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The End... Or Is It? aka: Or Is It
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An Ending Trope when the closing of the show reveals that there still a villain, monster or threat out there, creating doubt as there whether or not the heroes have achieved a final victory. This is usually a type of Sequel Hook, and often done as The Stinger.
See also Eye Awaken, Finger Twitching Revival, and Not Quite Dead.
Compare Or Was It a Dream?, Real After All, and Schrödinger's Butterfly.
Examples:
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Anime and Manga
- The ending of Noir: Sure, Mirielle and Kirika walk off all happy and everything, but... WHAT THE HELL WERE THOSE GUNSHOTS ALL ABOUT?
- Monster. The last thing shown is Johan's hospital bed. Johan — who was presumably in a coma — isn't in it.
- The ending of the manga Oldboy strongly implies that there are still unresolved plot issues.
- Code Geass — The VERY LAST SCENE. Lelouch is dead, right? Who knows! It depends on what the audience makes of the scene and the existing pieces of Word Of God. There's a Really Dead Montage, and the writer says he is, but the director's ambivalent attitude towards whether the ending is supposed to be "happy" or not appears to be a case of Shrug of God. The fans are, generally speaking, split in half over the issue.
- Sometimes, even the titular teacher in Hell Teacher Nube is unable to put a permanent end to the Monster of the Week — the best he can do is save his students from the threat, or it escapes before he can exorcise it. The series balances this out with frequent Aesops about not trusting that mysterious salesman with the shifty grin, or not talking to strangers (especially if they look suspicious or appear out of nowhere in the middle of the night,) or staying the hell away from the masked killer with the Sinister Scythe.
- Shaman King. At the end of Kang Zeng Bang, we see Hao still alive and well and doing what he likes. Also followed up in Shaman King: Flowers when Hana, Yoh and Anna's son, is confronted by Hao.
Comic Books
- In the Groo The Wanderer story "The Aranja", Groo and Chakaal are hired to kill a giant spider that is terrorizing a village. Stumbling drunkenly around the spider's cave, Groo notices something he figures is important and tries to tell Chakaal, who is unfortunately too busy to listen. Soon after, Groo has forgotten the whole thing. As the heroes depart at the end of the story, the readers are shown what Groo discovered: The aranja was a female, and it had laid several eggs, which are just starting to hatch...
- Watchmen closes on a shot of Rorschach's journal in the office of the New Frontiersman, implying that there's a possibility Veidt's Xanatos Gambit may be revealed to the world, undoing the fragile peace that has been worked together in the aftermath of what everyone assumes is an attack from an Eldritch Abomination. A rare example of where a sequel was not planned, although given the nature of the comics industry lately, it's possible one may be made eventually anyway despite Moore's wishes.
Film
- From the Alien series:
- Alien leaves open the possibility that the cat that Ripley takes along with her as she flees the soon-to-be-nuked ship has been infected. This is, of course, proven untrue in the second film, and quickly takes a back seat to the fact that the title monster stowed away on Ripley's escape pod. There was also an original Twist Ending planned: the Xenomorph bites Ripley's head off, then records a message in her voice, and relaxes, waiting to get picked up.
- After the credits of Aliens there is silence and a dark screen. Then the organic squelch of an egg opening can be heard...
- The last shot in the remake of Ocean's Eleven shows Ocean, free from jail and reunited with his girl, driving past the camera and seemingly off into the sunset, but after a fairly long delay, we are passed by another car which seems to be following them, driven by two mooks of the Big Bad.
- Actually, if you listen to the dialogue between Danny and Rusty as they approach the car, it is implied that they already know they're being followed and will lose their tail shortly afterwards. At least until the Ocean's 12.
- Occurs at the end of the film Space Mutiny, notable only because of the commentary when it became an episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000. A slow, meandering shot of the villainous Kalgan's body, and...:
Servo: And His Eyes Open. Crow: An-n-n-nd his eyes open. Mike: His eyes open. Servo: Eyes open. Crow: Eyes open. Mike: His EYES open. Crow: Come ON! Servo: Man!
- Happens quite famously at the end of the first Friday the 13th film and most subsequent ones, insinuating that the threat is not in fact over.
- Humorously, the first one was just meant to be a final scare, not a Sequel Hook. Obviously, it's become one with all the other movies.
