Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Main / BigSecret

Go To

1->''"The Judge said 'Son, what's your alibi?\
2If you were somewhere else, then you won't have to die.'\
3I spoke not a word, 'though it meant my life.\
4For I'd been in the arms of my best friend's wife."''
5-->-- '''Lefty Frizzell''', ''The Long Black Veil''
6
7A suspect in an investigation has a DarkSecret, completely unrelated to the crime at hand.
8
9Because they are so obviously lying, or because there is such strong circumstantial evidence against them, the police waste a lot of time investigating them before they're cleared.
10
11Sometimes they will finally give in and reveal their secret, but in other cases the police dig it up, or another character will speak up to clear them, even though it may implicate the supporting character. If a character acts reluctant but coughs it up fairly quickly, odds are good that it's InfractionDistraction.
12
13A particular pattern involving adultery (e.g. the suspect has an alibi they can't use — they were in bed with a married individual and don't want to ruin the other's marriage) is very common and is currently being regularly subverted.
14
15On TV, having a Big Secret usually means that you're not the murderer, although you may be guilty of other things.
16
17This is a standard RedHerring. Alternatively, it can be a way for a [[MinorCrimeRevealsMajorPlot Minor Crime to reveal a Major Plot]], if investigating the Big Secret turns out to be more interesting and consequential than solving the original minor infraction.
18
19See also: YouDidntAsk, MysteriousPast, BeAsUnhelpfulAsPossible, ShamefulSourceOfKnowledge.
20----
21!!Examples:
22
23[[foldercontrol]]
24
25[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
26* In the anime ''Manga/LoveHina'', the episode "The Case of the Missing Hinata Apartment Money: A Mystery", Naru refuses to let the other residents search her room for the missing money and later grabs the turtle, Tama-chan, when it is seen to have a piece of paper stuck to it (which is thought to possibly be a piece of one of the bills). Of course, it turns out that Naru was not the culprit; rather, she did not want the others to learn that she treasured a photo of herself and Keitaro, which she had been looking for and which was the paper stuck on Tama's shell.
27* Yoshihisa has one during the second half of Episode 7 of ''Manga/KotouraSan''. This is [[OOCIsSeriousBusiness very much unlike him since he normally doesn't keep secrets at all]]. It's actually [[spoiler: a SurpriseParty for Haruka's birthday which is celebrated at the end of the episode]]. The fact that he managed to keep this away from [[{{Telepathy}} Haruka]] for those two weeks was extremely badass on his part!
28[[/folder]]
29
30[[folder:Comic Books]]
31* ''ComicBook/ThePunisher'': In "The Cell", Frank start planting the seeds of a PrisonRiot by stealing the corrupt guard Leonard's nametag, murdering a black inmate (and carving a swastika on the corpse's face) and placing it prominently on the body. When Leonard shows up, he realizes he can't prove it wasn't him, as the murder was committed at the same time as he was having sex with a white supremacist inmate.
32[[/folder]]
33
34[[folder:Films — Live-Action]]
35* In ''Film/CatchAFire'', Patrick Chamusso is held and tortured by the authorities. He is suspected of a bombing at a power plant, but cannot acquit himself because he spent the time with the mother of his secret 'illegitimate' son.
36* In ''Film/LegallyBlonde'', Brooke Taylor Windham (a famous fitness instructor) is accused of murdering her wealthy husband. She actually does have a concrete and easily proven alibi, [[spoiler:she was getting liposuction at the time of the murder]], but the nature of said alibi would ruin her [[spoiler: reputation as fitness guru]]. Elle does manage to get her to reveal this, but due to a Delta Nu Oath, is sworn to secrecy. Thus she has to prove her clients innocence while withholding this piece of information. [[spoiler:She eventually manages to out the real culprit via ThePerryMasonMethod, by pointing out a [[ConvictionByContradiction contradiction]] in ''her'' alibi, (and her hair).]]
37* In ''Film/TheReader'', Michael realizes that Hanna has made a series of strange, hasty moves, including [[AllGermansAreNazis working as a guard at Auschwitz]], to conceal [[spoiler:her illiteracy]]. Her continued efforts to do this result in her taking a far greater share of blame for an atrocity she was involved in than she should have, and those most responsible getting punished lightly.
