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6''In any work that has both drama and comedy, the drama rises proportionally with the level of tension in the story. The comedy does the reverse.''
7
8A tragicomedy (similar to a {{dramedy}}) is a mix of lighter and darker material that uses humor to lighten the tension and drama as a way to show the audience that something serious is going on. This is a difficult balancing act to carry out, and only a few shows have ever done it successfully.
9
10In the worst cases, however, over the course of a series of books, films, television episodes, or other media, the subject might start out mainly comedy, switch to dramedy at about the halfway point, then continue to become [[DarkerAndEdgier darker]] [[CerebusSyndrome and less comedic]] until [[AnyoneCanDie beloved characters start getting wiped out with frightening regularity]]. Fans are then more justified in complaining that the series JumpedTheShark with a GenreShift.
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12To prevent this, a show might intentionally keep all the high-tension drama for climaxes and action scenes, while saving all the comedy for the filler moments when nothing too important is actually going on. Other times, outright comedy will be added to an otherwise work of straight tragedy.
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14If it does this by pushing comedic characters OutOfFocus or having them PutOnABus, that's ShooOutTheClowns. If the work frequently shifts between tragedy and comedy without warning, that's MoodWhiplash. If the ''actual plot'' has jumped the tracks and gone in a completely different direction, it's HalfwayPlotSwitch -- the trope on this page only implies a tone change.
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16Titles that have undergone CerebusSyndrome fall under this trope, CerebusRollercoaster even more so.
17
18----
19!!Examples:
20
21[[foldercontrol]]
22
23[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
24* ''Manga/ChronoCrusade'' starts out as a fun action-adventure show with supernatural elements. Although there's hints of a darker tone from the start (the main characters are fighting demons, after all), the ending takes a stark turn for the dramatic after a climatic battle at a festival midway through the series. The manga keeps enough comedic moments in the series that it might be closer to MoodWhiplash, but the [[DarkerAndEdgier anime]] heads full throttle into deep, dark tragedy until it heads straight into an infamous TearJerker ending. In both versions, [[spoiler:TheHeroDies]] at the end of the series.
25* ''Anime/CowboyBebop'' had Ed and Ein do a quick fade any time the plot took a dark turn -- their presence equaled comedy. [[spoiler:[[ShooOutTheClowns They left the show two episodes before the]] BittersweetEnding.]]
26* ''Manga/DGrayMan'' starts out a mix of comedy and drama with a healthy dash of horror thrown in. The comedy has been disappearing fast with only a few lighter hearted moments thrown in that are quickly squashed by the next horrible event.
27* ''Anime/DeathParade'' balances its dark themes and inherently somber setting with moments of levity, some romance, and plenty of BlackComedy. Episodes that feature the main cast during their time off are nice and breezy, and usually only serve to develop interpersonal relationships without advancing the overall plot. Since the series is somewhat episodic , the tone of certain episodes relies on the nature of their respective [[OneShotCharacter one shot characters]]. Most of these episodes are some shade of dark, but episodes 3 and 6 are notably LighterAndSofter. The latter especially stands out for its slapstick shenanigans, [[RefugeInAudacity outrageous setup]], and ''extremely'' [[GleefulAndGrumpyPairing contrasting characters]]. These episodes do very little to advance the plot and develop the main duo, however, and the episodes that ''are'' devoted to doing so are generally DarkerAndEdgier. The latter half of the series ramps up the tension as the MythArc unfolds.
28* ''Manga/ElfenLied'' is one of the darker tragicomedies. It does have its silly moments, such as when Nyu is awake early on in the manga, but then becomes ''even darker'' after the point where the anime cuts off, where [[spoiler:Kakuzawa initiates the final part of his plan to take over the world by infecting the population with the Diclonius virus.]] Appropriately enough, the comedy portion of the manga is left in the omakes, which is not canon.
