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9->''"They [young actors] see TV movies. They see Creator/{{Lifetime}} movies. They ''think'' that's melodrama. They don't know the true fun of ever-escalating emotions building up to a volcanic pitch!"''
10-->-- '''Creator/QuentinTarantino''' on Creator/DouglasSirk melodramas
11
12A type of theater, film, and television that focuses on heightening the emotions of the audience. The word "melodrama" derives from "melody [in] drama" (like opera); melodrama at its finest aspires to have the tone and the repetitive waves of building emotion of an {{opera}} or a [[ClassicalMusic symphony]]. In melodrama, the plot is sensationalized and emotional and the dialogue is bombastic and sentimental. Characters tend to be thinly sketched, flat {{Stock Character}}s (the hero or heroine might face problems from a "[[TheVamp homewrecking temptress]]" or an [[AristocratsAreEvil aristocratic villain]]). No room for a nuanced AntiHero or AntiVillain with complicated motivations here; the IdealHero is too busy trying to foil the schemes of DastardlyWhiplash. Melodramas are often accomplished by dramatic, emotional music.
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14It's usually associated with [[WorldOfHam everyone acting like a]] LargeHam, but it's actually about specific emphasis on any dramatic situation. This is done by amping up the perceived scale and emotional response on everything. Basically, every little hurdle becomes a mountain, every setback a {{tragedy}} of Greek proportions, and the official couple will be StarCrossedLovers over the tiniest things, usually thanks to outside interference and PoorCommunicationKills. The difference between melodrama and drama is that the latter aims for realism; the conflict(s) are based on more logical and reasonable events and usually tend to have more calmer moods.
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16Note that this isn't the same as stage actors [[NoIndoorVoice speaking loudly]] and [[MilkingTheGiantCow making broad movements]]. That's just a necessity of stage acting. This is when the actors portray the characters (or the characters are written as) being akin to teenagers with a very small, SoapOpera scale world. Every success, kiss, and snub will carry the sting of a legendary story. Essentially, what to us would be a pinprick gains the pathos of a rending wound.
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18[[Administrivia/TropesAreTools Also note that this can be done right]]. Melodrama can quite easily hook viewers into becoming emotionally invested in the characters, something every story needs to survive. [[NarmCharm It helps if the stories are the type that can produce large emotions]] -- and if the characters are depicted with proper motivations. Only occasionally does it fall into the {{Anvilicious}} {{Narm}}-fests we associate with them. Which is why nowadays it's more of a pejorative term for gratuitous drama, and something writing books today urge people to steer clear of.
19
20Melodrama is heavily used in [=1800s=] opera, such as in Donizetti's bel canto operas, in Bellini's works, and many Verdi and Puccini operas. In these composers' works, the heroines need to resolve impossible romantic situations all amidst grandiose, heightened stakes.
21
22A SubTrope of RuleOfDrama.
23
24A SuperTrope to {{GASP}}, MelodramaticPause, DramaQueen, DramaticDownstageTurn.
25
26Compare ChewingTheScenery, LargeHam, MilkingTheGiantCow, {{Narm}}, MundaneMadeAwesome, ComicalOverreacting, {{Wangst}}.
27
28Contrast DullSurprise.
29
30'''Note:''' Please explain what makes a work melodramatic. Don't cite critics, fans, and YMMV tropes here, also general examples that don't apply to the whole set of works (e.g. Indian works, {{Korean Drama}}s, etc.) aren't allowed per [[Administrivia/ExamplesAreNotGeneral the site's rules]].
31
32----
33!!Examples:
34
35[[foldercontrol]]
36
37[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
38* A lot of {{shojo}} series, from the 70's to today, have these in spades. In fact, it would be easier to list those {{shojo}} anime/manga titles in which melodrama ''isn't'' a central element of it. Some examples:
39** ''Manga/TheRoseOfVersailles'' is loaded with this. In one scene based on historical events, UsefulNotes/MarieAntoinette just had to say a few words to Madame [=DuBarry=], and [[https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/marie_antoinette_melodrama.jpg Marie then runs away in tears]], and even tosses her [[PrettyInMink Ermine]] [[PimpedOutCape Cape]] behind her [[RuleOfSymbolism to show the princess is beaten]]. Episode 03 of ''WebVideo/RoseOfVersaillesAbridged'' discusses the importance of this and RuleOfDrama.