38[[/folder]]
39
40[[folder:Literature]]
41* ''Literature/TwentySixSixtySix'': It's heavily implied that [[spoiler: the mayor, police, and the criminal underworld are all connected.]]
42* Almost always happens in Creator/AgathaChristie novels. Hercule Poirot sometimes comments that ''everyone'' has something to hide, and will therefore lie in an investigation.
43* In keeping with the above, Vimes muses in ''Literature/{{Night Watch|Discworld}}'' that part of the basis of police work is questioning people that privately believe cops can peer into their souls to find the big secret. You're just not allowed to [[SecretPolice slam their fingers in drawers until they give it up]].
44* Several examples from Creator/DorothyLSayers' Literature/LordPeterWimsey novels:
45** In ''Clouds of Witness'', the Duke was committing adultery when his sister's fiance committed suicide. The other woman was married to a vindictively [[GreenEyedMonster jealous]] man, [[spoiler:making her eventual decision to testify a serious danger, and also giving the Duke a motive to kill the dead man. Fortunately, Lord Peter manages to locate [[SmokingGun the dead man's suicide note]], and the jealous husband's attempt to kill her results in his accidental death]].
46** In ''Have His Carcase'', a boat was off shore when Harriet found the body. The owner was surly and obstructive, and his grandson had gone off to Ireland. [[spoiler:When they had constructed several theories involving this boat, the grandson reappeared and explained that he and his grandfather had been poaching on another fisherman's lobster pots.]]
47** In ''Whose Body?'', the man in whose apartment the body was found eventually reveals his alibi: he had been persuaded to go to a nightclub.
48* In Creator/JohnDicksonCarr's ''Death Watch'', the police are investigating a murder in a house, and announce that they are going to make a thorough search of everyone's rooms. A very prim [[OldMaid elderly spinster]] -- who was completely above suspicion until then -- suddenly starts acting extremely agitated, almost throwing a hysterical fit. Naturally, this draws attention to her. It turns out this very proper lady was hiding a [[PornStash cache of pornography magazines]] under her bed.
49* In Creator/CharlesDickens' ''Literature/ATaleOfTwoCities'', Charles Darnay refused to reveal even at his trial for treason that he is searching for the child of a family his father wronged.
50* Gintaro Aono in ''[[Literature/ErastFandorin Murder on the Leviathan]]'' has a big secret... [[spoiler:which is that he is a doctor and not a soldier, much to his shame. The other characters are European and most of them don't understand that this might be why he was hiding that, making him seem so much more suspicious]]. Likewise with some of the other suspects.
51* In Elizabeth Gaskell's ''Literature/NorthAndSouth'', Margaret is seen at a train station at night with a man. She cannot explain that he was her brother, as he is wanted for treason and was not supposed to be in the country.
52* In the ''Literature/SherlockHolmes'' story "The Boscombe Valley Mystery" the main suspect refused to tell police what he had argued with his father about moments before he died: [[spoiler:He was married and didn't want the woman he loved (who was in the courtroom) to know]].
53** In "The Man With the Twisted Lip", a beggar is caught as a suspect in murder. He keeps silent until Holmes deduces his big secret: [[spoiler:the beggar ''is'' the supposed murder victim - apparently, it pays much better than regular work]].
54* ''Literature/HarryPotter'':
55** In ''Literature/HarryPotterAndTheChamberOfSecrets'', Percy acts suspiciously because he doesn't want anyone to find out about his girlfriend Penelope Clearwater.
56** In ''Literature/HarryPotterAndTheGobletOfFire'', Ludo Bagman is set up as someone who may have put Harry's name into the Goblet of Fire. In the end, it turns out his big secret was that he made a bet on Harry winning the Triwizard Tournament in an attempt to cover his various gambling debts.
57* In ''Literature/GoneGirl'', Nick Dunne's suspicious behavior results in him becoming the prime suspect in his wife's disappearance. It turns out that Nick [[spoiler: is having an affair with a younger woman.]]
58* In Creator/IsaacAsimov's ''The Currents of Space'', a man is accused of a crime. The man accusing has been {{Mind Rape}}d by the criminal and only remembers that the latter used the accused one's name, and seeing the man towering over him. The suspect subverts the trope immediately by revealing his ''very'' well kept big secret - [[spoiler:extremely short legs which make it physically impossible for him to ''tower over'' anyone]].
