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* ''WesternAnimation/MonstersInc'': When Mike and Sulley are trying to get Boo back to her door, Mike lets it slip that he got the door thank to Randall. Sulley immediately becomes suspicious that Randall is after Boo, and refuses to put her back in her door. Mike, being irritated, tries going into Boo's door to prove that everything's fine, only for Randall to kidnap him, confirming Sulley's suspicions.

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* ''WesternAnimation/MonstersInc'': ''WesternAnimation/MonstersInc1'': When Mike and Sulley are trying to get Boo back to her door, Mike lets it slip that he got the door thank to Randall. Sulley immediately becomes suspicious that Randall is after Boo, and refuses to put her back in her door. Mike, being irritated, tries going into Boo's door to prove that everything's fine, only for Randall to kidnap him, confirming Sulley's suspicions.
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*** In the ''Revenge of The Sith'' novelization, Commander Cody upon receiving Order 66, has artillery fired at Obi-Wan, personally goes to try and find the body, and when he doesn't, has multiple search teams look for him.

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* In ''Film/{{GoodFellas}}'', Henry is called paranoid by his wife and associates for having suspicions about a helicopter follow him all day long, as well as being extremely scared that his mob friends are going to whack him any moment. Unfortunately, he was correct to be paranoid, as the helicopter belonged to the DEA finally intending to arrest him, and Jimmy really wanted to whack him because ''he'' was going crazy as well.
* In ''Film/{{Godzilla 2014}}'', Joe Brody's obsession with his wife's death has left him more than a little nutty, but he was still right about the cover up.

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* In ''Film/{{GoodFellas}}'', ''Film/GoodFellas'', Henry is called paranoid by his wife and associates for having suspicions about a helicopter follow him all day long, as well as being extremely scared that his mob friends are going to whack him any moment. Unfortunately, he was correct to be paranoid, as the helicopter belonged to the DEA finally intending to arrest him, and Jimmy really wanted to whack him because ''he'' was going crazy as well.
* In ''Film/{{Godzilla 2014}}'', ''Film/Godzilla2014'', Joe Brody's obsession with his wife's death has left him more than a little nutty, but he was still right about the cover up.



* Chance warns the others about being sent to the pound every chance he gets in
''Film/HomewardBoundTheIncredibleJourney''. Sure enough when they encounter the people searching for the lost girl, Chance is wary of them for this reason. Three guesses where the people drop them off, and the first two don't count.

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* Chance warns the others about being sent to the pound every chance he gets in
in ''Film/HomewardBoundTheIncredibleJourney''. Sure enough when they encounter the people searching for the lost girl, Chance is wary of them for this reason. Three guesses where the people drop them off, and the first two don't count.

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* In ''Film/TwentyEightDaysLater'', after an attack by the Infected leaves Mark with an open wound and covered in blood, despite his protests that it's ''his'' blood, Selena says she can't take the risk and immediately hacks him to death with a machete. Since it takes only a ''single'' drop of blood to become infected and the person will turn in ''30 seconds'', Selena has a very good reason to be so paranoid.
** [[WordOfGod Naomi Harris]] has said that she believes the reason for this is because Selena had to kill her entire family after they got infected...including her younger brothers and sisters.



* ''Film/RearWindow'' (and its newer equivalent, ''Film/{{Disturbia}}''): guy stuck in house becomes increasingly convinced his neighbour is a murderer. Guess what said neighbour is?
* In the HBO movie ''Safe House'', Patrick Stewart plays an old man who is suffering from the early stages of Alzheimer's disease. He tells his caretaker that he used to be a DIA agent and people are out to get him because HeKnowsTooMuch, so he insists on elaborate security precautions bordering on the ridiculous. Until the end, it's unclear whether his paranoia is justified or if he's just a crazy old man. As it turns out, they really are out to get him.

to:

* ''Film/RearWindow'' (and its newer equivalent, ''Film/{{Disturbia}}''): guy stuck in house becomes increasingly In ''Film/{{Bowfinger}}'', Kit Ramsay starts out paranoid about aliens ans is driven to even wilder hysteria when a small film crew shoots a sci-fi movie starring him without his knowledge. His advisor at [[ChurchOfHappyology Mindhead]] considers Kit's utterances about aliens and pod people to be pure paranoia, until he uncovers the film crew and says "Well, it seems the paranoid are sometimes actually being followed.".
* The Tom Hanks black comedy ''Film/TheBurbs'' is all about this trope. Hanks' character is
convinced by his neighbour is a murderer. Guess what said neighbour is?
* In the HBO movie ''Safe House'', Patrick Stewart plays an old man who is suffering from the early stages of Alzheimer's disease. He tells his caretaker
friends that he used the creepy neighbors on their block are actually serial killers. They repeatedly try to be a DIA agent find ways to expose them, but all they succeed in doing is to continue making fools of themselves. [[spoiler:Then at the end the suspected neighbors confront Hanks, and people are out to get him because HeKnowsTooMuch, so he insists on elaborate security precautions bordering on the ridiculous. Until the end, it's unclear whether his paranoia is justified or if he's just a crazy old man. As it turns out, they really out his friends were 100% right]].
* [[PickACard Pick a character from]] ''Film/BurnAfterReading''. [[PickACard Any character.]] Although they're frequently paranoid [[WrongGenreSavvy about the wrong things.]]
* Marty, the resident [[TheStoner stoner]] of ''Film/TheCabinInTheWoods'', is convinced that something strange is going on and that there
are out to get him.puppeteers running everything. His friends ignore him. [[TheCloudCuckoolanderWasRight At first]]. Later, when one of his friends admits that he was right, he says he wasn't. What he'd uncovered was much bigger.
-->'''Marty:''' [[NotHimself We are not...who we are]].



* In ''Film/TheConversation'', Harry Caul does everything in his power to keep his privacy intact, to the point that he keeps his office phone unlisted (and he makes calls through public phones if he needs to contact someone) and it's a serious, relationship-shattering BerserkButton if anybody asks him too many questions about anything (''especially'' personal info). Then it turns out that the company that hired him to record the titular conversation made a very thorough dossier on him even before he was hired and there is absolutely ''nothing'' that they don't know about him and there is absolutely ''no place'' that he owns that they can't break into to steal from him or place a bug.
* In ''Film/TheDarkKnight'', Harvey Dent doesn't trust anyone (except perhaps for Gordon) in Gordon's unit, which is comprised almost entirely of cops that he investigated while in Internal Affairs. [[spoiler: Two of those cops help Joker kidnap Dent and Rachel.]]
* Played with in ''Film/TheDeparted''. Mob boss Frank Costello and the police captain that is investigating him both assume that the other has planted a mole in their organization. They're both right. However, both miss out on catching the moles, and neither realize [[spoiler:that each side has more than one mole at work]].
* Gavin from ''Film/DisturbingBehavior'', a seemingly drug-addled teen is convinced there is some kind of mind control conspiracy going on in Cradle Bay but is rebuked by Steve when he [[YouHaveToBelieveMe claims he is next]]. Not only is he 100% right, [[spoiler:but they also get him]].
* In ''Film/{{Enchanted}}'', Robert is rightly suspicious of the fact that people keep trying to give Giselle free stuff. These "people" are actually Nathaniel, who tries to slip Giselle poison apple in some form or another from the moment he's first able to get to her in New York.



* [[PickACard Pick a character from]] ''Film/BurnAfterReading''. [[PickACard Any character.]] Although they're frequently paranoid [[WrongGenreSavvy about the wrong things.]]
* ''[[Film/TheThing1982 The Thing]]'' (1982), by Creator/JohnCarpenter, features a shape-shifting alien capable of infecting and duplicating every living thing. The characters are right about not trusting each other, and try to come up with a way of figuring out who is the thing and who isn't, but generally are unable to do so until NightmareFuel time sets in.
** Though played straight for most of the film, it's horrifically subverted in the case of Clark. He seems to be the most likely candidate for being infected as he was alone with the initial Thing for quite some time, and doesn't have an alibi for most of the cases of sabotage that one or more infected has been behind. In the end, it's later proven that he wasn't one of the infected... [[spoiler: after [=MacReady=] has already shot him through the skull.]] Childs makes sure to point out that [=MacReady=] [[WhatTheHellHero screwed up royally]] in that respect. (Although, in fairness to [=MacReady=], Clark did try to attack him.)