- The film version of the musical Little Shop of Horrors had an Audrey II cutting growing in the garden of Seymour and Audrey's house. (Actually, this ending was a replacement for the original Downer Ending, which test audiences disliked.)
- Used at the end of Big Trouble in Little China. (What is it with Asian villains and this?)
- Employee Of The Month did this about seven times. Yes, seven.
- Skeletor is revealed to be alive at the end of the film Masters of the Universe, setting up a sequel that never happened because the movie bombed.
- Subverted in Bats, where the closing scene shows the lone surviving bats slowly and menacingly rise up from the dirt in preparation to fly off into the sunrise, only to get run over by the heroes' SUV as they drive off into the sunrise.
- The ending of Legend has a shot of Darkness (who was apparently destroyed) laughing.
- "Manos" The Hands of Fate: "The End?" Also, Torgo escaped, albeit missing a hand.
- At the end of the movie adaptation of Christine, the metal cube that was once an evil car sits there... and one little corner bends.
- The original novel also hinted that the cube still had some life in it in the "first" ending, then proceeded to make it very clear that Christine was back in the epilogue.
- The 90's comedy Nothing But Trouble ends with one of these.
- The Lost Skeleton of Cadavra, as an Affectionate Parody of black and white B-grade '50s sci-fi flicks, naturally ends with a bold white THE END, after which appears a question mark, in turn followed by the inevitable OR IS IT? and some Fauxlosophic Narration in the same intentionally bad dialogue style as the rest of the movie.
- Just before the credits roll in X-Men: The Last Stand a depowered Magneto is seen sitting in the park, in front of a table with (presumably) metal chess pieces. He holds his hand forward, and one piece tilts ever so slightly before the screen goes black.
- Also, it's made fairly clear that Professor X has possessed the body of the brain-dead man they showed earlier on in the movie, who is apparently his twin brother.
- The ending of the American remake of The Ring indicates that, yes, she figured out how to not be killed by the ghost girl, but, as her son points out, what will happen to the person who has to watch the videotape to save her son?
- The original book has an even more drastic version: Asakawa copies the tape twice more for his wife and daughter, showing the copies to her parents, but as he's driving home, he looks back to see them both dead. Copying the tape wasn't the answer in the first place.
- And the Japanese movie adaption ends by saying how they'll continue to spread the curse from one person to another, over and over.
- Both The Hills Have Eyes and The Hills Have Eyes 2. In the first one, the survivors have a group hug as the camera pulls out and reveals that what is presumably another mutant watching them through binoculars. For the sequel, the survivors limp away as the camera pulls out and reveals that what is presumably another mutant is watching them on a laptop that has a long-range heat-sensitive camera.
- Used famously at the end of Flash Gordon.
- The movie version of The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen does this for Allan Quartermain, who dies in the final battle, hinting strongly that he will be Back from the Dead for a sequel.
- The Super Mario Bros. Movie ends just after Daisy has returned to her homeworld and the two parallel universes are closed off forever... with Daisy walking in holding a gun and dressed like a soldier saying "Mario, Luigi, you're not going to believe this..." We never found out what she meant, which may or may not have been a good thing.
- This rather extreme kind of sequel-trigger rarely seems to be picked up, although Mortal Kombat was an exception.
- Back to the Future: It's your kids, Marty! Something's got to be done about your kids!"
- They didn't even originally intend that to be a real sequel hook or even a real cliffhanger. It was only tongue-in-cheek at first, and the "TO BE CONTINUED" sign wasn't superimposed over the screen until the film was out on video after a sequel was already in the works.
- Played straight in part II; however, it may or may not count as part II and III were made pretty much together, going as far as showing a trailer for part III at the end of part II.
- The ending of Godzilla, Mothra, King Ghidorah: Giant Monsters All Out Attack shows that Godzilla's disembodied heart is still beating at the bottom of the ocean, heavily implying that he'll return to wreak havoc once again.
- The "new" American remake of Godzilla ends with an egg surviving, after all the effort to kill them.
- During the end credits of the 2007 Transformers live-action movie, Starscream (who escaped the F-22 Raptors in pursuit because they had bigger fish to fry) flies out of Earth's atmosphere and shoots straight up, presumably returning to Cybertron for reinforcements.