59* ''Literature/NeverDreamOfDying'': When it becomes clear that the Union has [[TheMole an agent at the prison where Yassassin is kept]], the staff are all checked for eye tattoos. One innocent man initially refuses to see the [=MI6=] optometrist because he's suffering from a degenerative eye disease and is afraid that he'll be fired before he qualifies for his pension.
60* In ''Literature/OneOfUsIsLying'', the murder victim Simon specialised in rooting these out and publishing them on his gossip app, About That, revelling especially in taking down the popular and powerful. The dirt he was about to publish on the Bayview Four, coupled with the fact that they were with him when he died, make them the main (only) suspects in his murder.
61** Simon is caught at his own game when [[spoiler: Jake Riordan]] finds out he fixed the Junior Prom vote so he'd end up on the court. [[spoiler: The threat of being humiliated as he's done to so many others triggers the events of the story]].
62** The sequel concerns a game of Truth or Dare, in which the next "player" has twenty four hours to accept the Dare, or their big secret will be texted to the whole school.[[spoiler: This is intended to force people to accept the Dare, thus allowing Brandon's murder to look like a dare gone wrong.]]
63* ''Literature/ThreeMenOut'': Several of Leo Heller's innocent clients are embarrassed to say why they wanted to see him. One wanted Leo to make a mathematical estimate of how long his wealthy aunt would live so he could borrow against his inheritance. Another needed help doing her job and was afraid of showing weakness to ambitious subordinates. The third was receiving blackmail notes.
64* In ''Literature/InSpectre'', a man is the prime suspect in the murder of his ex-wife due to several pieces of circumstantial evidence. One of them is that a security camera caught him shopping with a woman resembling his ex-wife despite claiming he hadn't seen her since they divorced a year ago. He claims the woman in the video is a different person but can't say who. Also, when asked for an alibi, he only says, "It's not like I don't have an alibi" without explaining further, thereby implying that he's either lying or is refusing to reveal his alibi. In both cases, he's hiding that he's become friends and roommates with a yokai, specifically a yuki-onna or snow woman.
65[[/folder]]
66
67[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
68* In an episode of the fourth season of ''Series/TwentyFour'', James Hellar's suspected/interrogated son isn't in league with the terrorists after all... but he ''is'' guilty of attending an anti-war rally and of being gay.
69* ''Series/BostonLegal'':
70** One episode featured a case in which the secret was that the man was reluctant to use his alibi of having been in bed with another man.
71** The same secret was used in another episode, but made way more believable by the twist that it was one of Denny's first cases and had happened during the 1960s. Denny, being awesome, managed to get the man acquitted without revealing the truth.
72%%* ''Series/{{Broadchurch}}'': it would be easier to name the characters who do not have a secret to hide.
73* Season four of ''Series/{{Dexter}}''. Dexter didn't kill [[spoiler:his wife, Rita]], but he DID kill a whole lot of other people...
74* ''Series/DoctorWho'': In [[Recap/DoctorWhoS30E7TheUnicornAndTheWasp "The Unicorn and the Wasp"]], as a homage to the works of Creator/AgathaChristie, there are many: Lady Eddison's MysteriousPast, Colonel Hugh's [[ObfuscatingDisability able-bodied state]], Robina Redmond's real identity, and Roger's relationship with one of the footmen.
75* In ''Series/Forever2014'', the main secret is Henry's immortality. When he dies, his body vanishes and he reappears naked in the nearest large body of water, so a lot of tension comes from the risk of Henry dying in front of witnesses or cameras. In "Social Engineering" two different hackers learn his records are fake and threaten to expose him.
76** In a flashback to the 1950s in "New York Kids," Henry [[spoiler: let a man die when he might've been able to save him to keep others from discovering his immortality]]. He's regretted it ever since, and even quit being a practicing physician because he felt he'd violated his [[InconvenientHippocraticOath oath]].
77** Henry asks Abe his biggest secret in "New York Kids," and at first Abe says it's that he once sold an antique he knew was a fake. Later on, Abe admits his real biggest secret is that, shortly after being drafted into the Vietnam war, his squad was ambushed and Abe panicked and just played possum until it was over. Three men on his squad died, and he's wondered ever since if they might have lived if he'd joined the fight.
