thing that made the avengers come together to save the day AND i eat up AoS. I find it leagues better than all of the netflix shows combined.
I hate when the cliche where there’s like some dumb side character or sometimes it’s like a pet or something and at the end of the movie they save the day. Like for example the main character is pinned down by the bad guy and the super ultra light beam (another cliche) is about to make a portal and there’s a big red button that turns it off and the side character (that’s usually Mexican for some reason) doesn’t know what he’s doing and hits the button and saves the day. I hate that.
For me, the worst movie cliche is when a person have conflicts when another person for a screw-up that shows up and bicker and fallout then they come back to each other again at the end which is not bad but to me looks unnecessary if not done right.
You should've brought up the power of friendship and an anime trope that they make an 1k yr old girl look like an 6 yr old. The power of friendship is good but its overused like take the last season of the flash tv show for example and the 2nd one i mentioned is not cringe it ls just weird.
i hate those really unrealistic haking scenes "i can get in, but i don't have enough time" "alright, ill buy you some time" "oh, almost in" like, what??? do they think haking things are like playing a video game or smthin??
Ok the cliche about the parent not believing a child is realistic, no adult is going to believe a child get abducted from a best friend or monster. You have to be really close to that person then they should believe it.
Also wen they have teens/kids as the main characters but they make them nerdy or social outcasts coz like why cant anyone else also be the main character, like a popular kid or a normal kid. Why they have to be outcasts
your forgetting the worst one when theres a timer for a bomb or even when somebody is about to die somebody comes and saves him at the exact last second and the bomb gets turned of at 1 or even zero seconds thats so stupid atleast let it be at like 2 or 5
5:01 The cliche I don't like is when a female side character gets an evil female sidekick to fight while the male protagonist takes out the main baddie.
Please work on not saying God’s name in vain it’s disrespectful he loves you all and needs you all to accept that you did that and all other sins in the book aka repentance for the sins you chose to do just admit you did them and take the stairs to having a change of heart, taking after his footsteps, ignoring the evil thoughts telling you to do otherwise when you are choosing to do good for others including yourself, wanting better for others cause you want to not cause you have to, spreading the love of God to everyone you meet enemies included, oh and spread the word of God to anyone you see cause you love them and don’t want them to perish steer them in the right direction be the change. All in the name of Jesus
3:42 This is my least favorite cliche but it's not only the kids who end up not believed in but adults too. What makes things worse is that the situation a character reports about isn't fantastical and is something that could be realistic (for example, reports of a trusted character turning out to be a villain) but everyone else around the main character is like "I don't believe you. You're fucking crazy!"
Praise God he loves you just repent and give your life to Christ and you’ll eventually get in the right shape trust me also I’m not forcing just recommending y’all have a blessed day/night/morning may God bless you all and deliver you all from evil 🙏🏾✝️🥹😇🙌🏾 ain’t nothing about this cliche what’s cliche is going through the same door twice and expecting change