29* ''Manga/NegimaMagisterNegiMagi'' does a good job with this once the CerebusSyndrome kicks in, with the heavily dramatic moments more or less balanced out by comedic moments.
30* {{Lampshade|Hanging}}d in ''Literature/{{Slayers}}'' when a comedic moment happens in the middle of the dramatic battle against the BigBad. When the funny is over, a character breaks the FourthWall to explain that the show had gotten a little ''too'' dramatic, so the funny moment had to happen.
31* ''Anime/TengenToppaGurrenLagann'' veers sharply into drama after episode sixteen, presses that throttle down, and then abruptly releases it for the last three episodes... only to slam it back down for its ending. Viewers were sharply divided.
32* ''Manga/{{Trigun}}'' notably was very light hearted in the first half, and barring some of the really deeper moments such as episode six's ending never really loses its humor. Things took a deeper turn when the main plot kicked in during the second half but still threw in an occasional gag, usually in the first half of the episode. Then during the final 5-6 episodes the comedy was all but dropped. In the case of the manga it was mostly averted: while the main, more dramatic story kicked in much earlier, the humor, while a little more sparse, never completely disappeared even as things got even more serious. For an example: [[spoiler: take the following events after Wolfwood's death. In the anime, the episode after we see Vash breaking down at the beginning of the episode and [[FromBadToWorse it goes downhill]] from there for him. In the manga, the chapter after Wolfwood's death has Vash connecting with his new ally Livio and there's a humorous breakfast scene with the two eating to get their strength back up.]]
33* ''Manga/YamadaKunAndTheSevenWitches'' has a notably more serious feel during Rika's arc which both leads up to and portrays the DarkestHour in Yamada's life when his friends have forgotten everything about him and rejected him. Here, the series has a clear {{dramedy}} feel while it's more of a traditional comedy in the SliceOfLife chapters.
34[[/folder]]
35
36[[folder:Comic Books]]
37* ''ComicBook/{{Bone}}'' starts out with characters right out of a cartoon short before they get caught up in epic fantasy. There's elements of both at all points of the story, but notably more silliness in the beginning and more of the epic stuff at the end.
38* Notably {{Averted|Trope}} in ''ComicBook/JusticeLeagueInternational'', the classic Giffen-[=DeMatteis=] run, with the story arc "Breakdowns". As the name might suggest, "Breakdowns" was one of the darkest times in the entire history of the Justice League, in any of its incarnations. It was also hysterically funny.
39[[/folder]]
40
41[[folder:Films -- Animated]]
42* ''WesternAnimation/{{Frozen|2013}}'' plays this pretty straight, with the funnier moments and musical numbers concentrated more in the first half while the harder drama comes into play more in the second half. Ironically, PluckyComicRelief character Olaf doesn't show up until the halfway point, which explains why his comedy is more limited than the [[NeverTrustATrailer trailers]] would have you believe. He does help counteract the increased seriousness of the main characters at that point, however. Even some of his comedy is actually BlackComedy.
43[[/folder]]
44
45[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
46* {{Inverted|Trope}} by ''Film/BeingThere'', which begins with serious scenes of a developmentally delayed man being evicted from his home when his employer dies, but it quickly turns to comedy once the main character is on his own.
47* ''Film/BicentennialMan'': The film starts with the comedic antics of a (LiteralMinded) RobotButler and explores the potential character depth available to said robot. However, a HalfwayPlotSwitch to RomanticComedy turns the primary conflict into making Portia happy. Because the World Congress determines if Andrew is human enough to marry Portia, whenever they appear on-screen the comedic elements disappear entirely.
48* ''Film/TheCableGuy'': the comedy begins zany and gets progressively darker, until the film becomes something of a psychological thriller with jokes. Audiences at the time were famously unprepared for such a dark turn from Creator/JimCarrey.