78** Played with in the pilot. Obviously, Henry doesn't want to call attention to the fact that he was in the subway crash (having died in it and reappeared in the East River), but Jo figures it out anyway, declaring him the prime suspect due to his presence and withholding of information. However, he is able to prove that the evidence against him isn't substantial enough, and finds evidence of another suspect, clearing himself surprisingly quickly, all while managing to avoid having his immortality discovered.
79* ''Every'' episode of ''Series/{{House}}'': Member of family gets sick. Cause unknown. History taken, however investigation reveals: a) she was taking drugs, and didn't tell anyone b) she was sleeping around c) and got pregnant d) AND an STD e) AND she's a dude. The clinic scenes, often a microcosm of the whole show, are this to the extreme: patient walks in with a sniffle, walks out with divorce papers.
80* ''Series/{{Monk}}'':
81** "[[Recap/MonkS1E7MrMonkAndTheOtherWoman Mr. Monk and the Other Woman]]": The reason Derrick suddenly went missing is that [[spoiler: he was suffering from schizophrenia, and two years ago, he went to a private clinic in Zurich]]. Monk doesn't find this out until he asks Monica if she's guilty of the murder. They wanted to keep the news from his family.
82** "Mr. Monk Joins A Cult": Father was in his cabin getting a cortisone shot for his bad back when Amanda Clark was killed. He doesn't want this to be made public because his image as the so-called "Eternal One" relies on his followers believing his claim that he has never been sick a day in his life.
83* In the ''Series/MurderSheWrote'' episode "[[Recap/MurderSheWroteS3E16SimonSaysColorMeDead Simon Says, "Color Me Dead]]", Irene's reluctance to bring her discovery of the body to law enforcement suggests to Jessica that she's hiding something. The "something" turns out to be the fact that she isn't biologically or legally Tommy's mother. She had become close to his birth mother, Irene Rutledge, who died bringing him into the world. She told the nurses she was Tommy's aunt, allowing her to take him, and has been on the run using Irene's identity ever since.
84* In any given episode of ''Series/NewTricks'', expect three or four of these to come tumbling out before the murderer of the week is rounded up.
85** One particularly beautiful example: one episode revolves around the 1984 murder of a peace protestor outside a [=NATO=] military base during an anti-nuclear protest. This, naturally, led to a lot of big secrets being dug up about spies and military 'spooks', government moles planted within the peace organization to inform on and discredit them, and secret plans to sabotage the military base's communications system -- and all of it revolves around a 'secret' that the victim apparently had. After all of this, what, then, was the Big Secret that got the victim killed? [[spoiler:Turns out he was sleeping with the girlfriend of one of the other peace protestors.]]
86* ''Series/OurMissBrooks'':
87** In "Stolen Aerial", Miss Brooks is able to get a discount from a wolfish television repairman who wants to go out with her. Miss Brooks is advised to keep her discount a secret so as not to get many more freeloaders wanting the same deal. Too late, Mrs. Davis and Walter Denton had already let the cat out of the bag. Miss Brooks gets deluged with broken aerials and even television sets needing repair. However, Miss Brooks keeps her promise; she hides the real reason for her sudden television-equipment windfall from Mr. Conklin. Unfortunately, the television repairman had accidentally lent Miss Brooks Mr. Conklin's checkered television aerial. Mr. Conklin concludes Miss Brooks is a [[Literature/OliverTwist "female Fagin"]], using Mr. Boynton and several high school students to run a television-equipment theft ring.
88** "The Jewel Robbery": Mr. Conklin accidentally breaks a jewelry store window when carrying a bad a laundry to the cleaners. Conklin believes the police want him for the inadvertent vandalism. In reality, they're looking for a thief who had robbed the jewelry store a short time before.
89* The fifth episode of ''Series/PoliceSquad'' has a recently released bomb-maker lying about his whereabouts on the night when someone planted a bomb that killed the judge who sentenced him to jail the next morning... because he had violated his parole by crossing state lines to go to a baseball game.
90* In an episode of ''Series/ThePractice'', a friend of Bobby's (who is also a lawyer) is protecting a prostitute in a murder case. The prostitute has an alibi (she was with a client at the time), but the client doesn't want to be revealed. The truth is that [[spoiler: the client was the lawyer himself, who is married.]]