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* [[PickACard Pick a character from]] ''Film/BurnAfterReading''. [[PickACard Any character.]] Although they're frequently In ''Film/EvenLambsHaveTeeth'', Katie calls her Uncle Jason "a crazy, paranoid [[WrongGenreSavvy about the wrong things.]]
* ''[[Film/TheThing1982 The Thing]]'' (1982), by Creator/JohnCarpenter, features a shape-shifting alien capable of infecting and duplicating
cop" for insisting that she call him every living thing. The characters are right about not trusting day, or text him if she can't call. He also makes her put a code word at the end of each other, text and try to come up with a way of figuring out who is change the thing word every day in case someone else gets hold of her phone. However, when she is kidnapped by sex traffickers, they use her phone to send him a text saying everything is fine, but they fail to change the code word. Jason is immediately suspicious and who isn't, but generally goes to investigate.
* ''Film/TheFaculty'': After [[spoiler:Marybeth and Stokely]]
are unable to do so until NightmareFuel time sets in.
** Though played straight for most
both revealed as aliens, Zeke demands that Casey take another hit of the film, it's horrifically subverted in the case of Clark. He seems to be the most likely candidate alien-killing drug even though he already took it before. As Zeke justifiably points out, he's only been gone for being infected as he was alone five minutes and nearly everybody besides him is already an alien by that point.
* ''Film/TheFastestGunAlive'': After George shows off his talents, his wife is very well aware that gunmen will be demanding a showdown
with the initial Thing for quite some time, and him unless they swear everyone to secrecy. Vinnie Harold's arrival proves these fears correct.
* In ''Film/FerrisBuellersDayOff'', Cameron
doesn't have an alibi want to leave his dad's prized [[CoolCar Ferrari]] at a garage in the care of a sleazy-looking attendant. He does so only after some persuasion by Ferris. It turns out his worries were absolutely justified as the attendant and his friend take the car on a joyride only seconds after they leave, adding dozens of miles onto the car.
* Chloe's father in ''Film/Freaks2018'' frequently checks the windows of their house and keeps them carefully taped up so no one can look in. He does quick grocery runs outside only when it becomes absolutely necessary and is completely obsessive about Chloe ''not'' leaving the house, to the point where it reaches borderline abuse when he locks her up as punishment
for most of the cases of sabotage that one or more infected trying to get outside. Chloe has been behind. In the end, no real understanding of why she can't go out, and when she does finally make it outside, it's later proven that he wasn't a peaceful, lovely day in a comfortable suburban community. Unfortunately for her, [[spoiler:as one of the infected... [[spoiler: after [=MacReady=] has already shot him through the skull."[[DifferentlyPoweredIndividual Abnormals]]", she's likely to be rounded up and exterminated (either that, or [[TykeBomb turned into a weapon]]) as soon as anyone sees her abilities. Which a seven year-old is not good at hiding.]] Childs makes sure to point out Factor that [=MacReady=] [[WhatTheHellHero screwed up royally]] in that respect. (Although, in fairness to [=MacReady=], Clark did try to attack him.)in, and her dad's fear is suddenly completely justified.



* In ''Film/{{GoodFellas}}'', Henry is called paranoid by his wife and associates for having suspicions about a helicopter follow him all day long, as well as being extremely scared that his mob friends are going to whack him any moment. Unfortunately, he was correct to be paranoid, as the helicopter belonged to the DEA finally intending to arrest him, and Jimmy really wanted to whack him because ''he'' was going crazy as well.
* Bryan Mills from ''Film/{{Taken}}'' looks like a stock overprotective dad until his warnings turn out to be too true.
* Chance warns the others about being sent to the pound every chance he gets in ''Film/HomewardBoundTheIncredibleJourney''. Sure enough when they encounter the people searching for the lost girl, Chance is wary of them for this reason. Three guesses where the people drop them off, and the first two don't count.
* In ''Film/{{Bowfinger}}'', Kit Ramsay starts out paranoid about aliens ans is driven to even wilder hysteria when a small film crew shoots a sci-fi movie starring him without his knowledge. His advisor at [[ChurchOfHappyology Mindhead]] considers Kit's utterances about aliens and pod people to be pure paranoia, until he uncovers the film crew and says "Well, it seems the paranoid are sometimes actually being followed.".
* In ''Film/FerrisBuellersDayOff'', Cameron doesn't want to leave his dad's prized [[CoolCar Ferrari]] at a garage in the care of a sleazy-looking attendant. He does so only after some persuasion by Ferris. It turns out his worries were absolutely justified as the attendant and his friend take the car on a joyride only seconds after they leave, adding dozens of miles onto the car.
* ''Film/ThePresidentsAnalyst'', soon after taking the title job, worries for his own mental health when he thinks he's seeing Men In Black following him everywhere, and has a nightmare that his girlfriend is a spy. Turns out he's right on both counts.

to:

* In ''Film/GalaxyQuest,'' when the crew of the NSEA Protector goes on a planet to search for beryllium spheres to repair the ship, one of the crew members, Guy, panics when he sees the planet's residents. Naturally, the crew dismisses this as paranoia because he once played a RedShirt on the show who died in an episode before the first commercial. [[spoiler:In a hilarious turn of events, Guy is proven right]].
-->'''Guy:''' Sure, they're cute now, but in a second they're gonna get mean, and they're gonna get ugly somehow, and there's gonna be a million more of them.
-->'''Guy:''' ''Did you guys ever watch the show''?
* In ''Film/{{GoodFellas}}'', Henry is called paranoid by his wife and associates for having suspicions about a helicopter follow him all day long, as well as being extremely scared that his mob friends are going to whack him any moment. Unfortunately, he was correct to be paranoid, as the helicopter belonged to the DEA finally intending to arrest him, and Jimmy really wanted to whack him because ''he'' was going crazy as well.well.
* In ''Film/{{Godzilla 2014}}'', Joe Brody's obsession with his wife's death has left him more than a little nutty, but he was still right about the cover up.
* In the ''Franchise/{{Halloween}}'' series, others viewed a young Michael Myers as a disturbed boy. Loomis viewed him as a monster just waiting to strike. Guess who was right.

* Bryan Mills from ''Film/{{Taken}}'' looks like a stock overprotective dad until his warnings turn In ''Film/TheHobbit'', Bard is the OnlySaneMan who recognizes that Smaug could and would bring destruction to Lake Town, reminding them what had happened to Dale, but he is ignored out of common greed. [[spoiler:Smaug flies off to be too true.
destroy Lake Town at the end of the second film]]. Later on, he tries to [[spoiler:place the last Black Arrow on the large crossbow in case Smaug does come]], but is stopped by the Master.
* Chance warns the others about being sent to the pound every chance he gets in in
''Film/HomewardBoundTheIncredibleJourney''. Sure enough when they encounter the people searching for the lost girl, Chance is wary of them for this reason. Three guesses where the people drop them off, and the first two don't count.
* In ''Film/{{Bowfinger}}'', Kit Ramsay starts out paranoid about aliens ans is driven to even wilder hysteria when a small film crew shoots a sci-fi movie starring him without his knowledge. His advisor at [[ChurchOfHappyology Mindhead]] considers Kit's utterances about aliens and pod people to be pure paranoia, until he uncovers the film crew and says "Well, it seems the paranoid are sometimes actually being followed.".
* In ''Film/FerrisBuellersDayOff'', Cameron doesn't want to leave his dad's prized [[CoolCar Ferrari]] at a garage in the care of a sleazy-looking attendant. He does so only after some persuasion by Ferris. It turns out his worries were absolutely justified as the attendant and his friend take the car on a joyride only seconds after they leave, adding dozens of miles onto the car.
* ''Film/ThePresidentsAnalyst'', soon after taking the title job, worries for his own mental health when he thinks he's seeing Men In Black following him everywhere, and has a nightmare that his girlfriend is a spy. Turns out he's right on both counts.
count.