- In the (original version of the) horror movie The She Creature, a hypnotist uses a woman in a trance to summon an aquatic monster from beyond time. After being mortally wounded by it, he banishes it forever. But the final shot of the movie shows the ocean, and a big "?" over it.
- The original version of Godzilla Vs. Hedorah ended like this as well. Of course, Yoshimitsu Banno was practically exiled from the studio after its completion, so...
- Bullshot (1983). The villain is supposedly killed when his plane runs out of fuel, though they Never Found the Body. The movie then concludes with a montage of photos showing the wedding of the hero and the heroine; the last photo shows the villain disguised as their chauffeur. But all that is another story.
- In the Fu Manchu movies starring Christopher Lee, after his evil plan was foiled, he would say "The world shall hear from me again."
- In Out of Sight, gentleman bank-robber Jack Foley and straight-arrow federal agent Karen Sisco have an affair, despite the fact that she's supposed to put him in jail. At the very end of the movie, after she's apprehended him, he's in the back of a van taking him from Detroit back to prison in Miami when he discovers that Sisco has gone out of her way to transport another prisoner with him: a convict nicknamed Hejira Henry, whose specialty is escaping from jail. Foley realizes that the two have a lot to talk about on the ride back to Miami, and instead of an "Or Is It?" title, we get an extreme close-up of Sisco's smile.
- Halloween: Michael Myers is shot repeatedly and then falls out of a window. But when Loomis goes to look, the body is gone. Turns out he really was the Boogeyman. And the parade of increasingly crappy sequels begins...
- "I shot him six times!!"
- He actually shot him *seven* times, as anyone can plainly see. But in the heat of the moment, Loomis was probably focusing more on aiming and firing than on keeping count of the bullets, so it's not an unusual flib for the character to make.
- In the original movie, Loomis did only shoot Michael 6 times. For some reason, the flashback in the sequel showed him shooting Michael 7 times... despite the gun only being a 6 chamber revolver.
- In the Street Fighter movie, M. Bison lives, but Raul Julia less so.
- Catwoman in Batman Returns.
- Con Air's Garland Greene escaped. But apparently is just trying to earn some bucks.
- Cloverfield does this. At the end of the movie, the US government drops a nuke on the monster. It is implied that it is finally dead, because, let's face it, nukes are all powerful. Die-hard movie buffs (read:nerds) recorded a sound byte after the credits and reversed it. Turns out it got better.
- Nope! Word of God says it was killed, and it wasn't nuked. They likely used something like a MOAB.
- The obscure blaxploitation film The Black Six ends with a Crowning Moment of Or Is It? Awesomeness - we see still frames of the title characters, then the caption "HONKY LOOK OUT! HASSLE A BROTHER AND THE BLACK SIX WILL RETURN!!!"
- Fantastic Four; to no one's surprise, as the crate carrying von Doom's remains is show departing, there's a hint of life shown.
- While this trope debuted in the 1950s version of The Thing from Another World, the 1980s version (simply titled The Thing) featured a less direct version of the trope. In the end, Macready and Childs are the only two characters remaining. It's not stated whether one or the other, or both of them, are infected by the Thing, with the film ending with their outpost burning, and the two of them deciding to "Wait and see"...
- The original 1958 version of The Blob, as seen at the end of this
clip.
- Combined with Oh Crap at the conclusion of 2010's The Wolfman, as the film ends with the police detective clutching his bite-wounds and realizing he's been infected with lycanthropy too.
- How could one forget Event Horizon, with the door closing at the end... Well, the door just closed normally because no one stands near it anymore. Or did it?
- Shutter Island: And how...
- Black Swan: On a similarly disturbing level as Shutter Island.
- The Wizard of Gore: After a series of Shocking Swerves, the movie ends with a textbook "The End... Or Is It?" card.
- Just like the comic, Kick-Ass ends revealing Red Mist has gone evil for good and is now a super-villain planning revenge.
- At the end of Dracula 2000, just before the sunlight takes him, Dracula turns Mary back into a human (luckily, after she falls from the roof). The ending voice-over reveals that Simon and her have become the protectors of the vampire's ashes. The final shot is a close-up of Mary's eyes, which suddenly turn an inhuman color.