91* ''Series/{{Scandal}}'': The first episode's case of the week deals with Lieutenant Sully St. James, who has been accused of murdering his girlfriend and needs Pope & Associates to clear his name. Ultimately, it's discovered that Sully's girlfriend was actually his [[TheBeard beard]] and that he was with his secret boyfriend at the time of her murder. As Sully is a Conservative, he is terrified of the truth about his sexuality becoming public knowledge but is ultimately persuaded to come out by Olivia so his name can be cleared.
92* ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'': "The Drumhead" features an example. After sabotage leads to an investigation of everyone on board the ''Enterprise'', the investigator's chief suspect becomes Ensign Tarses. A young man of [[HalfHumanHybrid mixed]] human/Vulcan heritage, it becomes clear he's hiding something and the investigative team is convinced he's behind the sabotage. Unfortunately for everyone, especially Ensign Tarses, it turns out that he's completely innocent of involvement in the original crime. [[spoiler:His big secret turns out to be that he lied about his heritage to avoid discrimination in Star Fleet: his heritage isn't Vulcan, it's Romulan.]]
93* ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'': In the episode "Dax," Curzon Dax is accused of treason and murder (and the Dax symbiont's current host, Jadzia Dax, is subjected to an extradition hearing over it). Although Curzon was innocent, Dax doesn't defend herself because at the time of the murder, Curzon was in bed with the murdered man's wife. The widow turns up to confess to the adultery to save Jadzia.
94[[/folder]]
95
96[[folder:Music]]
97* The song "Long Black Veil" is about a man who is hanged for murder because he refuses to reveal his alibi -- he was having an affair with his best friend's wife.
98* The Gary Moore song "Over the Hills and Far Away" (covered more recently by Finnish band Music/{{Nightwish|Band}}) describes a similar situation -- the main character is sent to prison for a robbery he didn't commit, because he'd spent the night in the arms of his best friend's wife and refuses to reveal the secret. Interestingly the reason he was convicted was because his pistol had been found at the scene, implying that someone knew about it and framed him knowing he wouldn't say it wasn't him.
99[[/folder]]
100
101[[folder:Theatre]]
102* ''Theatre/{{Hamilton}}'': As in real life, Alexander Hamilton is accused of financial impropriety because of a paper trail connecting him with James Reynolds. In fact, he is actually having an affair with Reynolds' wife, and paying him hush money to keep it a secret. Hamilton makes everything worse when he decides to confess to the affair in lurid detail in a published pamphlet, destroying his marriage and ruining his reputation further.
103[[/folder]]
104
105[[folder:Video Games]]
106* Commonly used in the ''Franchise/AceAttorney'' games, though Phoenix and Apollo usually manage to prove some point with the secret once it has been revealed.
107** A often used trick is for the defendant to be an accomplice to the murder, either blackmailed or hoping you can get them off without them having to go to jail themselves.
108** In one particularly brilliant subversion, Phoenix manages to get a suspect to reveal their Big Secret, to the surprise of the court...and then the Judge pretty much says So What, and Phoenix immediately flounders when he realizes that the Big Secret was entirely ''worthless''.
109* ''VisualNovel/DaughterForDessert'':
110** Averted with the protagonist's relationship with Amanda. It never comes out during Mortelli's investigation of the protagonist.
111** Played straight when the protagonist visits Kathy to ask why she hasn't shown up to work lately, and he finds out that [[spoiler:Kathy hasn't been writing the popular erotic stories she's been posting online. Amanda has.]]
112* ''VideoGame/{{Scratches}}''. On the backstory the former owner of the mansion, (where the game is set) was accused of murdering his wife since an eyewitness told that she saw him carrying her corpse to the yard; Since he died soon after and the mansion passed to his best friend, who was also a respected doctor, the police was left with no evidence and a lot of suspicion about their real secret: [[spoiler: All the time he had his [[MadmanInTheAttic deformed son locked in the basement]], who was the real culprit in his mother's death]].
113[[/folder]]
114
115[[folder:Western Animation]]
116* Virtually every episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Fillmore}}'' has these come out at some point, usually just before the clue pointing to the ''actual'' culprit turns up. These ranged from a BookDumb character turning out to actually be an A-student, to the suspected mascot-napper turning out to have pilfered a rival school's goat mascot.
117[[/folder]]

Top