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Narrative
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alt title(s): Jellybean Moment
Mommy, why does Jump work in dungeons?
"By the time you figure out what was wrong with that, it won't matter anymore!"
—The Dark Lord Sauron, forger of the Ruling Ring, the One Ring To Rule Them All!, One Ring to Rule Them All Special Edition Angel: You both did great. And I think I did a good thing here tonight.
Wesley: Yes. We set the captives free.
Cordelia: Well, actually ...didn't we set a bunch of demons free?
Wesley: Oh... well... technically... yes.
<uncomfortable silence>
Half an hour after the show is over, J. Random Viewer is staring into his refrigerator, vaguely bemused by the fact that his six-pack of beer has somehow become a two-pack of beer. Rather than work out how this might have happened, it occurs to him to wonder how in the hell Sydney Bristow went from Hungary to Melbourne, Australia, then to LA, all within 24 hours.
It hadn't bothered him during the show. It wasn't until he discovered he was running short of beer that it became an issue.
Fridge Logic has been the writer's-room term for these little internal-consistency issues for a good while, as in "Don't sweat the fridge logic, we've got bigger fish to fry. We've only got 20 minutes left to work in three costume changes, a foreign language, and a weird wig." The phrase is often attributed to Alfred Hitchcock, who referred to the delayed recognition of a Plot Hole as "the icebox moment."
Stories with a Tomato Surprise may count on this phenomenon to prevent you from questioning oddities in what appears to be happening. By the time the Fridge Logic would have hit the audience, they've explained what was really going on, and those problems are explained to be clues that something was up.
Ronald D. Moore talks about Fridge Logic extensively on the commentary to Battlestar Galactica episode (2.02) "Valley of Darkness", likening it to the type of logic used to figure out whether the light in the fridge stays on when the door is closed.
The writer David Gerrold refers to this as the "refrigerator door question" in his book on writing, Worlds of Wonder, which is described as the question that hits you square in the face as you're opening your refrigerator door for a late-night snack after the movie is over. He also gives an example: in the movie E.T., if E.T. can make the bicycle fly at the end, why doesn't he use it in the beginning of the film to avoid pursuit?
Note that, with equal probability, some Fridge Logic leads to Wall Banger Land, and some leads to Nightmare Fuel City. And sometimes, Fridge Logic leads to Depression Fuel junction. Fridge Logic can turn an otherwise Happy Ending into a Bittersweet or outright Downer Ending, as Cracked.com's list of Six Most Depressing Happy Endings in Movie History—Angel, "The Ring"
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