49* The musical ''Theatre/{{Camelot}}'' with Richard Harris does this amazingly well. The movie starts out as a light-hearted comedy, then very gradually gets darker leading to an inevitable, heart-wrenching conclusion. The high point is Burton/Arthur's reprisal of the lighthearted title song from the beginning, now sung dramatically, and his agony at the line, "For one brief shining moment!"
50* ''Film/{{Click}}'', an Creator/AdamSandler movie, fits this trope to a T. It starts out as a film with a guy who uses a magical remote to see a jogger's boobs jiggle in slow-mo, and begins a little more dramatic when he accidentally jumps one year ahead, but still had plenty of comedy. When he jumps ahead, he's there corporeally, but not mentally, he's basically zoned out, on "auto-pilot", so his social life falls apart, but for some reason he's a great architect. Then he jumps ten years into the future, where his wife left him, and he's severely overweight. It just goes straight into drama, leaving comedy in the dust when [[spoiler:he jumps past his father's death, and then comes into his own]]. But then say hello to comedy after the climax [[spoiler:it was AllJustADream, or it was time traveled away, take your pick]].
51* ''Film/DoTheRightThing'': While not a total comedy, the film features many slice of life comedic moments peppered between racial tensions... [[spoiler:before a giant riot occurs over the death of a local black youth. Trash can flying ensues]].
52* The soundtrack for ''Film/EdwardScissorhands'' is divided into two "acts" precisely because of this trope - it starts out rather sunnily, but begins to move down a darker path as Edward falls in love with Kim (and rejects Joyce's advances). Once Edward participates in the house robbery, the comedy gradually drains from the film altogether.
53* ''Film/GingerSnaps'' starts off as an amusing dark comedy about two sisters obsessed with death and their curt reactions to the world around them, with Ginger's first period driving a number of comedic bits (their mother's celebratory strawberry cake, the over enthusiastic nurse, etc.). Once the BodyHorror gets going, though, and bodies start piling up, the comedy slowly fades away, and by [[TearJerker the end]] absolutely no one's laughing.
54* ''Film/GoodMorningVietnam''
55* ''Film/InBruges'', although the tragic elements are there from the beginning, and there is still a bit of BlackComedy left towards the end.
56* ''Film/JojoRabbit'': The film gets ever-so-gradually less farcical until [[spoiler:the death of Rosie]] shoves the movie into something more like a straightforward war drama with some jokes.
57* In ''Film/TheMuppetChristmasCarol'', Gonzo and Rizzo (the comic relief {{Narrator}} and the comic relief GreekChorus, respectively) disappear after the arrival of The Ghost Of Christmas Yet To Come... but not before a little LampshadeHanging:
58-->'''Rizzo:''' I don't think I can watch any more!\
59'''Gonzo:''' When you're right, you're right. [[NoFourthWall (Turning to face the audience:)]] You're on your own, folks. [[ShooOutTheClowns We'll meet you at the finale]]!\
60''(after the Christmas Yet To Come sequence is over)''\
61'''Scrooge:''' I'm home.\
62'''Gonzo:''' ''(suddenly narrating again)'' Yes. The bedposts were his own, the bed was his own, the room was his own.\
63''(cut to Gonzo and Rizzo watching Scrooge through the window)''\
64'''Rizzo:''' Hi, guys! We're back!\
65'''Gonzo:''' We promised we would be.
66* ''Film/TheNinthConfiguration'' starts out as a farce highlighting the absurd antics of the asylum inmates, but then goes on to focus more on the theological discussions between Col. Kane and Capt. Cutshaw, which eventually culminates in a dramatic and tragic reveal about Col. Kane.
67* ''Film/{{Parasite|2019}}'': The first two-thirds of the movie are a comedic farce about the poor Kim family ingratiating themselves with the [[UpperClassTwit rich but ignorant]] Park family. However, when [[spoiler:the previous maid that the Kims got fired comes back and their apartment gets flooded, the story starts to take a much more serious turn and resolves in what's largely a DownerEnding]].