40** ''Manga/AimForTheAce'', which is even ''more'' noticeably overblown in the live-action adaptation. It's an early shoujo series, so it's only natural.
41** ''Manga/CandyCandy'' is about the OrphansOrdeal of a little girl, her two, cruel siblings in her new rich adoptive family, and life in pre-UsefulNotes/WW1 USA. Throughout her life, she's trampled on and left behind many times by the people she should be able to trust the most - but she refuses to break and decides to be a RebelliousPrincess and find her own happiness.
42** ''Anime/Charlotte1977'' is coloured by the drama behind the main character's status as one of the [[BlueBlood Montburns]], the inherited wrath of those who hated her father. There's also the constant question of whether her mother, Simone, truly is alive, and if Charlotte can find her.
43** ''Manga/{{Lady}}'' is a {{shoujo}} series that portrays melodrama from the point of view of five year old Lynn Russell, a half-Japanese girl living in Britain as a noblewoman, kept in the dark about the fact that her mother was killed off in a car accident and her grandfather refuses to look at her for being mixed-race. Lynn only finds out because her father's [[WickedStepmother potential new wife]], and her two children rub it in her face. Lynn continues to face maltreatment from them [[spoiler: and upon hearing that her father may marry the aforementioned woman, she's so disgusted she tries to flee back to Japan because she doesn't want her newfound older sister to suffer at her hands, and it takes a lot of convincing for her to stay and the marriage to break off. And the tragedy doesn't even end there, as the woman's daughter is angry about the rejection and schemes to get revenge on the Russells. There's a reason that this series has many sequel manga and a second series[[note]]''Hello! Lady Lynn'', which is sometimes referred to as the second season of the first anime series, ''Lady Lady''[[/note]] that had nothing to do with the manga - there's just so much material to choose from...]]
44%%** ''Manga/DearBrother'', which not so coincidentally is by the same author of ''Manga/TheRoseOfVersailles'', and inspired lots of YuriGenre series to come.
45%%** ''Manga/KazeToKiNoUta''.
46%%** ''Manga/HotGimmick''.
47%%** ''Manga/PeachGirl''.
48* ''Anime/FullmetalAlchemist2003'' mixes a good deal of melodrama and GothicHorror into what was originally more of a {{Thriller}} series. The heroes experience more {{Angst}}, the origins of the homunculi are [[TragicVillain more complex]], and characters [[DevelopingDoomedCharacters doomed to die]] are given more screentime so that their deaths hit harder.
49** The second anime adaptation, Fullmetal Alchemist Brotherhood also fits the bill, partly because of its bombastic orchestral score, especially during emotional, scary or action-heavy scenes, it's bigger emphasis on spectacle, and the way its directed, which sometimes makes the intended tone of a scene even more apparent than it was in its source material or other adaptations (like the background being blood-red at one point during Ed and Al's traumatic backstory).
50%%* ''Manga/SaintSeiya'', considering the action-to-drama ratio.
51%%* ''Anime/CodeGeass''. It wouldn't be half as awesome if it weren't.
52* The works of Creator/LeijiMatsumoto have melodrama written all over them. ''Manga/CaptainHarlock'' focuses on the struggles of an isolated {{Space Pirate|s}} who, despite his efforts not to, has an attachment to the people he's met on Earth (and vice versa), ''Anime/{{Starzinger}}'' is about the unlikely friendship between a beautiful Princess and three of the most violent cyborgs of the galaxy as they try to put an end to the potential death of the universe, and so on.
53* Creator/TadaoNagahama's works are infamous for this, so much that in Japan and the West they have the nickname "romance"[[note]]As in, ''romanticism'', not the love story type of romance[[/note]] -- for example, his mecha anime works are known as the ''Anime/RobotRomanceTrilogy''. Nagahama worked in theater before becoming an anime director and carried the dramatic tone with him to his animated works regardless of genre. In the West, you most likely know him as the director of the first half of the ''Manga/TheRoseOfVersailles'' anime.