* ''Film/StrangeDays'' reveals that the extreme misfortunes and frequent assassination attempts following the main characters around stems from a death squad operating within the [=LAPD=] designed to target undesirables, including a prominent rapper-slash-social activist who was recently assassinated. When one character dismisses this as paranoia, a Properly Paranoid one rebuts that "it's not a question of whether you're paranoid, it's whether you're paranoid ''enough''." The other characters spend the rest of the movie in a state of deep paranoia about this. [[spoiler:Except it's a complete lie; the rapper was shot by two trigger-happy cops who merely screwed up a traffic stop, most of the other events of the movie are the result of [[GambitPileup various other plans and gambits crashing into each other chaotically]], and the Properly Paranoid character was in on it the whole time and made up the whole 'death squad' thing [[XanatosSpeedChess on the spot]] to distract from his own wrongdoings]].

to:

* ''Film/StrangeDays'' reveals Will in ''Film/TheInvitation2015'' is immediately suspicious when his ex-wife Eden and her new boyfriend Dave invite him, his new girlfriend, and a bunch of their other friends back to their old house for a dinner party. Throughout the party Will notices things like Dave locking the front door, Eden acting happy, the new bars on the windows, [[spoiler: and the cult recruitment video/snuff film Dave and Eden show everyone]], but everyone else brushes off Will's paranoia as an extension of his grief [[spoiler: over Will and Eden's son dying]]. Turns out Will is right to be paranoid because [[spoiler: the cult Dave and Eden are in is a murder-suicide cult and they're planning to kill everyone]].
* ''Film/IRobot'': Del Spooner (played by Will Smith) doesn't trust robots, believing
that they are not as safe as the extreme misfortunes and frequent assassination attempts following ThreeLawsOfRobotics are supposed to make them. He is therefore the main characters around stems from a death squad operating within only person in Chicago who doesn't get one of the [=LAPD=] designed to target undesirables, including a prominent rapper-slash-social activist who was recently assassinated. new NS-5 model robots. When one character dismisses this as paranoia, the NS-5s stage a ZerothLawRebellion, Spooner is naturally the only human capable of effectively fighting back. It was his Properly Paranoid one rebuts and bigoted attitude that "it's not allowed Dr. Lanning to pull a question BatmanGambit on him to save the day, kicked off by Dr. Lannings own death.
* ''Film/NoBladeOfGrass'': As the crop-killing virus finishes ravishing Asia and people worry that it will reach Europe, David Custance kills all
of whether the grass-eating animals on his farm and converts his land to potato farming (as potatoes are immune to the virus). In the book, he also builds a guardhouse at the entrance to his valley around that time and says that he'd rather have his neighbors call it "Custance's Folly" if he's wrong than be defenseless if he's right. David's precautions are warranted when the virus reaches England.
* ''Film/PatriotGames'': Professor Jack Ryan is leaving work when he notices a young man that looks like [[BigBad Sean Miller]] idling nearby. The man casually walks away as he notices Ryan looking at him, but Ryan is clearly unnerved, even more so when he hears a car engine starting up. And with good reason--as he continues to walk down the street, the audience sees that both the car and the man are now following him. Luckily, Ryan quickly notices this too and is able to disarm the man--the woman driving the getaway car is unfortunately able to escape--and foil the attempt on his life--revenge for Ryan having foiled an assassination attempt made by these people several months earlier. The interesting subversion is that Ryan had been warned about the possibility of this by his CIA contacts--it's ''he'' who didn't want to believe that the group would go to such lengths to kill him.
* ''Film/ThePresidentsAnalyst'', soon after taking the title job, worries for his own mental health when he thinks he's seeing Men In Black following him everywhere, and has a nightmare that his girlfriend is a spy. Turns out he's right on both counts.
* In ''Film/{{Primer}}'', second act, none of what we see is actually the first timeline. This means there are time travelers from alternate futures running around doing who-knows-what.
-->'''Aaron:''' What's worse? Thinking
you're paranoid, being paranoid or knowing you ''should'' be?
* In ''Film/{{Ratter}}'', Emma grows increasingly anxious once she realizes she's being watched. It's especially tragic since we, as an audience, [[DramaticIrony know just how much danger she's in right from the get-go...]] since we've been stalking her alongside the culprit.
* ''Film/RearWindow'' (and its newer equivalent, ''Film/{{Disturbia}}''): guy stuck in house becomes increasingly convinced his neighbour is a murderer. Guess what said neighbour is?
* Marvin in ''Film/Red2010'' believes he was being used in some secret government mind control project. It turned out that he actually was being fed LSD for decades. And that's just the beginning of the list. Literally EVERYTHING that Marvin becomes paranoid about is either true or becomes true over the course of the film.
* ''Film/TheRental'': {{Zigzagged}}. Mina, who's of Middle Eastern descent, thinks Taylor didn't rent her the house earlier because he's racist as later her white boyfriend and friends instantly got approved. He denies all this naturally, but later his racist remark about "hajis" (i.e. Muslims/Middle Eastern people) all but confirms that she's right. However, she's wrong that he's behind the hidden cameras in the house.
* In the HBO movie ''Film/SafeHouse'', Patrick Stewart plays an old man who is suffering from the early stages of Alzheimer's disease. He tells his caretaker that he used to be a DIA agent and people are out to get him because HeKnowsTooMuch, so he insists on elaborate security precautions bordering on the ridiculous. Until the end,
it's unclear whether you're paranoid ''enough''.his paranoia is justified or if he's just a crazy old man. As it turns out, they really are out to get him.
* In ''Film/SavingPrivateRyan'', Reiben is against letting their prisoner "Steamboat Willie" walk free, in case he's picked up by the Germans and "thrown back into circulation.
" [[spoiler:Which is not only what happens, but the ex-prisoner also fatally wounds Miller]].
* ''Film/ASeriesOfUnfortunateEvents'': Every single one of Aunt Josephine's fears and phobias previously waved off as ridiculous by the children (including the stove bursting into flames, the fridge crushing one flat, and the door-knob exploding and a fragment getting in one's eye) come true after she disappears. Every. Single. ''One''.
-->'''Violet:''' ''[as the door-knob is superheated, and about to shatter]'' '''[[LampshadeHanging No way]].'''
* ''Film/Seven1979'': When Harris calls Drew and tells him that some details of the operation and that his agent on the island will be making contact, Drew immediately checks out of his hotel and leaves no forwarding address. As he explains to Alexa, he trusts Harris but does not know anything about Harris' agent or where their loyalties. This turns out to be a sensible precaution, as the agent is really a SixthRangerTraitor who tries to kill Cowboy when she can't locate Drew.
* Bob Lee Swagger in ''Film/{{Shooter}}''. Religiously, ''obsessively'' protective of his guns, [[spoiler:which turns out to be what clears his name when he is framed for an assassination. Taking the firing pins out of his rifles when he puts them away would be just as effective at preventing accidents or unauthorized use, but Bob goes the extra mile and replaces them with custom-modified pins that will not fire.
The other characters spend ''only'' reason for this would be to fool someone who was deliberately trying to frame him, and who would know to check the rest firing pin. Which means he planned for that exact scenario]]. Bob has good reason for his paranoia; he's been back-stabbed before.
* Done for comedy in ''Film/SonicTheHedgehog2020.'' Crazy Carl is the only resident of Green Hills that even ''suspects'' that Sonic exists (before Sonic meets Tom), and spends the first part
of the movie in a state of deep paranoia about this. [[spoiler:Except it's a complete lie; trying to catch Sonic just to prove it. Sonic later says that they should rename him to "Super Observant Carl."
* In ''Film/SplitSecond1992'',
the rapper was shot by two trigger-happy cops who merely screwed up a traffic stop, most Chief is initially wary of the Stone being a paranoid menace, since he carries around a HandCannon and several other events of the movie are the result of [[GambitPileup various other plans and gambits crashing into each other chaotically]], guns at all times. The very next scene involves him and the Properly Paranoid character chief discovering that the heart of the killer's latest victim [[FingerInTheMail was in on it delivered right to Stone's desk at the whole time and made up the whole 'death squad' thing [[XanatosSpeedChess on the spot]] to distract from his own wrongdoings]].precinct]].
-->'''Stone:''' Paranoid, huh?



* Marvin in ''Film/Red2010'' believes he was being used in some secret government mind control project. It turned out that he actually was being fed LSD for decades. And that's just the beginning of the list. Literally EVERYTHING that Marvin becomes paranoid about is either true or becomes true over the course of the film.
* Bob Lee Swagger in ''Film/{{Shooter}}''. Religiously, ''obsessively'' protective of his guns, [[spoiler:which turns out to be what clears his name when he is framed for an assassination. Taking the firing pins out of his rifles when he puts them away would be just as effective at preventing accidents or unauthorized use, but Bob goes the extra mile and replaces them with custom-modified pins that will not fire. The ''only'' reason for this would be to fool someone who was deliberately trying to frame him, and who would know to check the firing pin. Which means he planned for that exact scenario]]. Bob has good reason for his paranoia; he's been back-stabbed before.
* In the ''Franchise/{{Halloween}}'' series, others viewed a young Michael Myers as a disturbed boy. Loomis viewed him as a monster just waiting to strike. Guess who was right.
* ''Film/TheFaculty'': After [[spoiler:Marybeth and Stokely]] are both revealed as aliens, Zeke demands that Casey take another hit of the alien-killing drug even though he already took it before. As Zeke justifiably points out, he's only been gone for five minutes and nearly everybody besides him is already an alien by that point.
* In ''Film/GalaxyQuest,'' when the crew of the NSEA Protector goes on a planet to search for beryllium spheres to repair the ship, one of the crew members, Guy, panics when he sees the planet's residents. Naturally, the crew dismisses this as paranoia because he once played a RedShirt on the show who died in an episode before the first commercial. [[spoiler:In a hilarious turn of events, Guy is proven right]].
-->'''Guy:''' Sure, they're cute now, but in a second they're gonna get mean, and they're gonna get ugly somehow, and there's gonna be a million more of them.
-->'''Guy:''' ''Did you guys ever watch the show''?