- Final Fantasy VII: Advent Children. "I will... never be a memory...."
- Most people know the ending of Carrie: she dies. The ending of the made-for-TV 2002 remake is notably different, though. In this version, Carrie survives. She skips town and changes her appearance and identity. Regardless, though, she hasn't changed - she's still unstable and sensitive enough to lose control again later. While the endings in the both the book and the movie are final yet creepy (and perhaps the book has a touch of Or Is It? thrown in for good measure), this version implies that the horror is not over.
- Played with in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II, Super Shredder is crushed underneath a collapsing dock, The Turtles recover from the collapse, and THEN A HAND SHOOTS UP OUT OF THE RUBBLE! "No one could have survived that!". Then the arm drops with a groan. He's done for. Granted, there is a sequel, but it is not based on the ending of II.
- Most of the A Nightmare on Elm Street films end this way.
- Rise of the Planet of the Apes ends with the revelation that it wasn't nuclear bombs that destroyed humanity. It was a plague.
- Sherlock Holmes: A Game Of Shadows ends with the question-mark variation added by Holmes himself to Watson's typed account of events, to show he's Not Quite Dead.
- Batman: The Movie: After the Freaky Friday Flip that seems to defy the Status Quo is God, Batman and Robin going out inconspicuously throught the window
. Then we see The End superimposed in the screen. A second later, they add the word living and a question mark: The Living End?
Live Action TV
- In The X-Files in Monster of the Week episodes, the show often closes on a shot of the creature under a bed, or the supposedly dead creature opening its eyes, or even a disassembled computer lighting up.
- Doctor Who homaged this at the end of the third series of Doctor Who, which ended with a woman laughing and taking the Master's ring from his ashes...
- Word Of God said that they have no plans for it whatsoever and it's just something that they left in for another creative team to possibly eventually use. It beats the alternative.
- Meant to have happened at the end of Davros's debut story "Genesis of the Daleks" to show Davros's life support system still on. However, this detail got left out in production.
- The Second Doctor's debut episode, "The Power of the Daleks", ends with the TARDIS fading out next to the crushed remains of a Dalek... and as it does so, the eyestalk rises to watch it disappear.
- The next Dalek story, "The Evil of the Daleks", was meant to see the Daleks Killed Off for Real, but at the last minute the production team were instructed to show some indication that some Daleks had survived. Unfortunately, since the last episode no longer exists, accounts differ as to what it was.
- After the Fourth Doctor falls from a tower and lies dying while he reflects upon his life, he looks up to his current companions and grins, stating "It's the end. But the moment has been prepared for." and points towards the mysterious watcher. It's quite a moving moment considering that it's made to look like he may not be coming back at all.
- At the end of sixth Doctor series "The Trial of a Time Lord", the Doctor has overcome all the Valeyard's convoluted plans, and seems to have defeated him, only for the Keeper of the Matrix to turn around and reveal that it is actually the Valeyard, hiding among the 'respectable' Time Lords.
- At the end of the Red Dwarf episode "Polymorph", we see that the pod containing the titular shape-shifting monster actually contained two of them. We then see the crew walk past a corridor with two Listers in tow.
- The remastered version has a Revised Ending, with a caption stating that the second polymorph concealed itself in Lister's clean underwear drawer, where it died of starvation many years later.
- Used in a number of Buffy the Vampire Slayer episodes, especially in the early years, which left a lot of What Happened to the Mouse? in its wake.
- The 2nd season Star Trek: Enterprise episode "Dead Stop" involving an unmanned space station that repairs ships, secretly abducting their crewmembers and using their brains to augment its abilities. Apparently destroyed, it is seen at the end to be reassembling itself.
- Star Trek: Voyager. "Bride of Chaotica" (which takes place in the Captain Proton holoprogram) concludes with Dr. Chaotica dying, whereupon music plays on an imagizer and the words THE END appear... followed by a question mark and Chaotica's Evil Laugh.
- Played more seriously in the two-parter "Year of Hell", about a scientist who creates a ship that can alter time itself, creating all kinds of hell for himself, countless civilisations, and Voyager. After the vessel is destroyed, history gets a Reset Button back to 'normal' and we see the scientist in a happy moment at home with his wife (who'd previously been wiped from existence). The camera finishes on a shot of scientist's table, on which lie the plans for the timeship.