54** ''Anime/VoltesV'': The anime has this on both the heroes and villain's sides. It begins with the ParentalAbandonment of the three Gō brothers, Kenichi, Daijiro and Hiyoshi, who have no idea why their dad left and desperately want to see him again. Amidst an AlienInvasion by the distant Planet Boazania, they find out that there's a possibility he's alive and they can save him. Whereas the ConqueringAlienPrince of Boazania, a SourOutsideSadInside soul with a fractured sense of honour, finds out that his court isn't as loyal as he thought and the Emperor, his own uncle, doesn't trust him...but why?
55** ''Anime/{{Daimos}}'' is the tale of an AlienPrincess who falls for a human boy... while their planets are at war and he leads the main resistance by preventing the alien's attacks with his HumongousMecha. Both face scrutiny, abuse and humiliation for their romance, are called traitors and even face jail (in his case) and ({{execution}} in her case - don't worry, she escapes). However, their love perseveres through it all, and they never stop searching for solutions to the conflict- and even their biggest in-universe detractors are left in shock by the power of their love. That's not even getting to the touchy politics of the alien empire, which is rife with betrayal and conflicting loyalty here and there.
56* ''Anime/IsabelleOfParis'' focuses on the upcoming war in (and outside of) 1880s France, but Isabelle also angsts over her sister having it all while she's the [[AlwaysSecondBest "ugly duckling"]], the unrequited love triangle between her sister, the commoner Jules and the French army captain and [[spoiler:the [[IHaveNoSon parental disavowment]] faced by both siblings from their esteemed father]].
57* ''Anime/GoLion''/''Anime/{{Voltron}}'', despite being a mecha anime, counts. The politics of the Galra Empire and the AwfulTruth behind their ties to the Alteans, Princess Fala overcoming the stigma of women in battle and the dea-- [[NeverSayDie err]], [[{{Bowdlerise}} disappearances]] of many of the friends and allies the team, who risk their life against the fascist empire and uncover more secrets about them.
58* ''Manga/HonooNoAlpenRose'' is a war melodrama in an anime trenchcoat. This ShoujoDemographic series takes place in UsefulNotes/WorldWarII Switzerland, focusing on an amnesiac girl who's relentlessly pursued by a NaziNobleman. No one knows why, and no matter what she does, he's desperate to have her in his clutches. Her heart already belongs to the kind little boy who rescued her after she fell out of the plane, Lundi, and together they join LaResistance in spite of their tender ages.
59* ''Anime/LaSeineNoHoshi'' is a superhero story set in 1700s France, about a little girl who becomes enmeshed in the web of sticky French politics after she's adopted into a noble family. She doesn't know why, but various nobles have expressed an interest in her and seem to know about her parents, even though all her life she's believed herself to be one of the commoners. Waters are muddied further when she finds out Marie Antoinette may have had something to do with her past, even though she hates [[HatesRichPeople aristocrats like her]] as they killed her adoptive parents and maltreat the people of Paris regularly.
60* ''Anime/HelloSandybell'''s main characters all have complicated interpersonal relationships that build off melodrama. Sandybell likes Mark, but she's also very attached to his mother despite meeting her briefly, because she grew up without one herself and sees a ParentalSubstitute in her. Mark likes her back, but because he's the son of the [[BlueBlood Wellington]] family, he's forced into an ArrangedMarriage with Kitty. Kitty has always hated Sandybell and is elated at marrying Mark, but he doesn't want to marry her and flees from Scotland after his parents die, trying to pursue his dream. Sandybell is broken by this, especially as her father dies around the same time, and sets off on her own adventure after moving to London, believing she can find her mother. Her free-spiritedness and refusal to abandon hope drives most of the show.
61* ''Anime/IdolDensetsuEriko'' is about a young girl training to be an idol after her parents die, but her only living relative refuses to let this happen as he despised her father. He does everything he can to stop her from reaching her dream. And even without that, she breaks as an idol, having to juggle MaliciousSlander, a school life that isn't compatible with the idol lifestyle, and her rivalry with another upcoming starlet who hates her guts.
62* Melodrama plays a vital role in most YuriGenre anime. As with most shojo anime and manga, it would be easier and shorter to list those Yuri Genre shows which ''aren't'' all about melodrama.
63* ''Manga/DeathNote'', especially the dub. Major plot twists are accompanied by [[MundaneMadeAwesome mundane actions and hammy dialogue]] - see the famous "I'll take a potato chip... AND EAT IT!" scene.