to:

* Marvin in ''Film/Red2010'' believes he was being used in some secret government mind control project. It turned out ''Film/StrangeDays'' reveals that he actually was being fed LSD for decades. And that's just the beginning of extreme misfortunes and frequent assassination attempts following the list. Literally EVERYTHING that Marvin becomes paranoid about is either true or becomes true over main characters around stems from a death squad operating within the course of the film.
* Bob Lee Swagger in ''Film/{{Shooter}}''. Religiously, ''obsessively'' protective of his guns, [[spoiler:which turns out
[=LAPD=] designed to be what clears his name when he is framed for an assassination. Taking the firing pins out of his rifles when he puts them away would be just as effective at preventing accidents or unauthorized use, but Bob goes the extra mile and replaces them with custom-modified pins that will not fire. The ''only'' reason for this would be to fool someone target undesirables, including a prominent rapper-slash-social activist who was deliberately trying to frame him, and who would know to check the firing pin. Which means he planned for that exact scenario]]. Bob has good reason for his paranoia; he's been back-stabbed before.
* In the ''Franchise/{{Halloween}}'' series, others viewed a young Michael Myers as a disturbed boy. Loomis viewed him as a monster just waiting to strike. Guess who was right.
* ''Film/TheFaculty'': After [[spoiler:Marybeth and Stokely]] are both revealed as aliens, Zeke demands that Casey take another hit of the alien-killing drug even though he already took it before. As Zeke justifiably points out, he's only been gone for five minutes and nearly everybody besides him is already an alien by that point.
* In ''Film/GalaxyQuest,'' when the crew of the NSEA Protector goes on a planet to search for beryllium spheres to repair the ship,
recently assassinated. When one of the crew members, Guy, panics when he sees the planet's residents. Naturally, the crew character dismisses this as paranoia, a Properly Paranoid one rebuts that "it's not a question of whether you're paranoid, it's whether you're paranoid ''enough''." The other characters spend the rest of the movie in a state of deep paranoia because he once played about this. [[spoiler:Except it's a RedShirt complete lie; the rapper was shot by two trigger-happy cops who merely screwed up a traffic stop, most of the other events of the movie are the result of [[GambitPileup various other plans and gambits crashing into each other chaotically]], and the Properly Paranoid character was in on it the whole time and made up the whole 'death squad' thing [[XanatosSpeedChess on the show who died in an episode before the first commercial. [[spoiler:In spot]] to distract from his own wrongdoings]].
* Bryan Mills from ''Film/{{Taken}}'' looks like
a hilarious stock overprotective dad until his warnings turn of events, Guy is proven right]].
-->'''Guy:''' Sure, they're cute now, but
out to be too true.
* The protagonist
in a second they're gonna get mean, and they're gonna get ugly somehow, and there's gonna be a million more of them.
-->'''Guy:''' ''Did you guys ever watch the show''?
''Film/TakeShelter'' sees himself as this when he begins digging up his backyard to expand their storm shelter. Everyone else thinks he's gone nuts.



* ''[[Film/TheThing1982 The Thing]]'' (1982), by Creator/JohnCarpenter, features a shape-shifting alien capable of infecting and duplicating every living thing. The characters are right about not trusting each other, and try to come up with a way of figuring out who is the thing and who isn't, but generally are unable to do so until NightmareFuel time sets in.
** Though played straight for most of the film, it's horrifically subverted in the case of Clark. He seems to be the most likely candidate for being infected as he was alone with the initial Thing for quite some time, and doesn't have an alibi for most of the cases of sabotage that one or more infected has been behind. In the end, it's later proven that he wasn't one of the infected... [[spoiler: after [=MacReady=] has already shot him through the skull.]] Childs makes sure to point out that [=MacReady=] [[WhatTheHellHero screwed up royally]] in that respect. (Although, in fairness to [=MacReady=], Clark did try to attack him.)
* In ''Film/TowerOfLondon'', Queen Elyzabeth never shook off her fear for the safety and lives of her sons, suspecting Richard's machinations on them. She would tragically be proven right.



* ''Film/IRobot'': Del Spooner (played by Will Smith) doesn't trust robots, believing that they are not as safe as the ThreeLawsOfRobotics are supposed to make them. He is therefore the only person in Chicago who doesn't get one of the new NS-5 model robots. When the NS-5s stage a ZerothLawRebellion, Spooner is naturally the only human capable of effectively fighting back. It was his Properly Paranoid and bigoted attitude that allowed Dr. Lanning to pull a BatmanGambit on him to save the day, kicked off by Dr. Lannings own death.
* In ''Film/TheDarkKnight'', Harvey Dent doesn't trust anyone (except perhaps for Gordon) in Gordon's unit, which is comprised almost entirely of cops that he investigated while in Internal Affairs. [[spoiler: Two of those cops help Joker kidnap Dent and Rachel.]]
* Played with in ''Film/TheDeparted''. Mob boss Frank Costello and the police captain that is investigating him both assume that the other has planted a mole in their organization. They're both right. However, both miss out on catching the moles, and neither realize [[spoiler:that each side has more than one mole at work]].



* The Tom Hanks black comedy ''Film/TheBurbs'' is all about this trope. Hanks' character is convinced by his friends that the creepy neighbors on their block are actually serial killers. They repeatedly try to find ways to expose them, but all they succeed in doing is to continue making fools of themselves. [[spoiler:Then at the end the suspected neighbors confront Hanks, and it turns out his friends were 100% right]].
* In ''Film/TwentyEightDaysLater'', after an attack by the Infected leaves Mark with an open wound and covered in blood, despite his protests that it's ''his'' blood, Selena says she can't take the risk and immediately hacks him to death with a machete. Since it takes only a ''single'' drop of blood to become infected and the person will turn in ''30 seconds'', Selena has a very good reason to be so paranoid.
** [[WordOfGod Naomi Harris]] has said that she believes the reason for this is because Selena had to kill her entire family after they got infected...including her younger brothers and sisters.
* Marty, the resident [[TheStoner stoner]] of ''Film/TheCabinInTheWoods'', is convinced that something strange is going on and that there are puppeteers running everything. His friends ignore him. [[TheCloudCuckoolanderWasRight At first]]. Later, when one of his friends admits that he was right, he says he wasn't. What he'd uncovered was much bigger.
-->'''Marty:''' [[NotHimself We are not...who we are]].
* ''Film/TheFastestGunAlive'': After George shows off his talents, his wife is very well aware that gunmen will be demanding a showdown with him unless they swear everyone to secrecy. Vinnie Harold's arrival proves these fears correct.
* In ''Film/SavingPrivateRyan'', Reiben is against letting their prisoner "Steamboat Willie" walk free, in case he's picked up by the Germans and "thrown back into circulation." [[spoiler:Which is not only what happens, but the ex-prisoner also fatally wounds Miller]].
* The protagonist in ''Film/TakeShelter'' sees himself as this when he begins digging up his backyard to expand their storm shelter. Everyone else thinks he's gone nuts.

to:

* ''Film/TheTrumanShow'': The Tom Hanks black comedy ''Film/TheBurbs'' is all about this trope. Hanks' character is convinced by plot kicks off when a series of bizarre incidents around his friends hometown makes Truman begin to suspect that someone or something is pulling the creepy neighbors on their block are actually serial killers. They repeatedly try strings of his life, and that he's BeingWatched. His attempts to prove it and find ways to expose them, but all they succeed in doing out what exactly is to continue making fools of themselves. [[spoiler:Then at going on would make him come off as a total lunatic, if not for the end fact that he's completely right; his ''whole life'' is a manufactured and continuously broadcast TV show, and everyone in his town, except for him, is an actor.
* ''Film/UnderSiege2DarkTerritory'': When Penn learns that [[OneManArmy Ryback]] is
the suspected neighbors confront Hanks, and it turns out his friends were mysterious stowaway, he recognizes that as long as they're not 100% right]].
* In ''Film/TwentyEightDaysLater'', after an attack by the Infected leaves Mark with an open wound and covered in blood, despite his protests that
sure he's dead, it's ''his'' blood, Selena says she can't take the risk imperative to assume that he's not, and immediately hacks him orders his men to death with a machete. Since it takes only a ''single'' drop of blood to become infected search the train, over and the person will turn in ''30 seconds'', Selena has a very good reason over again, top to be so paranoid.
** [[WordOfGod Naomi Harris]] has said that she believes the reason for this is because Selena had to kill her entire family after
bottom, UNTIL they got infected...including her younger brothers and sisters.
* Marty, the resident [[TheStoner stoner]] of ''Film/TheCabinInTheWoods'', is convinced that something strange is going on and that there are puppeteers running everything. His friends ignore him. [[TheCloudCuckoolanderWasRight At first]]. Later, when one of his friends admits that he was right, he says he wasn't. What he'd uncovered was much bigger.
-->'''Marty:''' [[NotHimself We are not...who we are]].
* ''Film/TheFastestGunAlive'': After George shows off his talents, his wife is very well aware that gunmen will be demanding a showdown with him unless they swear everyone to secrecy. Vinnie Harold's arrival proves these fears correct.
* In ''Film/SavingPrivateRyan'', Reiben is against letting their prisoner "Steamboat Willie" walk free, in case he's picked up by the Germans and "thrown back into circulation." [[spoiler:Which is not only what happens, but the ex-prisoner also fatally wounds Miller]].
* The protagonist in ''Film/TakeShelter'' sees himself as this when he begins digging up his backyard to expand their storm shelter. Everyone else thinks he's gone nuts.
can confirm it.