68* ''Film/TheRoom2003'' actually follows this pretty rigidly. The first half is mostly baffling moments of comedy and meandering subplots, while the second half cuts away all the subplots in favour of the main infidelity storyline, before the protagonist is DrivenToSuicide. (Though it's [[SoBadItsGood so badly acted]] that even the dramatic parts are unintentionally funny.)
69* While the book doesn't fit this trope, and the film is pretty [[SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism cynical]] overall, ''Literature/AScannerDarkly'''s film adaptation was rather lighthearted for the first 53 minutes. [[spoiler:Then Luckman collapses.]] Things get progressively darker after that.
70* ''Film/ShaunOfTheDead'' does this to good effect.
71* ''Film/SingStreet'' is already a dramedy about teens starting a rock band, but the tone becomes more serious when [[spoiler:Conor's parents decide to split]].
72* The majority of ''Film/StarTrekIVTheVoyageHome'' is played for comedy, but it becomes dramatic towards the end with the whale hunters and the return to the future. The beginning of the film when the probe reaches Earth and the crew heads back in time is also played mostly seriously.
73* ''Film/StrangerThanFiction''. [[NeverTrustATrailer The trailer lied]].
74* ''Film/ThirdStar'' is hilarious throughout, despite having [[BlackComedy very dark subject matter]] but in the last half hour everything starts to go horribly wrong.
75* ''Film/TropicThunder'', of all movies, has all three lead characters be crippled by questions of identity and self-worth while the climax is going down. It doesn't last too long, but it's very strange for a wacked-out Ben Stiller farce which earlier on had the lead character wearing a panda's head like a hat.
76* ''Film/{{Underground}}'' gets less comedic and more tragic as it goes on, though it has both throughout.
77* ''Film/WhosAfraidOfVirginiaWoolf'' (a fairly faithful adaptation of an Creator/EdwardAlbee play of the same name) fits this. One troper has described it as "a movie that starts out as a dark comedy then gets darker and darker until it's not even a comedy any more." There are still ''jokes'' all the way through, but they get increasingly nasty and bitter.
78* ''Film/WithnailAndI'' is a barrel of laughs, but [[spoiler:it ends on a firmly bittersweet note that's much more bitter than it is sweet]].
79* ''Film/TheWorldsEnd'' somehow maintains equal parts hilarious comedy and serious drama all the way to the end when it adds tear-jerker pathos to the mix. You're horrified by Gary King's antics even while you are laughing helplessly at them.
80[[/folder]]
81
82[[folder:Literature]]
83* ''Literature/CatchTwentyTwo'', despite being hilarious as a whole, becomes increasingly dark as the story progresses, eventually throwing out all comedy in one of the final chapters. Subverted in some ways, considering that before it gets truly horrific, many of the moments of comedy could, if observed objectively, be taken for equally horrifying. This suggests that the increasingly serious tone and likewise decrease in jokes is more an intentional device of the writer and not a direct consequence of the trope.
84** Since the novel continually re-visits previous events, it contains a lot of things that are initially humorous, then tragic as they are explained. A good example would be [[spoiler:the dead man in Yossarian's tent]].
85* ''Literature/EverythingIsIlluminated''. It's rather pronounced in the [[FilmOfTheBook film]].
86* This is the course taken by the increasingly dark ''Literature/HarryPotter'' series. Also, each individual volume internally features this: if Harry's alone, facing his destiny, it'll be deadly serious. If he's with his friends, someone will crack a joke at some point.
87** This eventually reached the point where the trailers of ''Film/HarryPotter'' movies strikingly resemble a preview of a horror film.
88* ''Literature/TheInvisibleMan'' starts out as a lighthearted comedy but takes a darker turn halfway through.
89* ''Literature/OneFlewOverTheCuckoosNest'' starts out fairly comedic with the rebellious antics of [=McMurphy=] and the other patients, but culminates in the tragic suicide of Billy Bibbit and the lobotomization (and subsequent MercyKill) of [=McMurphy=]. The first half of the film is even more comedic in tone.