64* ''Manga/AttackOnTitan'', particularly the anime. The series doesn't miss a chance to ramp up the music, animation and acting whenever a plot development or action scene occurs. The manga itself also uses melodrama to punctuate the sheer dread, panic and gut-wrenching tragedy of both war and nature in general.
65%%* Many stories in ''Manga/CaseClosed'' easily fall into this.
66%%* Almost every main storyline in ''Anime/DragonBallZ'', and especially obvious in the villains.
67* ''Anime/WorldMasterpieceTheater'':
68** It's believed that this was done deliberately with the anime ''Anime/PrincessSarah'', since WMT's previous works failed to reach critical success, and they wanted to WinBackTheCrowd. Sarah is made meeker, her bullies are made haughtier, [[spoiler: and in an [[FanonDiscontuinity extremely controversial decision]], she forgives them in the end, in spite of all the abuse they heaped on her after her family lost their wealth.]]
69** ''Anime/ADogOfFlanders1975'': While the book was sad enough, the anime twists the knife by making Nello and Alois friends, with her father repeatedly scolding her and abusing her for daring to associate with a "filthy beggar". [[spoiler: And to really ramp it up, when Nello and Patrasche die, we see them as angels!]]
70** ''Anime/{{Pollyanna}}'': The anime deviates a bit from the original novel by adding tons of {{wangst}} during the Boston arc, which many Western fans hated (whereas Japanese fans adored it and it made Pollyanna more endearing to them, wanting to give the girl a hug). Along with adding the deaths of many beloved characters from the book, it's melodramatic to the core.
71** The anime version of ''[[Anime/HeidiGirlOfTheAlps Heidi]]'' falls easily into this.
72* Imagine your own parents selling you for money and telling you that you were never their biological child, your newfound adoptive father-slash-newfound saviour having a ''messy'' can of worms regarding his own past, your childhood crush being a mute girl who's suddenly sent away or finally finding your birth family, and realizing they're better off without you making things worse for them. That's basically just another Tuesday for the protagonist of ''Anime/NobodysBoyRemi1977''. It was also directed by Creator/OsamuDezaki, who's up there with Nagahama as one of the most melodramatic directors in anime history.
73* ''Anime/YuGiOh'' is quite possibly the biggest example of melodrama in anime. The fate of the world, existential crises, life or death situations, all fall upon a ''[[SeriousBusiness children's card game]]''.
74[[/folder]]
75
76%%[[folder:Comic Books]]
77%%* Creator/ChrisClaremont's work is often seen like this now.
78%%* ''ComicBook/FromHell'' bears the subtitle "A melodrama in sixteen parts".
79%%[[/folder]]
80
81[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
82* Sometimes turns up in the Franchise/DisneyAnimatedCanon:
83** In ''WesternAnimation/SnowWhiteAndTheSevenDwarfs'', all the characters are large hams to varying extents. There's the operetta-quality trilling of the heroine, the silent movie-esque gestures of the Queen/Hag, and the outsized personalities of the dwarfs (Bashful makes ''shyness'' hammy).
84** In ''WesternAnimation/SleepingBeauty'', a fairy duel erupts over the color of a dress. Wait until you see what happens when an entire kingdom's at stake, and all because an evil fairy wasn't invited to a party!
85** ''WesternAnimation/Frozen2013'' is possibly the most triumphant example. Elsa's childhood is one traumatic event after another, including seriously endangering her sister's life ''twice'' by accident. Not to mention how her PowerIncontinence has plunged the entire kingdom in eternal winter. And add to that a ManipulativeBastard for a villain. Saying that everyone [[EarnYourHappyEnding earned their happy ending]] would be an understatement.
86[[/folder]]
87
88[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
89* Many silent movies were melodramas by necessity, as they couldn't rely on spoken dialogue to convey emotion. Creator/DWGriffith was a master of the art, and his epic films (''Film/{{The Birth of a Nation|1915}}'', ''Film/WayDownEast'', etc.) were pure melodrama. But, as with all things, there are exceptions. Part of the trouble is which films and performances have survived and remained well-known, which were often the most popular/successful ones of the time. And let's face it, melodrama ''sells''. A lot of silent movie conventions appear in ''Film/{{Dracula 1931}}'', to the point that no non-diegetic music appears. Gestures and dialogue are exaggerated, and a close-up of Dracula's DeathGlare repeats to the point of RunningGag.