* In ''Film/TheHobbit'', Bard is the OnlySaneMan who recognizes that Smaug could and would bring destruction to Lake Town, reminding them what had happened to Dale, but he is ignored out of common greed. [[spoiler:Smaug flies off to destroy Lake Town at the end of the second film]]. Later on, he tries to [[spoiler:place the last Black Arrow on the large crossbow in case Smaug does come]], but is stopped by the Master.
* In ''Film/SplitSecond1992'', the Chief is initially wary of Stone being a paranoid menace, since he carries around a HandCannon and several other guns at all times. The very next scene involves him and the chief discovering that the heart of the killer's latest victim [[FingerInTheMail was delivered right to Stone's desk at the precinct]].
-->'''Stone:''' Paranoid, huh?
* ''Film/NoBladeOfGrass'': As the crop-killing virus finishes ravishing Asia and people worry that it will reach Europe, David Custance kills all of the grass-eating animals on his farm and converts his land to potato farming (as potatoes are immune to the virus). In the book, he also builds a guardhouse at the entrance to his valley around that time and says that he'd rather have his neighbors call it "Custance's Folly" if he's wrong than be defenseless if he's right. David's precautions are warranted when the virus reaches England.
* ''Film/PatriotGames'': Professor Jack Ryan is leaving work when he notices a young man that looks like [[BigBad Sean Miller]] idling nearby. The man casually walks away as he notices Ryan looking at him, but Ryan is clearly unnerved, even more so when he hears a car engine starting up. And with good reason--as he continues to walk down the street, the audience sees that both the car and the man are now following him. Luckily, Ryan quickly notices this too and is able to disarm the man--the woman driving the getaway car is unfortunately able to escape--and foil the attempt on his life--revenge for Ryan having foiled an assassination attempt made by these people several months earlier. The interesting subversion is that Ryan had been warned about the possibility of this by his CIA contacts--it's ''he'' who didn't want to believe that the group would go to such lengths to kill him.
* ''Film/ASeriesOfUnfortunateEvents'': Every single one of Aunt Josephine's fears and phobias previously waved off as ridiculous by the children (including the stove bursting into flames, the fridge crushing one flat, and the door-knob exploding and a fragment getting in one's eye) come true after she disappears. Every. Single. ''One''.
-->'''Violet:''' ''[as the door-knob is superheated, and about to shatter]'' '''[[LampshadeHanging No way]].'''
* In ''Film/{{Godzilla 2014}}'', Joe Brody's obsession with his wife's death has left him more than a little nutty, but he was still right about the cover up.



* Gavin from ''Film/DisturbingBehavior'', a seemingly drug-addled teen is convinced there is some kind of mind control conspiracy going on in Cradle Bay but is rebuked by Steve when he [[YouHaveToBelieveMe claims he is next]]. Not only is he 100% right, [[spoiler:but they also get him]].
* In ''Film/{{Enchanted}}'', Robert is rightly suspicious of the fact that people keep trying to give Giselle free stuff. These "people" are actually Nathaniel, who tries to slip Giselle poison apple in some form or another from the moment he's first able to get to her in New York.
* In ''Film/{{Primer}}'', second act, none of what we see is actually the first timeline. This means there are time travelers from alternate futures running around doing who-knows-what.
-->'''Aaron:''' What's worse? Thinking you're being paranoid or knowing you ''should'' be?
* In ''Film/TheConversation'', Harry Caul does everything in his power to keep his privacy intact, to the point that he keeps his office phone unlisted (and he makes calls through public phones if he needs to contact someone) and it's a serious, relationship-shattering BerserkButton if anybody asks him too many questions about anything (''especially'' personal info). Then it turns out that the company that hired him to record the titular conversation made a very thorough dossier on him even before he was hired and there is absolutely ''nothing'' that they don't know about him and there is absolutely ''no place'' that he owns that they can't break into to steal from him or place a bug.
* In ''Film/EvenLambsHaveTeeth'', Katie calls her Uncle Jason "a crazy, paranoid cop" for insisting that she call him every day, or text him if she can't call. He also makes her put a code word at the end of each text and change the word every day in case someone else gets hold of her phone. However, when she is kidnapped by sex traffickers, they use her phone to send him a text saying everything is fine, but they fail to change the code word. Jason is immediately suspicious and goes to investigate.
* ''Film/Seven1979'': When Harris calls Drew and tells him that some details of the operation and that his agent on the island will be making contact, Drew immediately checks out of his hotel and leaves no forwarding address. As he explains to Alexa, he trusts Harris but does not know anything about Harris' agent or where their loyalties. This turns out to be a sensible precaution, as the agent is really a SixthRangerTraitor who tries to kill Cowboy when she can't locate Drew.
* ''Film/UnderSiege2DarkTerritory'': When Penn learns that [[OneManArmy Ryback]] is the mysterious stowaway, he recognizes that as long as they're not 100% sure he's dead, it's imperative to assume that he's not, and immediately orders his men to search the train, over and over again, top to bottom, UNTIL they can confirm it.
* Will in ''Film/TheInvitation2015'' is immediately suspicious when his ex-wife Eden and her new boyfriend Dave invite him, his new girlfriend, and a bunch of their other friends back to their old house for a dinner party. Throughout the party Will notices things like Dave locking the front door, Eden acting happy, the new bars on the windows, [[spoiler: and the cult recruitment video/snuff film Dave and Eden show everyone]], but everyone else brushes off Will's paranoia as an extension of his grief [[spoiler: over Will and Eden's son dying]]. Turns out Will is right to be paranoid because [[spoiler: the cult Dave and Eden are in is a murder-suicide cult and they're planning to kill everyone]].
* Chloe's father in ''Film/Freaks2018'' frequently checks the windows of their house and keeps them carefully taped up so no one can look in. He does quick grocery runs outside only when it becomes absolutely necessary and is completely obsessive about Chloe ''not'' leaving the house, to the point where it reaches borderline abuse when he locks her up as punishment for trying to get outside. Chloe has no real understanding of why she can't go out, and when she does finally make it outside, it's a peaceful, lovely day in a comfortable suburban community. Unfortunately for her, [[spoiler:as one of the "[[DifferentlyPoweredIndividual Abnormals]]", she's likely to be rounded up and exterminated (either that, or [[TykeBomb turned into a weapon]]) as soon as anyone sees her abilities. Which a seven year-old is not good at hiding.]] Factor that in, and her dad's fear is suddenly completely justified.
* Done for comedy in ''Film/SonicTheHedgehog2020.'' Crazy Carl is the only resident of Green Hills that even ''suspects'' that Sonic exists (before Sonic meets Tom), and spends the first part of the movie trying to catch Sonic just to prove it. Sonic later says that they should rename him to "Super Observant Carl."
* ''Film/TheRental'': {{Zigzagged}}. Mina, who's of Middle Eastern descent, thinks Taylor didn't rent her the house earlier because he's racist as later her white boyfriend and friends instantly got approved. He denies all this naturally, but later his racist remark about "hajis" (i.e. Muslims/Middle Eastern people) all but confirms that she's right. However, she's wrong that he's behind the hidden cameras in the house.
* ''Film/TheTrumanShow'': The plot kicks off when a series of bizarre incidents around his hometown makes Truman begin to suspect that someone or something is pulling the strings of his life, and that he's BeingWatched. His attempts to prove it and find out what exactly is going on would make him come off as a total lunatic, if not for the fact that he's completely right; his ''whole life'' is a manufactured and continuously broadcast TV show, and everyone in his town, except for him, is an actor.
* In ''Film/{{Ratter}}'', Emma grows increasingly anxious once she realizes she's being watched. It's especially tragic since we, as an audience, [[DramaticIrony know just how much danger she's in right from the get-go...]] since we've been stalking her alongside the culprit.
* In ''Film/TowerOfLondon'', Queen Elyzabeth never shook off her fear for the safety and lives of her sons, suspecting Richard's machinations on them. She would tragically be proven right.