90[[/folder]]
91
92[[folder:Live Action TV]]
93* In a two-part arc on ''Series/BarneyMiller'', department policy and the stringpulling of Inspector Luger cause the 12th precinct to be converted into a homicide division. At first it's the occasion for slightly darker than usual gags about murder. Then a gruff shopkeeper is killed after Barney had had to turn him away before because his case didn't involve homicide. That largely stops the comedy until TheDenouement in which the squad is reassigned to a lighter felony.
94* {{Defied|Trope}} on ''Series/CrazyExGirlfriend''. Petty or comedic situations happen along side the dire ones. Managing the two in tandem ties into the show's themes surrounding mental health and relationship boundaries.
95* Creator/TylerPerry's ''Series/HouseOfPayne'' has a tendency towards this which changes depending on which character is in the spotlight at the moment.
96* ''Series/{{MASH}}'' is the ultimate example of this trope in American pop culture. Its reputation shifted from being among the zaniest of zany sitcoms (by the standards of the time) to TearJerker-a-minute episodes.
97** One great example, and probably a turning point for the series in this regard, was the episode with Henry Blake's departure, which is filled with corny in-jokes about the guy and his history on the show right up until the [[BusCrash abrupt, heart-rending, soul-crushing last-minute surprise]].
98** That said, there was plenty of serious stuff early on -- take "Sometimes You Hear The Bullet". The main difference is in the (dis)integration of the elements rather than the amount of either: in the early days comedy and tragedy often happened back-to-back in the same situation, whereas in later years episodes would often feature distinct "funny" and "serious" plotlines.
99* The first twenty or so minutes of any ''Series/{{Scrubs}}'' episode will be hilarious; the rest will be depressing.
100* ''Series/StargateSG1'':
101** The episode "[[GroundhogDayLoop Window of Opportunity]]" is very funny in almost every scene -- with the exception of the very dramatic climax.
102** "Urgo" is pretty much the same way (and when the climax ends, the humor comes back).
103* You know you're watching ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'' when, apart from the one or two [[BreatherEpisode Breather Episodes]] they do a season, the episodes have about ten minutes worth of cracky fun and the other thirty is laced with a deep depression. And then of course, one of those [[BreatherEpisode Breather Episodes]] will be something like "Mystery Spot," where the cracky fun/depression ratio is reversed: "Hilarious, hilarious... ''[[TearJerker Oh my god]]!''"
104* The 1994 Scottish 6-Part miniseries, ''Series/TakinOverTheAsylum'' follows this trope. The first 3 episodes are a quirky {{Dramedy}} whereas the last 3 episodes are much darker, starting with the [[WhamEpisode death]] of a major character at the end of Episode 4.
105[[/folder]]
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107[[folder:Theatre]]
108* The term "tragicomedy" was originally coined to describe plays that started out like tragedies but ended with redemption and reconciliation instead of numerous deaths. John Fletcher and Philip Massinger were particularly well known for their tragicomedies, and for a time the form was so popular that some of Shakespeare's darker tragedies were given LighterAndSofter revisions with happier endings.
109* A lot of light-hearted operas (e.g. ''Theatre/LaBoheme'', ''Theatre/DonGiovanni'', ''Theatre/{{Carmen}}'', ''Theatre/LaTraviata'' or pretty much any opera in the "fallen woman" genre, etc.) take a dive toward the dramatic in the final act. Mozart himself said that any good comic opera needs at least one ''seria'' (read: dramatic opera) character or arc.
110* The musical ''[[Theatre/SeventeenSeventySix 1776]]'' follows a similar arc. It begins comedically, then darkens; and while it has a happy ending, it has to travel through some very dark territory to get there.
111* ''Theatre/{{Carousel}}'' begins as a period-flavored romantic comedy, but gradually develops into a tragic romance.