90* ''Film/AtFirstSight'': The movie revolves around the daily struggles of a blind man and the woman who fell in love with him, as well as the paradigm shift that occurs when the man recovers his eyesight thanks to a medical operation.
91* Creator/KenjiMizoguchi was the foremost practitioner of Eastern melodrama, such as ''Film/OsakaElegy''.
92* Hong Kong was rather fond of melodramatic cinema in its heyday. Creator/JohnWoo and his HeroicBloodshed melodramas are prime examples.
93* Creator/KingVidor's ''Film/{{Stella Dallas|1937}}'' (starring Creator/BarbaraStanwyck) is a heartbreaking film, which shows melodrama at its finest.
94* Any big-screen adaptation of a stage play (or in the case of ''Film/TheProducers'', film adaptation of a play adaptation of a movie).
95* ''Film/{{Titanic|1997}}'', especially the second half.
96* Speaking of, ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfTheTitanic'' (not to be confused with [[WesternAnimation/TitanicTheLegendGoesOn the one with the rapping dog]]) is heavy on this in the second half.
97* The ''Franchise/StarWars'' movies are adventure melodramas. Any scene with Padme and Anakin is a mini romantic melodrama.
98* ''Film/TheRoom2003'': Johnny would like you to know that "[[MemeticMutation you are TEARING me APART, Lisa]]!" It's amazing how much drama Tommy Wiseau attempts to put into the minimal amount of things that actually happen.
99* ''Film/TheWizardOfOz''. Everyone puts intense effort into showing their emotions (worried, happy, frightened, angry...).
100* PlayedWith in ''Film/TheDevilsDisciple'' (1959).
101-->'''Major Swindon:''' I can only do my best sir, and rely on the devotion of our countrymen.\
102'''General John Burgoyne:''' May I ask, Major, are you writing a melodrama?\
103'''Major Swindon:''' No, sir.\
104'''General John Burgoyne:''' ''[sarcastically]'' What a pity! WHAT a pity!
105* TheFifties is generally seen as the peak age of the Melodrama with its StepfordSuburbia setting, nuclear family casts and plots that focus on family angst, frustrated desire, adultery and bad marriages:
106** Creator/DouglasSirk is widely understood to "own" the genre, as his best-known films are 1950s Hollywood melodramas such as ''Film/MagnificentObsession'', ''Film/AllThatHeavenAllows'', ''Film/WrittenOnTheWind'', and ''Film/{{Imitation of Life|1959}}''. [[VindicatedByHistory Retroactively]] considered by many to be [[StealthParody Stealth Parodies]] and sly critiques of midcentury American society, these films were also major commercial successes of the era and inspired the likes of Creator/RainerWernerFassbinder, Creator/ToddHaynes and Creator/JohnWaters, among many others.
107** Creator/EliaKazan's direction often led to melodrama seeping into genres that were not supposed to accommodate it. His ''Film/EastOfEden'' is a famous example but other examples include ''Film/WildRiver'' and ''Film/TheArrangement''.
108** Creator/MaxOphuls directed a few notable melodramas in America and France. Examples include ''Film/LetterFromAnUnknownWoman, ''Film/TheEarringsOfMadameDe'', Film/{{Caught}}'' and ''Film/TheRecklessMoment''.
109** Creator/VincenteMinnelli directed a few famous films in this genre: ''Film/TheCobweb'', ''Some Came Running'', ''Home from the Hill''.
110** Creator/NicholasRay made two very famous melodramas: ''Film/RebelWithoutACause'', which was so GenreBusting that it codified the teen movie, and ''Film/BiggerThanLife'' a film about a failed teacher's frustration that anticipated ''Film/AmericanBeauty''.
111** Creator/DelmerDaves made a sudden switch from gritty [[TheWestern Westerns]] to melodrama after doctors advised him to make less demanding films following a heart scare. His biggest hit in that vein, ''A Summer Place'', is an adaptation of a Sloan Wilson novel about a pair of star-crossed teenage lovers who meet again on vacation decades later as their [[AwfulWeddedLife marriages to different people are faltering]], only to find further complication when their own teenage offspring fall in love with each other. After that he did ''Parrish'' (LoveDodecahedron on a tobacco farm), ''Susan Slade'' (TeenPregnancy back when it was a ''very'' taboo topic) and ''Youngblood Hawke'' (naïve young writer from Kentucky gets involved with a succession of Manhattan women). These films all have a solid {{Camp}} reputation nowadays.