- An episode of Air Wolf involved the titular helicopter's designer programming a doomsday failsafe into its main computer, which was supposed to electronically trick the United States and Russia into launching their nuclear arsenals at each other. While the heroes and the special guest heroine (who happened to be a computer expert and "usually beat" Airwolf's creator at chess) were able to regain control and prevent a nuclear war, the light-up key that had initiated the whole thing flickered fitfully just before the closing credits, implying that it could all start over again if the heroes weren't careful.
- Parodied in an episode of Everybody Loves Raymond, in which Ray is home alone for the weekend and Robert teases him about it, before adding "Or ARE you?"
- The season 1 finale of Heroes, which builds up to the final defeat and killing of Sylar, shows signs he's potentially alive (which it turns out he is for season 2, albeit somehow weakened).
- Building up to a Downer Ending that evokes this trope is the whole point to the fake-cryptid-footage show Lost Tapes.
- In Power Rangers RPM, the Rangers defeat Venjix and Earth is restored. The last shot of the series is the rangers' morphers, with one of them containing the Venjix Virus, being locked away.
- The Criminal Minds episode "Bloodline" ends with the mother of the evil Roma family telling her son "Don't tell them about your brothers". After the team translates what she said, it cuts to a scene involving a family similar to the captured one, getting ready to kill a couple and abduct a girl to be their son's bride.
- Later episode "Solitary Man" has one of the team mention on the ride home the number of "highway serial killers" active in the country at any given time. It then cuts to a dark highway, where a lone hitchhiker is picked up by a truck identical to the one used by the (now dead) killer featured in the episode.
- In the Supernatural episode Tall Tales, after Sam, Dean, and Bobby leave, the body of the Trickster they'd just staked through the stomach disappears. Turns out it was only an illusion the real Trickster created.
- Another episode called Monster Movie is filmed to resemble any of several old horror movies. The end card is "The End...", with a question mark appearing after a moment. Actually, it was The End. They did gank the Big Bad with no repercussions since.
- "So, that's all for this hypothetical edition of QI... Or Is It? Yes, it is. Goodnight."
- Batman: The Movie: After the Freaky Friday Flip that seems to defy the Status Quo is God, Batman and Robin going out inconspicuously throught the window
. Then we see The End superimposed in the screen. A second later, they add the word living and a question mark: The Living End?
Literature
- The Gun, a short story by Philip K. Dick. A spacecraft investigating a planet destroyed by nuclear war is shot down by a robot anti-aircraft weapon. Fortunately they're able to approach the weapon on foot and deactivate it, then repair their spacecraft and take off. They plan to return later and remove the contents of the archive that the gun was protecting, unaware that underground robot repair units have already been sent to put the gun back together again.
- In the Gaunt's Ghosts novel Only in Death, Hinzerhaus appears to be haunted at first. Gradually, various explanations - not all scientific - are given, until it seems that the phenomena have been explained away. The very last part of the novel, excluding Hark's final diary entry, then suggests that maybe the fortress is really haunted after all.
- The book of Wicked seems to suggest, with it's last lines, that the main character may have survived her encounter with Dorthy on some level, or at least may be coming back.
- Isaac Asimov actually managed to fit one of these into the first chapter of his novel of Fantastic Voyage. The characters are hoping a Soviet scientist's defection will turn out well:
Happy ending?
[Owens} frowned at the intonation in his mind that had put a question mark after those two words.
Happy ending! he thought grimly, but the intonation slithered out of control so that it became Happy ending? again.
- Every single Goosebumps book ends with one of these. The last few lines of each book usually reveal that one of the monsters is still out there, that something is still stalking the protagonists, that the safety they thought they gained is probably an illusion, the person they rescued isn't actually safe, or that whatever victory over the monsters they achieved is probably not real. Or might not be real. It's sometimes ambiguous, but not in the "Was it all just a dream?" sense.
- The Stand by Stephen King has a epilogue which shows that the villain survived, and is trying to recruit new followers.
Music
- The music video for Michael Jackson's "Thriller" has Jackson turning into a zombie, summoning his dancing zombie pals, and surrounding his girlfriend in an abandoned building. She then wakes up next to un-zombie Michael Jackson, who looks at the camera revealing werewolf eyes at the very end.