112* The theatrical version of Disney's ''Theatre/TheHunchbackOfNotreDame'' becomes one of these. Most of the play follows the movie's plot with comedy sprinkled around (although the comedic gargoyles are removed). Then, unlike the movie, [[spoiler:Esmeralda dies]]. Then [[spoiler:Quasimodo throws Frollo to his death]]. Then (depending on the production), [[spoiler:Quasimodo takes Esmeralda's body into Notre Dame's crypt to die alone with her]]. So its a tad bit more depressing to say the least.
113* ''Theatre/IntoTheWoods''. The first half is set up as a mix of traditional fairy tales, with plenty of humour, although some of it is BlackComedy due to not going with a Disneyfied version of all of the tales (the fate of Cinderella's stepsisters in particular stand out). The second act shows the fallout of everything that happened to achieve the "happily ever after" of the first act. Despite starting with some very funny scenes, it quickly takes a turn for the worse and character start dropping like flies. There's even a reprise of a very funny song, ''Agony'', a duet for the two Princes talking about wanting unreachable women, which is still hilarious but has a darker undertone due to the fact that they are now cheating on the wives they spent the first act trying to get.
114* ''Theatre/LittleShopOfHorrors'' fits this law, though [[Film/LittleShopOfHorrors the film adaptation]] does not.
115* ''Petrushka'' is a pretty lighthearted ballet for the first tableau, but not so much for the second and third tableaus, where the puppets are on their own.
116* Up until Act III, and aside from the opening, ''Theatre/RomeoAndJuliet'' is essentially a RomanticComedy.
117* ''Theatre/RosencrantzAndGuildensternAreDead''.
118* ''Theatre/{{Salome}}'', especially in its operatic adaptation which composer Richard Strauss once described as "ein Scherzo mit tödlichem Ausgang" (a scherzo with a fatal conclusion).
119* ''Theatre/SweeneyToddTheDemonBarberOfFleetStreet'' starts off as a BlackComedy, though the end is not very funny.
120* [[InvertedTrope Inverted]] by [[JustForFun/TheZerothLawOfTropeExamples William Shakespeare's]] ''Theatre/TheWintersTale'', one of the earliest tragicomedies. The first half is a gloomy, melodramatic, and heartbreaking tragedy of a king who wrongfully suspects his wife of infidelity. Then a guy gets [[BearsAreBadNews eaten by a bear]], and it becomes a pastoral romantic comedy.
121[[/folder]]
122
123[[folder:Video Games]]
124* While ''VideoGame/ConkersBadFurDay'' is mostly a very funny game there are some grim moments breaking through the facade. While before this is mostly cruelty against minor characters, this falls back on Conker himself in the ending. [[spoiler:After all the time Conker was searching for his girlfriend, he finally finds her only to lose her, perhaps even twice: Not only does she seem quite aloof and not very happy to see him, she also dies at the end. Afterwards, he gets a chance to wish her back to life, but just momentarily forgets about her. In the end he is "King of all the lands", but ultimately without any of the happiness that his wealth could otherwise afford him. He gives an epic monologue on materialism ending with "The grass is always greener, and you don't really know what it is you have until it's gone...gone...gone...". At the end we see him in the Tavern again, alone and drinking, afterwards waggling off in an uncertain future.]] It's only ''slightly'' better than the original planned ending where [[spoiler:Conker shoots himself]].
125* ''VideoGame/RadiataStories'' starts out very goofy and remains so for most of its running time, with serious moments scattered around. However, as both paths near their end, the comedy dies out and the story gets very serious, and the game ends with either a BittersweetEnding or DownerEnding, with the ending where Ganz kills himself and humanity is implied to be destroyed being the BittersweetEnding!
126[[/folder]]
127
128[[folder:Webcomics]]
129* Present in ''Webcomic/BittersweetCandyBowl''; [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} David]] is seldom around when things get bad.