112* Creator/LarsVonTrier is a standout example. He has [[WordOfGod by his own admittance]] one story: A [[TheCutie Cutie]] that's AlwaysFemale has her life [[BreakTheCutie systematically ruined]] by a male {{Jerkass}} that's frequently a KnowNothingKnowItAll. If that doesn't sound melodramatic enough, there's always [[DiabolusExMachina plenty of hellish happenings]] throughout every movie, enough to drive the angst to the extreme.
113* ''Film/LifeAsAHouse'' is a film about a man [[YourDaysAreNumbered dying from cancer]] who decides to spends his last days building his dream house. On top of that, there are also sub-plots including, but not limited to, a parental [[ParentalIssues reconnection after estrangement]], a teenage boy sleeping with his [[StacysMom girlfriend’s mom]], angsty moody [[EmoTeen Emo]]-ness, a [[OldFlame rekindled romance]], a [[TheTease sexually curious girl]] who is attracted to both a father and son, and a HighSchoolHustler.
114* ''Film/ManhattanMelodrama'' wasn't kidding around. Much [[{{Tearjerker}} tearjerking]] goes on as Blackie the gangster kills someone to save his old buddy Jim's political career, then refuses to let Jim commute his sentence, as Blackie's old girlfriend Eleanor, now Jim's wife, begs for Blackie's life.
115* In-universe with ''Film/ExitSmiling'', which is about a traveling theater troupe that performs an absurdly over-the-top, silly melodrama.
116%%* Creator/DonBluth's movies. ''WesternAnimation/TheLandBeforeTime'' is a good example, which makes the SliceOfLife flavored direct-to-video sequels so startling.
117* ''Literature/TheGirlOnTheTrain'': Almost every single scene in the film is filled with exaggerated crying, shouting, violence, sex, or all of the above, almost to the point of camp. And then there's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yHw5A9BAZ98 this]] highly over-the-top scene.
118* Common in FilmNoir, but special mention goes to ''Film/LeaveHerToHeaven'' (1945), directed by John M. Stahl, who defined melodrama in the 1930s, and two of whose films were remade by the aforementioned Douglas Sirk. It's a film about arguably the most evil of all femme fatales, played by Creator/GeneTierney, and her obsession with a man (Cornell Wilde) that leads to both of their downfalls. It includes a very operatic scene of Tierney riding on horseback through the desert scattering her father's ashes, an iconic scene where she calmly watches another character drown while wearing SinisterShades, another where she induces an abortion by throwing herself down the stairs, and much more, all shot in glorious technicolor. The end result is a film that's so far into melodrama, it's almost like a fever dream.
119[[/folder]]
120
121[[folder:Literature]]
122* In ''Literature/TheBabySittersClub'' series, there's no other word to describe the scene in ''Boy-Crazy Stacey'' where the girls are saying goodbye. They're all going their (temporary) separate ways and the waterworks are endless. Sobbing, hugging, wailing. How long will they be apart? ''Two weeks''.
123* Gothic and Romantic literature -- ''Literature/TheCastleOfOtranto'' and ''Literature/WutheringHeights'' certainly count as melodrama, which doesn't mean they're bad.
124** The standard RomanceNovel is purely and unabashedly melodrama by design; though some are low-key, most thrive on emotional extremes and emotion-heightening situations.
125* ''Literature/TheThreeMusketeers'', where every girl is the receiver of [[TrueLoveIsExceptional True, Passionate Romance]], loyalty to King, Queen and Country are True and Absolute, and every tiny transgression is cause for a [[DuelToTheDeath Duel! to the Death!]] Impassioned hamminess is considered the most praiseworthy of qualities in this novel. A bit of an InvokedTrope due to the setting's BlueAndOrangeMorality -- the reason Milady is so dangerous in-universe is because she keeps a low profile and doesn't play by the rules.
126* ''Literature/{{Twilight}}''. When you think about it, there aren't that many obstacles keeping Edward and Bella apart. They just like to ''think'' that there are.