- In introducing a performance on Britain's Top of the Pops music program, the announcer said before the video played, "These two never actually sung on the record, so here's Milli Vanilli, 'Girl You Know It's True', or is it?"
Radio
- Final Fantasy Tactics Advance's Ivalice was supposed to vanish, right? Well, in its Radio Drama, after the supposed ending in the game ends, the music stops, and a voice from Montblanc says towards Marche that he wanted to meet again in the dream. May it be that the dream Ivalice is still there or that it was Montblanc's Final Speech is still a mystery.
Video Games
Web Animation
- When an internet sprite film used the question mark trick, the maker was asked multiple times by fans what it meant.
- Gotham Girls's third season ends with its Big Bad, locked up in a refrigeration unit, suddenly opening her eyes (which are red all of a sudden) and ominously breathing against the glass, cracking it.
Webcomics
Web Original
- At the end of KateModern: Precious Blood, a brief glimpse of Terrence can be seen, cackling gleefully.
- In the very last episode of lonelygirl15, after even "The Ascension", Lucy posts a video entitled "In My Sights", saying "It's not that easy, Jonas".
- At the end of the puppet sketch "Dangeresque: Puppet Squad" on Homestar Runner, the two Dangeresques caught the guy responsible for one time stealing their curly fries...
Sharktooth Bubs: Or did you?
- Also the end of The theme from Dangeresque II: This time, it's not Dangeresque I.
Dangeresque: Or did I?
- Played for laughs at the end of the first final (!) battle between AVGN and the Nostalgia Critic, with the Critic's bloody hand raising towards the screen after being defeated by Super Mecha Death-Christ.
- In Seeking Truth, the final blog post seems to indicate that Zeke Strahm has, indeed, gone crazy... and is now on the run. In Dreams In Darkness, Zeke himself pops up to hint that Damien's Slender-blog was not an in-universe fabrication.
- He's popped up in a number of other Slender-blogs, and is still sporadically posting semi-cryptic messages on his original blog..
- Referenced in this
wiki-answers article about tides.
"When the concept of universal gravitation was introduced, it quantified the forces involved and neatly accounted for the ocean tides. Today, anyone can tell you that the tides are caused by the "gravity" of the moon. Or are they?"
Western Animation
- Used for humorous effect in Family Guy, when, after Peter Griffin's epic fight with the chicken man, the camera zooms in on its unconscious form to see that it's still alive.
- In the Angry Beavers episode "Dag For Night", Dagget and Norbert's attempt at finishing the unfinished Oxnard Montalvo B-movie The Not Too Friendly Creature From the Off-White Puddle Who Will Eat You ends with "The End?", except Dagget melodramatically reads it as "The End... Question Mark?" That, and the movie ended with the Earth exploding.
- Unicron is seen still in one piece and possibly alive at the end of Transformers Armada. Sure enough, the rest of the Unicron Trilogy (natch) confirms this.
- A favorite of various 80s cartoon villains, including Mumm-Ra and Megatron. One gets the impression that the writers had a variety of potential "deaths" for the bad guys in mind, and just wanted to get them all out of their system.
- Used in the final (but not planned that way) episode of the SatAM Sonic The Hedgehog series, not with Robotnik, but with Snively... and someone else.
- Word Of God is that the someone else was Naugus, who had escaped the Void.
- Parodied in The Simpsons, where "The End?" appears in an alternate ending of Casablanca.
- And again in "Behind the Laughter": "The dream was over. Coming up next, was the dream really over? Yes, it was. Or was it?"
- Another episode featured a Star Wars parody, specifically spoofing the prequels. The entire film is just the galactic senate deliberating on a budget issue. At the end, they finally reach a preliminary consensus, and Yoda, acting as speaker, says "tabled, this motion is.... or IS it?"
- Spoofed in one episode of Freakazoid!: "The End. Or is it? Yes, it is!"
- Played straight in Batman Beyond: Inque gets one of these. Unsurprisingly, she comes back. Curiously, Big Bad Blight also gets a textbook The End (Or Is It?) in the first season's finale (to the point where Terry himself seems to completely expect that he'll come back), but never reappeared.