130* ''Webcomic/EverydayHeroes'' also plays this trope straight. The first few chapters showed a superhero treating crime-fighting like a regular 9-to-5 job, and his super-powered daughter trying to be a normal high school student. Then we get a flashback into Jane's past, and all of a sudden her boss is pure evil and her best friend gets killed. More recent chapters have lightened up and brought back the comedy.
131* From Chapter 5 on, every page of ''Webcomic/GunnerkriggCourt'' featured [[TheRant commentary]] (usually [[DeadpanSnarker quite ]][[TrollingCreator wry]]) by the author below the comic. In Chapter 16, just before the plot's excursion into PsychologicalHorror territory, the comments abruptly stopped. When several fans complained about the missing commentary, Tom replied:
132-->"Page notes will return when the chapter stops being about dead people. Come on."
133* ''Webcomic/{{Homestuck}}'' plays around with this. At the beginning, it's a zany story about a somewhat dimwitted nerdy kid running around his house doing random things with his quirky clown-obsessed father while his friend manipulated his house through a computer game, to his dismay. Then it turns out the game is an ArtifactOfDoom bringing about the apocalypse, but the comic still stays funny. Fast-forward a few Acts, and the ComedicSociopath PunchClockVillain with a distaste for the silly costumes his superiors make him wear has become a monster who massacres countless {{Redshirt}}s. That's pretty dark, but there are still plenty of jokes to be heard. Eventually, though, major characters start [[AnyoneCanDie dropping like flies]], and there's often very little humor for long stretches. However, even when things are extremely serious, the comic often delights in [[BlackComedy treating them like jokes]], and its moments of genuine lightheartedness never go away completely, coming back especially in force at the beginning of Act 6. (Not that this puts a damper on the seriousness at all)
134** This has given rise to the meme of "MS Pain Adventures", an edited image deliberately ramping up the grimdark by putting the main characters on a battlefield drenched with blood, as well another of the words "Kids and Fun!" pasted over scenes of death and destruction.
135** The climax, [S]: Collide, shows the heroes facing against all of the major villains... alongside Karkat's battle against the InvincibleMinorMinion Clover.
136* ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick'' mostly averts this and manages to have a joke (or five) in almost every strip, no matter how plot critical. Somehow it does this without undermining either the comedy or the drama.
137** Even comics with deaths of major characters (such as [[spoiler:the deaths of [[http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0443.html Roy]] and [[http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0464.html Miko]]]]) contain at least one humorous line.
138** The [[http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0639.html single darkest strip in the entirety of the comic]] is also not without humor.
139** The trope is played straight in [[http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0593.html this strip]], where the first page, however grim, contains some amounts of humor (actually more than the ones mentioned before), but by the second page it shifts to a complete TearJerker with no comedy at all.
140* ''Webcomic/SluggyFreelance'' tends to be especially obvious with this trope.
141** Subverted in [[http://www.sluggy.com/daily.php?date=010309 this]] strip when Riff makes a wisecrack while fighting K'Z'K, a demon who has [[DemonicPossession possessed]] his ex-girlfriend Gwynn.
142--->'''Zoe:''' Was that supposed to be a ''joke?'' ''This is no time for jokes!''\
143'''Riff:''' Sorry, my angst-train derailed for a minute there. ''Die, Kizke, die!''
144** Also note that K'Z'K was at least once defeated by puns.
145* The Webcomic/WalkyVerse usually follows this law to a T. Also subverted/lampshaded by the author, David Willis, by stating that "before we can proceed [with the excessive drama], this strip needs an EMERGENCY [[TheComicallySerious BATMAN]] INFUSION!"
146** Also noticeably spoofed with - well, you know those little plastic tabs on battery-operated toys? Where the battery won't work until you pull it? [[http://www.shortpacked.com/2006/comic/book-2-pulls-the-drama-tag/06-the-drama-tag/tab/ Robin pulls a tag marked "Drama".]]