to:

* Gavin from ''Film/DisturbingBehavior'', a seemingly drug-addled teen is convinced there is some kind of mind control conspiracy going on in Cradle Bay but is rebuked by Steve when he [[YouHaveToBelieveMe claims he is next]]. Not only is he 100% right, [[spoiler:but they also get him]].
* In ''Film/{{Enchanted}}'', Robert is rightly suspicious of the fact that people keep trying to give Giselle free stuff. These "people" are actually Nathaniel, who tries to slip Giselle poison apple in some form or another from the moment he's first able to get to her in New York.
* In ''Film/{{Primer}}'', second act, none of what we see is actually the first timeline. This means there are time travelers from alternate futures running around doing who-knows-what.
-->'''Aaron:''' What's worse? Thinking you're being paranoid or knowing you ''should'' be?
* In ''Film/TheConversation'', Harry Caul does everything in his power to keep his privacy intact, to the point that he keeps his office phone unlisted (and he makes calls through public phones if he needs to contact someone) and it's a serious, relationship-shattering BerserkButton if anybody asks him too many questions about anything (''especially'' personal info). Then it turns out that the company that hired him to record the titular conversation made a very thorough dossier on him even before he was hired and there is absolutely ''nothing'' that they don't know about him and there is absolutely ''no place'' that he owns that they can't break into to steal from him or place a bug.
* In ''Film/EvenLambsHaveTeeth'', Katie calls her Uncle Jason "a crazy, paranoid cop" for insisting that she call him every day, or text him if she can't call. He also makes her put a code word at the end of each text and change the word every day in case someone else gets hold of her phone. However, when she is kidnapped by sex traffickers, they use her phone to send him a text saying everything is fine, but they fail to change the code word. Jason is immediately suspicious and goes to investigate.
* ''Film/Seven1979'': When Harris calls Drew and tells him that some details of the operation and that his agent on the island will be making contact, Drew immediately checks out of his hotel and leaves no forwarding address. As he explains to Alexa, he trusts Harris but does not know anything about Harris' agent or where their loyalties. This turns out to be a sensible precaution, as the agent is really a SixthRangerTraitor who tries to kill Cowboy when she can't locate Drew.
* ''Film/UnderSiege2DarkTerritory'': When Penn learns that [[OneManArmy Ryback]] is the mysterious stowaway, he recognizes that as long as they're not 100% sure he's dead, it's imperative to assume that he's not, and immediately orders his men to search the train, over and over again, top to bottom, UNTIL they can confirm it.
* Will in ''Film/TheInvitation2015'' is immediately suspicious when his ex-wife Eden and her new boyfriend Dave invite him, his new girlfriend, and a bunch of their other friends back to their old house for a dinner party. Throughout the party Will notices things like Dave locking the front door, Eden acting happy, the new bars on the windows, [[spoiler: and the cult recruitment video/snuff film Dave and Eden show everyone]], but everyone else brushes off Will's paranoia as an extension of his grief [[spoiler: over Will and Eden's son dying]]. Turns out Will is right to be paranoid because [[spoiler: the cult Dave and Eden are in is a murder-suicide cult and they're planning to kill everyone]].
* Chloe's father in ''Film/Freaks2018'' frequently checks the windows of their house and keeps them carefully taped up so no one can look in. He does quick grocery runs outside only when it becomes absolutely necessary and is completely obsessive about Chloe ''not'' leaving the house, to the point where it reaches borderline abuse when he locks her up as punishment for trying to get outside. Chloe has no real understanding of why she can't go out, and when she does finally make it outside, it's a peaceful, lovely day in a comfortable suburban community. Unfortunately for her, [[spoiler:as one of the "[[DifferentlyPoweredIndividual Abnormals]]", she's likely to be rounded up and exterminated (either that, or [[TykeBomb turned into a weapon]]) as soon as anyone sees her abilities. Which a seven year-old is not good at hiding.]] Factor that in, and her dad's fear is suddenly completely justified.
* Done for comedy in ''Film/SonicTheHedgehog2020.'' Crazy Carl is the only resident of Green Hills that even ''suspects'' that Sonic exists (before Sonic meets Tom), and spends the first part of the movie trying to catch Sonic just to prove it. Sonic later says that they should rename him to "Super Observant Carl."
* ''Film/TheRental'': {{Zigzagged}}. Mina, who's of Middle Eastern descent, thinks Taylor didn't rent her the house earlier because he's racist as later her white boyfriend and friends instantly got approved. He denies all this naturally, but later his racist remark about "hajis" (i.e. Muslims/Middle Eastern people) all but confirms that she's right. However, she's wrong that he's behind the hidden cameras in the house.
* ''Film/TheTrumanShow'': The plot kicks off when a series of bizarre incidents around his hometown makes Truman begin to suspect that someone or something is pulling the strings of his life, and that he's BeingWatched. His attempts to prove it and find out what exactly is going on would make him come off as a total lunatic, if not for the fact that he's completely right; his ''whole life'' is a manufactured and continuously broadcast TV show, and everyone in his town, except for him, is an actor.
* In ''Film/{{Ratter}}'', Emma grows increasingly anxious once she realizes she's being watched. It's especially tragic since we, as an audience, [[DramaticIrony know just how much danger she's in right from the get-go...]] since we've been stalking her alongside the culprit.
* In ''Film/TowerOfLondon'', Queen Elyzabeth never shook off her fear for the safety and lives of her sons, suspecting Richard's machinations on them. She would tragically be proven right.
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* In ''Film/TowerOfLondon'', Queen Elyzabeth never shook off her fear for the safety and lives of her sons, suspecting Richard's machinations on them. She would tragically be proven right.
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* ''WesternAnimation/HeyArnoldTheMovie'': [[spoiler:Scheck's security camera system [[BigBrotherIsWatching is set up all over the building recording everything that goes on 24/7]], and it proves its effectiveness by twice catching Arnold and Gerald when they sneak past the guards. There's even a security camera in the security room itself with a direct line to his office so he can catch anyone who isn't supposed to be there possibly tampering with the cameras, and he can replace any disabled cameras with just a press of a button. [[DidntThinkThisThrough Unfortunately, this proves to be a big mistake for Scheck]], since [[HoistByHisOwnPetard they also catch everything he does]], such as [[FieryCoverUp burning]] [[DestroyTheEvidence the historical document]] [[EngineeredPublicConfession in front of Arnold and Gerald]].]]

to:

* ''WesternAnimation/HeyArnoldTheMovie'': [[spoiler:Scheck's security camera system [[BigBrotherIsWatching is set up all over the building recording everything that goes on 24/7]], and it proves its effectiveness by twice catching Arnold and Gerald when they sneak past the guards. There's even a security camera in the security room itself with a direct line to his office so he can catch anyone who isn't supposed to be there possibly tampering with the cameras, and he can replace any disabled cameras with just a press of a button. [[DidntThinkThisThrough Unfortunately, this proves to be a big mistake for Scheck]], since [[HoistByHisOwnPetard they also catch everything he does]], such as [[FieryCoverUp burning]] [[DestroyTheEvidence the historical document]] [[EngineeredPublicConfession in front of Arnold and Gerald]].Gerald]], leading up to the two boys stealing [[CaughtOnTape a videotape]] filming his crimes.]]
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* ''WesternAnimation/HeyArnoldTheMovie'': [[spoiler:Scheck's security camera system [[BigBrotherIsWatching is set up all over the building recording everything that goes on 24/7]], and it proves its effectiveness by twice catching Arnold and Gerald when they sneak past the guards. There's even a security camera in the security room itself with a direct line to his office so he can catch anyone who isn't supposed to be there possibly tampering with the cameras, and he can replace any disabled cameras with just a press of a button. [[DidntThinkThisThrough Unfortunately]], [[HoistByHisOwnPetard it also catches everything Scheck does]], such as [[FieryCoverUp burning]] [[DestroyTheEvidence the historical document]] [[EngineeredPublicConfession in front of Arnold and Gerald]].]]

to:

* ''WesternAnimation/HeyArnoldTheMovie'': [[spoiler:Scheck's security camera system [[BigBrotherIsWatching is set up all over the building recording everything that goes on 24/7]], and it proves its effectiveness by twice catching Arnold and Gerald when they sneak past the guards. There's even a security camera in the security room itself with a direct line to his office so he can catch anyone who isn't supposed to be there possibly tampering with the cameras, and he can replace any disabled cameras with just a press of a button. [[DidntThinkThisThrough Unfortunately]], Unfortunately, this proves to be a big mistake for Scheck]], since [[HoistByHisOwnPetard it they also catches catch everything Scheck he does]], such as [[FieryCoverUp burning]] [[DestroyTheEvidence the historical document]] [[EngineeredPublicConfession in front of Arnold and Gerald]].]]
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* ''WesternAnimation/HeyArnoldTheMovie'': [[spoiler:Scheck's security camera system [[BigBrotherIsWatching is set up all over the building recording everything that goes on 24/7]], and it proves its effectiveness by twice catching Arnold and Gerald when they sneak past the guards. There's even a security camera in the security room itself with a direct line to his office so he can catch anyone who isn't supposed to be there possibly tampering with the cameras, and he can replace any disabled cameras with just a press of a button. [[DidntThinkThisThrough Unfortunately]], [[HoistByHisOwnPetard it also catches everything Scheck does]], such as [[FieryCoverUp burning]] [[DestroyTheEvidence the historical document]] [[EngineeredPublicConfession in front of Arnold and Gerald]].]]
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* In ''Film/{{Ratter}}'', Emma grows increasingly anxious once she realizes she's being watched. It's especially tragic since we, as an audience, [[DramaticIrony know just how much danger she's in right from the get-go...]] since we've been stalking her alongside the culprit.
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* In ''WesternAnimation/OverTheHedge'', [[RascallyRaccoon RJ the raccoon]] convinces the other suburban animals to start raiding the neighborhood for food, but Verne the turtle believes he has ulterior motives - which is actually true, as RJ is collecting the food to pay back [[BearsAreBadNews an angry bear]] whose winter stash he accidentally destroyed.
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Grammar


* Bril in ''Film/EnemyOfTheState''. Understanding since he used to be a spook himself.

to:

* Bril in ''Film/EnemyOfTheState''. Understanding Understandable since he used to be a spook himself.



* ''Film/FreezeFrame'', a British film, where the main character films everything he does, 24/7/52, after been accused (but acquitted) of multiple murders. [[spoiler: It finally allows him to prove himself innocent in the end]]. It stars Lee Evans (a comedian) in a serious role.

to:

* ''Film/FreezeFrame'', a British film, where the main character films everything he does, 24/7/52, after been being accused (but acquitted) of multiple murders. [[spoiler: It finally allows him to prove himself innocent in the end]]. It stars Lee Evans (a comedian) in a serious role.
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Adding a trope link.


* ''WesternAnimation/AlvinAndTheChipmunksMeetTheWolfman'': Alvin has a history of subverting this trope, as Simon proves with a record of everyone that Alvin thought was a werewolf, mummy, vampire, or she-wolf, which had practically everyone in town. So when Alvin believes that the new neighbor Mr. Talbot is a werewolf, he gets brushed off. But for once, it turns out that Alvin was right all along, considering that [[spoiler:Talbot is the werewolf that bit poor Theodore and turned him into a were-munk]].

to:

* ''WesternAnimation/AlvinAndTheChipmunksMeetTheWolfman'': Alvin has a history of subverting this trope, as Simon proves with a record of everyone that Alvin thought was a werewolf, mummy, vampire, or she-wolf, which had practically everyone in town. So when Alvin believes that the new neighbor Mr. Talbot is a werewolf, he gets brushed off. But for once, [[CryingWolf it turns out that Alvin was right all along, along]], considering that [[spoiler:Talbot is the werewolf that bit poor Theodore and turned him into a were-munk]].
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* ''WesternAnimation/MonstersInc'': When Mike and Sulley are trying to get Boo back to her door, Mike lets it slip that he got the door thank to Randall. Sulley immediately becomes suspicious that Randall is after Boo, and refuses to put her back in her door. Mike, being irritated, tries going into Boo's door to prove that everything's fine, only for Randall, believing he was the kid, to kidnap him, confirming Sulley's suspicions.

to:

* ''WesternAnimation/MonstersInc'': When Mike and Sulley are trying to get Boo back to her door, Mike lets it slip that he got the door thank to Randall. Sulley immediately becomes suspicious that Randall is after Boo, and refuses to put her back in her door. Mike, being irritated, tries going into Boo's door to prove that everything's fine, only for Randall, believing he was the kid, Randall to kidnap him, confirming Sulley's suspicions.
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Mike didn't confide in Randall, Randall put the pieces together and confronted him.


* ''WesternAnimation/MonstersInc'': When Mike and Sulley are trying to get Boo back to her door, Mike lets it slip that he got the door by confiding in Randall. Sulley immediately becomes suspicious that Randall is after Boo, and refuses to put her back in her door. Mike, being irritated, tries going into Boo's door to prove that everything's fine, only for Randall to kidnap him, confirming Sulley's suspicions.

to:

* ''WesternAnimation/MonstersInc'': When Mike and Sulley are trying to get Boo back to her door, Mike lets it slip that he got the door by confiding in thank to Randall. Sulley immediately becomes suspicious that Randall is after Boo, and refuses to put her back in her door. Mike, being irritated, tries going into Boo's door to prove that everything's fine, only for Randall Randall, believing he was the kid, to kidnap him, confirming Sulley's suspicions.
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** ''Film/RevengeOfTheSith'': While Anakin is mostly ImproperlyParanoid in some of his assumptions, such as believing Obi-Wan doesn't trust him, he is not ''entirely'' wrong. Mace Windu in particular is very open about the fact he doesn't, chosen one or not.
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Overprotective Dad has been disambiguated


* Bryan Mills from ''Film/{{Taken}}'' looks like a stock OverprotectiveDad until his warnings turn out to be too true.

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* Bryan Mills from ''Film/{{Taken}}'' looks like a stock OverprotectiveDad overprotective dad until his warnings turn out to be too true.
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* ''Film/NoBladeOfGrass'': As the crop-killing virus finishes ravishing Asia and people worry that it will reach Europe, David Custance kills all of the grass-eating animals on his farm and converts his land to potato farming (as potatoes are immune to the virus). In the book, he also builds a guardhouse at the entrance to his valley around that time and says that he'd rather have his neighbors call it "Custance's Folly" if he's wrong than be defenseless if he's right. David's precautions are warranted when the virus reaches England.
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*** When the Clone Wars started and it was revealed the Separatists used almost exclusively battle droids, the Republic Senate ordered ''all'' battle droids in Republic loyalist forces to be deactivated, and later only used them sparingly. This was because they feared that if two armies of battle droids faced each other they could realize they were just meant to kill each other for their masters and rebel. By the time the Senate allows loyalists to use battle droids again it's only because [[GodzillaThreshold the situation has gotten just that bad]] and their droids are so more powerful than Separatist droids they can be used effectively while in numbers low enough they can be shot in the back if they try anything funny, and the Separatists can shut down their at any moment anyway.
** Palpatine was always fearful of his apprentices turning on him . Hence why he does things like grooming young Jedi and Sith to be future apprentices in case his current one got out of hand. And purposelessly placing his strongest apprentice Darth Vader into an outdated limiting life support suit despite having the tech and budget to give him a much more current life support suit. Later Vader offers to overthrow him with Luke's help so the pair can rule the galaxy together, so the Emperor was not really wrong.

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*** When the Clone Wars started and it was revealed the Separatists used almost exclusively battle droids, the Republic Senate ordered ''all'' battle droids in Republic loyalist forces to be deactivated, and later only used them sparingly. This was because they feared that if two armies of battle droids faced each other they could realize they were just meant to kill each other for their masters and rebel. By the time the Senate allows loyalists to use battle droids again it's only because [[GodzillaThreshold the situation has gotten just that bad]] and their droids are so much more powerful than Separatist droids they can be used effectively while in numbers low enough they can be shot in the back if they try anything funny, and the Separatists can shut down their at any moment anyway.
** Palpatine was always fearful of his apprentices turning on him .him. Hence why he does things like grooming young Jedi and Sith to be future apprentices in case his current one got out of hand. And purposelessly placing his strongest apprentice Darth Vader into an outdated limiting life support suit despite having the tech and budget to give him a much more current life support suit. Later Vader offers to overthrow him with Luke's help so the pair can rule the galaxy together, so the Emperor was not really wrong.
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* Will in ''Film/TheInvitation'' is immediately suspicious when his ex-wife Eden and her new boyfriend Dave invite him, his new girlfriend, and a bunch of their other friends back to their old house for a dinner party. Throughout the party Will notices things like Dave locking the front door, Eden acting happy, the new bars on the windows, [[spoiler: and the cult recruitment video/snuff film Dave and Eden show everyone]], but everyone else brushes off Will's paranoia as an extension of his grief [[spoiler: over Will and Eden's son dying]]. Turns out Will is right to be paranoid because [[spoiler: the cult Dave and Eden are in is a murder-suicide cult and they're planning to kill everyone]].