- The opposite version of "The End?" appears at the end of the second season finale of Beast Wars after Megatron launches a devastating blast of energy into the original Optimus Prime's head, creating a time storm that threatens to destroy the entire universe. Right before the credits, you see "To Be Continued..." followed by "?"
- The Danny Phantom episode "The Ultimate Enemy" ends on this. The villain indeed was set to return for the Grand Finale, but the original writer was fired and replaced, resulting in an alternate outcome.
- The highly er... surreal "Mr. Friend" episode of Rugrats ends like this.
- Transformers Generation One ended "Enter The Nightbird" with a shot of Nightbird's optics lighting up just as she's being sealed away. It's not sure why, seeing as she's never used again.
- Transformers Animated did this with a few of its one-shot villains, usually to leave open the possibility of their return. So far, most of them have come back at least once, so it's a useful strategy.
- Played with in "The Laughing Fish" of Batman: The Animated Series. The Joker fell into the ocean very close to a hungry shark. Commissioner Gordon asks Batman a bit later if he thinks the Joker's really dead. Batman says he wishes so, but that he has his doubts. The camera closes in on the Joker card that Harley has thrown into the ocean in mourning and then it's eaten by the same shark, managing to make the viewer certain both that the Joker survived and that he did so only by the skin of his teeth (so to speak) at the same time.
- In fact, countless TAS episodes end on this trope. Especially when they introduce new villains, the episodes always seem to end with a hint that the villain will return.
- Happens for good guys, too. At the end of the episode in which Batgirl was introduced, Bruce Wayne straight-up says "I'm sure we'll be seeing her again."
- The alternative ending in "The Good the Bad and The tigre" in El Tigre plays with this.In the "The End" screen,the Narrator questions "Or...does it?" adding a question mark,then clarifying "yes it does",thus removing the question mark.
- In the opening credits of an episode of Futurama, "Or is it?" pops up on the title screen.
- Galaxy Rangers pulled this with "Scarecrow." The titular villain is chased off, running away from a burning house and lit on fire. Shane, Niko, and Zozo are back on Ranger-1, preparing for takeoff, speculating on just what the Scarecrow was. As they take off, the technician that was gassing up their ship chuckles and melts, revealing the very much alive Scarecrow.
- Spoofed in "Tearjerker" from American Dad!. In the episode where the family does a big spoof on the spy genre, Stan Smith is the secret agent hero and Roger the Alien is the villain. At the end of the episode, we believe Roger is dead and Stan has succeeded. But at the very end, we see the mouth of the volcano Roger had fallen into and we see the words "THE END" appear. Just then though, Roger reaches out of the volcano and now it reads "THE END?" But, just as quickly, Roger falls back in and "THE END?" goes back to "THE END".
- This is the phrase Early Cuyler from Squidbillies uses to end his threat/prayers:
Early: Amen... pulls knife Or is it?
- In Fanboy and Chum Chum, "Dollar Day":
Fanboy: Chum Chum! What did you do?! That was our only dollar!
Chum Chum: Or was it?
Fanboy: Yes, and you spent it!
Chum Chum: Or did I?
Fanboy: Yes! I saw you put it in the machine.
Chum Chum: Or did you?
Fanboy: Why do you keep talking like that?
Chum Chum: Cause I lost our only dollar!
- Parodied in Spliced, when Peri and Entree are stalked by a golf cart they drove for a while and then abandoned. When they destroy the cart in the volcano, the characters comment that they're glad their ordeal is over. The screen then flashes the message Or Is It?, then shows the volcano again, and then says, "Yeah, it probably is."
- Parodied in Johnny Bravo. At the end of The Color of Mustard, Pops concludes his story about Johnny's failed badminton career with an ominous "Or did we?" aimed at the audience. This is more of a Big Lipped Alligator Moment given Pops' tone of voice.
- In the My Little Pony Friendship Is Magic episode Suited For Sucess:
Hoity Toity: Rarity, my congratulations. You are the most impressive fashion maven. Would you do me the great honor of allowing me to feature your couture in my best of the best boutique in Canterlot?
Rarity: (happy gasp)
Hoity Toity: Now, I'll need you to make a dozen of each dress for me by next Tuesday.
Rarity: (gulps in fear)
(cut to credits)
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