127** In fact, most of these hurdles are put up by ''Bella and Edward themselves'', be it Bella fretting over not being pretty enough to deserve Edward or Edward deciding that he needs to separate himself from Bella, resulting in him uprooting his whole family so that he can go live in South America and ''months'' of {{Wangst}}ing from both him and Bella.
128* Hwang Sun-won's 1959 short story ''Sonagi'' (''Rain Shower'' in English) is an enduringly popular melodrama in Korea that is often referenced in contemporary Korean culture, which is a culture that is very fond of melodrama.
129* One of the complaints of Creator/GeorgeEliot's "Literature/SillyNovelsByLadyNovelists":
130-->''In the same way very ordinary events of civilized life are exalted into the most awful crises, and ladies in full skirts and manches à la Chinoise, conduct themselves not unlike the heroines of sanguinary melodramas.''
131* Used quite a lot in Creator/FernMichaels' ''Literature/SisterhoodSeries''. For the most part, it's done right. On occasion, it does fall into {{Narm}}.
132* Creator/HPLovecraft, of all people, wrote a highly amusing parody of this genre entitled "Literature/SweetErmengarde".
133[[/folder]]
134
135[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
136* ''Her Married Lover'', which is actually a {{Deconstruction}} of those melodramatic movies.
137* There was a ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'' sketch from the early 1990s, "Those Proud Pattersons", where everybody was an overdramatic actor.
138* ''Series/TheColbertReport'' is already [[GutFeeling very emotional]] [[LargeHam about everything]], but occasionally it [[http://www.colbertnation.com/the-colbert-report-videos/217061/january-27-2009/omar-returns ramps it up.]] Even ''Series/TheDailyShow'' [[http://thedailyshow.cc.com/videos/datspe/colbert---another-world did it once.]]
139* Even though it's a reality show, ''Series/ExtremeMakeoverHomeEdition'' seems to be chock full of melodrama.
140** Reality shows in general are a gold mine for this trope. For example, ''Series/MyKitchenRules'' makes putting on a dinner party look like an epic tale of love, hate, war and [[BuffySpeak other things.]]
141** New-formula ''Series/{{Masterchef}}'': "''Cooking'' doesn't get ''tougher'' than ''this!''"
142* ''Series/{{Scrubs}}'' exists to invert and subvert this trope. The show is about low-ranking, everyday doctors who realistically acknowledge that one-third of their patients are old farts about to die and most of their day is spent disimpacting people's bowels. This is in direct contrast to medical dramas such as ''Series/{{House}}, Series/{{ER}}'' and ''Series/GreysAnatomy'' where every single patient leads the cast on a roller-coaster of emotional torment and soul-searching. Although it should be noted that the doctors on ''Series/{{Scrubs}}'' have, on occasion, been put on a rollercoaster of emotional torment and soul-searching (by their patients or otherwise) anyway.
143* ''Series/LittleHouseOnThePrairie'' has melodrama in almost every episode. It's not uncommon to see someone crying in an over-the-top manner on the show.
144* ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'': Forget that some see the show as running on this for a moment; the episode "[[Recap/BuffyTheVampireSlayerS3E13TheZeppo The Zeppo]]" pokes fun at how the Buffy/Angel scenes can be. Later the ''Series/{{Angel}}'' episode "[[Recap/AngelS03E05Fredless Fredless]]" has Cordelia and Wesley imitate the scene, [[SerialEscalation even more exaggerated.]]
145[[/folder]]
146
147[[folder:Theater]]
148* [[Creator/WilliamShakespeare Shakespeare]] is often regarded as a ''master'' of this trope. Although whether it's done well or poorly depends on who you ask, which play you're talking about, or both.
149%%* Creator/TakarazukaRevue productions.
150* ''Theatre/SweeneyToddTheDemonBarberOfFleetStreet'', based on a character from VictorianLondon theatre, is a musical melodrama; composer Music/StephenSondheim, asked about the dark subject matter, [[https://blogs.loc.gov/now-see-hear/category/musical-theater/ replied]], "''Sweeney Todd'' is not dark, it's a melodrama."
151* ''Theatre/ThePhantomOfTheOpera'' and its sequel ''Theatre/LoveNeverDies''.