147[[/folder]]
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149[[folder:Web Original]]
150* ''WebVideo/DoctorHorriblesSingAlongBlog'' does this, [[spoiler:complete with downer ending]], though YMMV.
151* {{Parodied|Trope}} in [[http://team-mm10.tripod.com/epiloguespace.html an epilogue]] by the StylisticSuck ''VideoGame/MegaMan10'' team, ''[[http://team-mm10.tripod.com/ Aggravated Assault / Heaven's Hammarz]]''. Space is SeriousBusiness, and you're not allowed to make jokes in space, or else you'll be thrown out the airlock. Naturally, a lot of drama unfolds during the protagonists' adventure in space, although there is an odd scene of the parents of [[Literature/TheTwilightSaga Vampire]] [[Manga/DragonBall Trunks]] (Sheep Babe's supposed love interest) trying to get him to marry a ham sandwich. At the climax of the story, Commando Man explains to Sheep Babe that [[spoiler:"marry" in vampire terms means [[IAmAHumanitarian to eat]], explaining the ham sandwich scene]]. He then gets thrown out the airlock despite his protest that he wasn't joking.
152* ''WebAnimation/RedVsBlue'' more often that not. During [[WebAnimation/RedVsBlueTheBloodGulchChronicles the earlier seasons]], it tries to keep the zany comedy on top by splitting more serious stuff onto miniseries. But then CerebusSyndrome kicks in, making a deeper plot take precedence - though that means a world and characters that try to take themselves seriously have to welcome the previously established cast of bickering/weird/clueless idiots, a contrast that makes them even funnier.
153* ''Literature/TheSagaOfTuck'' also follows this to a T: when [[spoiler:Tuck is beaten and left near death StuffedIntoALocker, all the cracking wise grinds to a halt until he's out of the hospital]]. This annoyed a few fans who accused it of CerebusSyndrome.
154[[/folder]]
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156[[folder:Western Animation]]
157* {{Subverted|Trope}} in ''WesternAnimation/AdventureTime'' on the "Holly Jolly Secrets" episode. We're learning [[TheReveal the big secret]] revealing [[spoiler:a recurring antagonist, [[TheSociopath the Ice King]], as a TragicVillain]]. Literally right after this, Jake tries to humorously say, "drama booomb~!" but the comedy is just not there, not for the audience or any other characters. The rest of the episode following that has at least one other joke, and it's mixed in with what is supposed to be an odd mix of tragedy and heartwarming.
158* ''WesternAnimation/MoralOrel'' was famous for this across its entire run. The first season consists of Orel getting into wacky hijinks as he tries to be a good Christian boy in a town where AdultsAreUseless. The seeds of tragedy were always there, but even the darker elements of the characters were PlayedForLaughs. Then the show gradually dipped more and more into serious territory, culminating in the Season Two finale "Nature," where Orel's abusive father Clay breaks down, shoots Orel in the leg, then fails to get him help. The final season was so bleak that Cartoon Network executives pointed out that the entire run of episodes only had a single joke--and creator Dino Stamatopoulos asked them where it was ''so he could remove it.'' Part of this can be attributed to CreatorBreakdown: Stamatopoulos was going through a bitter divorce during the second season, and a lot of his own emotions clearly manifest in the characters.
159* ''WesternAnimation/SamuraiJack'' swings erratically between the SlidingScaleOfSillinessVersusSeriousness, but it's relatively rare for an episode to have significant amounts of comedy ''and'' drama. The laughs tend to be fairly separated.
160* Almost totally averted by ''WesternAnimation/TheVentureBrothers''. The jokes almost never stop, no matter how serious things get. WordOfGod claims it actually ruined an intended MoralEventHorizon - The Monarch once put a hooker through a death course, making references to shows like ''Series/{{Lost}}''. The creators intended this to be his big creepy MoralEventHorizon, but people just found it hilarious. Otherwise, it's done very well.
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