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* Will in ''Film/TheInvitation'' ''Film/TheInvitation2015'' is immediately suspicious when his ex-wife Eden and her new boyfriend Dave invite him, his new girlfriend, and a bunch of their other friends back to their old house for a dinner party. Throughout the party Will notices things like Dave locking the front door, Eden acting happy, the new bars on the windows, [[spoiler: and the cult recruitment video/snuff film Dave and Eden show everyone]], but everyone else brushes off Will's paranoia as an extension of his grief [[spoiler: over Will and Eden's son dying]]. Turns out Will is right to be paranoid because [[spoiler: the cult Dave and Eden are in is a murder-suicide cult and they're planning to kill everyone]].
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* ''WesternAnimation/{{Ratatouille}}'': Skinner strongly suspects that Rémy provides something important to Linguini's success, and of course, he's right.
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* Marvin in the film adaption of ''Film/{{RED}}'' believes he was being used in some secret government mind control project. It turned out that he actually was being fed LSD for decades. And that's just the beginning of the list. Literally EVERYTHING that Marvin becomes paranoid about is either true or becomes true over the course of the film.

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* Marvin in the film adaption of ''Film/{{RED}}'' ''Film/Red2010'' believes he was being used in some secret government mind control project. It turned out that he actually was being fed LSD for decades. And that's just the beginning of the list. Literally EVERYTHING that Marvin becomes paranoid about is either true or becomes true over the course of the film.
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* ''Film/TheTrumanShow'': The plot kicks off when a series of bizarre incidents around his hometown makes Truman begin to suspect that someone or something is pulling the strings of his life, and that he's BeingWatched. His attempts to prove it and find out what exactly is going on would make him come off as a total lunatic, if not for the fact that he's completely right; his ''whole life'' is a manufactured and continuously broadcast TV show, and everyone in his town, except for him, is an actor.
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* Disney's ''WesternAnimation/RobinHood'' has this with Trigger the vulture, one of the Sheriff's lackeys. When a blind beggar comes up to the gallows where he and the Sheriff are, and he and the other vulture, [[MeaningfulName Nutsy]], start carelessly saying that they're going to hang Friar Tuck at dawn. Only Trigger is suspicious of him…which is justified, since the beggar is Robin in disguise. Early the next morning, an hour before dawn, Trigger continues ranting to the Sheriff about how he knows that there's going to be a jailbreak. The Sheriff dismisses it as paranoia, even as Robin Hood and Little John infiltrate the grounds. He gets his vindication the hard way an hour later, when he tries to warn the Sheriff again, and it turns out to be Little John in disguise.

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* Disney's ''WesternAnimation/RobinHood'' ''WesternAnimation/RobinHood1973'' has this with Trigger the vulture, one of the Sheriff's lackeys. When a blind beggar comes up to the gallows where he and the Sheriff are, and he and the other vulture, [[MeaningfulName Nutsy]], start carelessly saying that they're going to hang Friar Tuck at dawn. Only Trigger is suspicious of him…which is justified, since the beggar is Robin in disguise. Early the next morning, an hour before dawn, Trigger continues ranting to the Sheriff about how he knows that there's going to be a jailbreak. The Sheriff dismisses it as paranoia, even as Robin Hood and Little John infiltrate the grounds. He gets his vindication the hard way an hour later, when he tries to warn the Sheriff again, and it turns out to be Little John in disguise.

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* In ''WesternAnimation/AlvinAndTheChipmunksMeetTheWolfman'', Alvin believes that the neighbor Mr. Talbot is a werewolf, but Dave and Simon (the latter playing along regardless) brush him off… though Simon very readily justifies this with a record he kept of everyone that Alvin thought was a werewolf, mummy, vampire, or she-wolf, which had practically everyone in town. But for once, it turns out that Alvin was right all along, considering that [[spoiler:Talbot is the werewolf that bit poor Theodore and turned him into a were-munk]].

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* In ''WesternAnimation/AlvinAndTheChipmunksMeetTheWolfman'', ''WesternAnimation/AlvinAndTheChipmunksMeetTheWolfman'': Alvin believes that the neighbor Mr. Talbot is has a werewolf, but Dave and history of subverting this trope, as Simon (the latter playing along regardless) brush him off… though Simon very readily justifies this proves with a record he kept of everyone that Alvin thought was a werewolf, mummy, vampire, or she-wolf, which had practically everyone in town.town. So when Alvin believes that the new neighbor Mr. Talbot is a werewolf, he gets brushed off. But for once, it turns out that Alvin was right all along, considering that [[spoiler:Talbot is the werewolf that bit poor Theodore and turned him into a were-munk]].



* In ''WesternAnimation/RecessSchoolsOut'', TJ Dettwiler tries to tell everyone in town that there was suspicious activity going on at the school, yet his parents and the police never believed him, and his friends felt doubtful at what happened after stealing one of their crates and Prickly apparently leaving the school (ItMakesSenseInContext). Turns out, TJ was actually very sound in his suspicions, as the school had actually been taken over by an extremist group led by the former Secretary of Education and former principal of Third Street Elementary, Phllium Benedict, that was trying to eliminate summer vacation.

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* In ''WesternAnimation/RecessSchoolsOut'', TJ Dettwiler tries to tell everyone in town that there was suspicious activity going on at the school, yet school. Yet his parents and the police never believed him, and his friends felt doubtful at what happened after stealing one of their crates a crate from the people in the school (weather maps, test scores, Norwegian documents) and Prickly apparently leaving the school after getting dematerialized (ItMakesSenseInContext). His friends are about to abandon him and return to their summer camps...right up until they see the school's roof retract and a giant laser emerges. Turns out, TJ was actually very sound in his suspicions, as the school had actually been taken over by an extremist group led by the former Secretary of Education and former principal of Third Street Elementary, Phllium Benedict, that was trying to eliminate summer vacation.
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* ''Film/TheFastestGunAlive'': After George shows off his talents, his wife is very well aware that gunmen will be demanding a showdown with him unless they swear everyone to secrecy. Vinnie Harold's arrival proves these fears correct.
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* ''Film/TheRental'': {{Zigzagged}}. Mina, who's of Middle Eastern descent, thinks Taylor didn't rent her the house earlier because he's racist as later her white boyfriend and friends instantly got approved. He denies all this naturally, but later his racist remark about "hajis" (i.e. Muslims/Middle Eastern people) all but confirms that she's right. However, she's wrong that he's behind the hidden cameras in the house.
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* ''Film/BeneathThePlanetOfTheApes'': Mendez ruthlessly interrogates humans and apes alike due to his desperation to find out whether the apes are planning to attack him and his people. They are.

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* Fear's job in ''WesternAnimation/InsideOut'', such as stopping toddler Riley from tripping over a power cord while playing.



* Disney's ''WesternAnimation/RobinHood'' has this with Trigger the vulture, one of the Sheriff's lackeys. When a blind beggar comes up to the gallows where he and the Sheriff are, and he and the other vulture, [[MeaningfulName Nutsy]], start carelessly saying that they're going to hang Friar Tuck at dawn. Only Trigger is suspicious of him…which is justified, since the beggar is Robin in disguise. Early the next morning, an hour before dawn, Trigger continues ranting to the Sheriff about how he knows that there's going to be a jailbreak. The sheriff dismisses it as paranoia, even as Robin Hood and Little John infiltrate the grounds. He gets his vindication the hard way an hour later, when he tries to warn the Sheriff again, and it turns out to be Little John in disguise.
* Fear's job in ''WesternAnimation/InsideOut'', such as stopping toddler Riley from tripping over a power cord while playing.

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* Disney's ''WesternAnimation/RobinHood'' has this with Trigger the vulture, one of the Sheriff's lackeys. When a blind beggar comes up to the gallows where he and the Sheriff are, and he and the other vulture, [[MeaningfulName Nutsy]], start carelessly saying that they're going to hang Friar Tuck at dawn. Only Trigger is suspicious of him…which is justified, since the beggar is Robin in disguise. Early the next morning, an hour before dawn, Trigger continues ranting to the Sheriff about how he knows that there's going to be a jailbreak. The sheriff Sheriff dismisses it as paranoia, even as Robin Hood and Little John infiltrate the grounds. He gets his vindication the hard way an hour later, when he tries to warn the Sheriff again, and it turns out to be Little John in disguise.
* Fear's job in ''WesternAnimation/InsideOut'', such as stopping toddler Riley from tripping over a power cord while playing.
disguise.

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