152* ''Under The Gaslight'', a play from the 1800s; it was eventually made into a silent film, which also qualifies.
153* ''Theatre/TheWarriorsAtHelgeland'' by Creator/HenrikIbsen is by far the most melodramatic play he ever wrote. Later, Ibsen spoofed the genre in ''Theatre/{{Rosmersholm}}'' by having an off stage suicide, commented on by the last person left on stage:
154---> Dear god, they embrace! And save us, they are jumping in the waterfalls together!
155[[/folder]]
156
157[[folder:Video Games]]
158%%* The ''Franchise/FinalFantasy'' series, and many other [[EasternRPG JRPGs]].
159* One of ''VideoGame/MetalGear'''s claims to fame/notoriety. Every boss battle is followed up by a five- to ten- minute death scene and the MythArc is deep enough to put ''Series/{{LOST}}'' to shame. The last cutscene of ''[[VideoGame/MetalGearSolid4GunsOfThePatriots Guns Of The Patriots]]'' (the de facto GrandFinale) is over an hour long.
160[[/folder]]
161
162[[folder:Visual Novels]]
163* In ''VisualNovel/DoubleHomework'', when the protagonist and Johanna finally have an honest conversation about their relationships with each other and Tamara, Johanna, when she isn’t smacking her brother, is construing just about everything he says as a reason why she’s not good enough.
164[[/folder]]
165
166%%[[folder:Webcomics]]
167%%* ''Webcomic/BittersweetCandyBowl'' has this, in both serious and Narm varieties.
168%%[[/folder]]
169
170[[folder:Western Animation]]
171* The original Terrytoons ''WesternAnimation/MightyMouse'' series. Not only did it feature an [[TheAce Ace]] hero, a DamselInDistress and a CardCarryingVillain, but all the dialogue was sung, {{Opera}}-style.
172* ''WesternAnimation/PrincessSissi'', the German AnimatedAdaptation of Elizabeth of Bavaria's life. This isn't surprising, as most historical drama isn't low-key.
173* Later episodes of ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'' often go in that direction, thanks to CerebusSyndrome. There are 3 ways that it's used: intentionally (i.e. "[[Recap/SouthParkS7E14Raisins Raisins]]"), PlayedForLaughs (i.e. "[[Recap/SouthParkS12E6OverLogging Over-Logging]]"), or ''both'' (i.e. "[[Recap/SouthParkS12E8TheChinaProbrem The China Probrem]]").
174* Rarity from ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' has her moments, and [[LargeHam out-hams]] everyone around her: "I VANT TO BE ALO-HO-HO-ON I WANT TO WALLOW IN... WHATEVER IT IS PONIES ARE SUPPOSED TO WALLOW IN! (aside to self) Do ponies wallow in pity? (back to the melodrama!) OH, LISTEN TO ME! I DON'T EVEN KNOW WHAT I'M SUPPOSED TO WALLOW IN! I'M SO PATHETI-I-I-IC"
175** In a RunningGag in a particular episode she telekinethically summons a divan just so she can dramatically throw herself onto it whenever she wants to freak out about something... and is then [[ParodiedTrope parodied]] at the end when the couch doesn't arrive due to having been tied down, and she promptly switches to freaking out about not having a proper setting in which to freak out anymore.
176* The ''WesternAnimation/DastardlyAndMuttleyInTheirFlyingMachines'' episode "Stop Which Pigeon?" had the Yankee Doodle Pigeon impostor Dastardly hired (to fool the General) critiquing Dastardly's call for help from Muttley after their airborne bathtub plan failed as "a bit on the melodramatic side."
177* ''WesternAnimation/StevenUniverse'' has Pearl, who expresses her emotions with the subtlety of a brick, and thus can be a little melodramatic at times. Best exemplified in the episode "Say Uncle", where she absolutely ''loses it'' after Uncle Grandpa's cartoony hijinks lead to the Crystal Gems getting trapped in a WhiteVoidRoom:
178--> '''Pearl:''' WE'LL NEVER ESCAPE! ''THIS'' IS OUR NEW HOME!
179--> '''Garnet:''' Pearl, you're overreacting.
180--> '''Pearl:''' [[IResembleThatRemark I'M NOT OVERREACTING!]] ''(runs off screaming)''
181[[/folder]]

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