Funny Video of Fat Guy Pulling Guns

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There's a rifle above the bar because the name of the place is "The Winchester".

"If you say in the first chapter that there is a rifle hanging on the wall, in the second or third chapter it absolutely must go off. If it's not going to be fired, it shouldn't be hanging there."

Anton Chekhov, master of the short story, gave this advice: If it's not essential, don't include it in the story.

The term has come to mean an insignificant object that later turns out to be important. For example, a character may find a mysterious necklace that turns out to be the power source to the Doomsday Device, but at the time of finding the object, it doesn't seem important. The necklace was essential to the story, but its introduction downplayed its importance. Chekhov's advice wasn't necessarily to conceal importance, but to just not spend time on things that aren't important.

A lot of people consider the phrase "Chekhov's gun" synonymous with foreshadowing, and both terms are related. A gun that goes off in the third act but hasn't been in the play at all before, then, is going to feel like a real Ass Pull, but that's not key to the meaning of the phrase.

As a result of the success of franchises like Lost or Harry Potter, viewers and fans of Myth Arc-laden and/or carefully written shows and books have become accustomed to obsessing over minuscule details and looking out for Chekhov's Guns everywhere and anywhere... whether they actually exist or not. We call these Epileptic Trees and Wild Mass Guessing.

Chekhov's Gun Depot also stocks:

Part A: General cases

  • Androcles' Lion: Basically Chekhov's good deed.
  • Chekhov M.I.A.: Remember that missing character? It's actually a Chekhov's Gunman.
  • Chekhov's Armoury: A whole stash of Chekhov's Guns.
  • Chekhov's Army: A whole stash of Chekhov's Gunmen.
  • Chekhov's Boomerang: Chekhov's Gun has already been used once, then unexpectedly turns up again.
  • Chekhov's Classroom: Remember what you heard, when you weren't even listening?
  • Chekhov's Exhibit: Chekhov's Gun will be put on display for the general public to gawk at. Before it's stolen, of course.
  • Chekhov's Gag: You thought Chekhov's Gun was only introduced for the Rule of Funny, but later it goes off dramatically.
  • Chekhov's Gift: Happy birthday! Here, have a Chekhov's Gun.
  • Chekhov's Gunman: When a character seems to be there for no reason, they must be important. In other words, the Chekhov's Gun is a character rather than an object.
  • Chekhov's Hobby: Like Chekhov's Skill, but it is merely established that the character has the skill rather than showing them using or learning it beforehand.
  • Chekhov's News: When a news report mentions something that will be important later.
  • Chekhov's Party: If a party happens or is mentioned, pay close attention. Something important happened there.
  • Chekhov's Skill: What you learn along the way can be a Chekhov's Gun.
  • Chekhov's Volcano: If it wasn't going to erupt, it would have just been a mountain.
  • Conspicuously Light Patch: The Chekhov's Gun of old, traditional animation, where anything obviously not part of the static (and often painted) background layer will be put to use by a character.
  • Empty Room Psych: In a video game, all places must have a purpose.
  • Forbidden Chekhov's Gun: Never do this. Ever. (Unless you've crossed the Godzilla Threshold or something...)
  • Headache of Doom: If you have a headache, expect it to turn out to be for a very serious reason.
  • Incurable Cough of Death: The medical Chekhov's Gun. If you coughed in the first act, you can bet that you'll be dead by the third. Same for unexplained itches, unless they lead to something more... interesting.
  • Inevitably Broken Rule: If you introduce a rule for a character to follow, expect someone to break it without fail.
  • Infallible Babble: If prophecies are always right, then nonsense, hearsay and barely comprehensible rumours are even moreso.
  • Ironic Echo: A line of dialogue early on is repeated in an ironic context, showing a change in meaning or of heart.
  • It May Help You on Your Quest: Take this dull, seemingly-useless (or even mostly-useless) item. Go on, take it! You will be most definitely needing it.
  • King Incognito: When Chekhov's Gunman is a famous/important person in disguise.
  • The Legend of Chekhov: If someone tells a fairy tale or legend, it'll turn out to be true. And, outright disbelieving it only ups the uncomfortable nature of the truth when it hits.
  • Meaningful Echo: A line of idle dialogue is later repeated in a context that gives it additional significance.
  • Meaningful Name: If the character's name has a special meaning but no immediate relevance, then the relevance will come later.
  • Not-So-Small Role: Character #23 is played by whom? They'd never have signed on for so small a role!
  • Notice This: It must be important to the plot — look where it's positioned and lighted.
  • Plot Device All Along: Something mundane that the character uses regularly and constantly turns out to have been a highly important artifact.
  • The Promise: A verbal, visual or conceptual Chekhov's Gun where a promise is made and later comes up. Whereupon the promiser will be required to act; or, in unlucky cases, the promisee.
  • Resolved Noodle Incident: When a Noodle Incident now becomes important to the plot.
  • Someday This Will Come in Handy: Useless knowledge is always important. Compare Classroom, Skill.
  • 2D Visuals, 3D Effects: The analogue for CGI, newer cartoons, and more video games.
  • Workplace-Acquired Abilities: When the abilities obtained in one's professional career come in handy.
  • You Will Know What to Do: You are told it will be important, but you aren't told when, where, how, or why. And, you'll be lucky if you know exactly what it does before the consequences hit, too.

Part B: You know what will invariably happen when you see any of these in a scene....

  • Funeral Ashes — They will be scattered inappropriately.
  • An assembly line — It will speed up and cause chaos.
  • A Banana Peel — Someone will slip on it.
  • Someone Carrying a Cake — It will be smashed.
  • A sign warning of thin ice ahead — Someone will fall through it.
  • Someone's prized autographed possession — It will get lost, stolen, or destroyed.
  • Someone wearing new clothes — They will be dirtied, torn (often beyond repair), or drenched.
  • Doomed Supermarket Display — It will fall.
  • A soufflé — It will collapse.
  • Fish Tank — It will explode.
  • Someone checking a Fatal Family Photo before a fight — They will die.
  • An electrocardiogram — There'll be a Flatline.
  • Fruit Cart — It will be destroyed.
  • The Precious, Precious Car — If someone who owns a nice car acts like a jerk, the car will be borrowed without permission and/or broken.
  • Priceless Ming Vase — It will break.
  • Railroad Tracks of Doom — A train will show up, at the worst possible time for the characters.
  • Someone wearing a pearl necklace — The pearls will be ripped off.
  • Rope Bridge — It will fall.
  • Rule of Pool: Someone will fall or be pushed into that pool.
  • Sheet of Glass — It will break.

Compare Schrödinger's Gun for a competing dramatic weapons dealer. Contrast to a Red Herring, where something shown early appears to be significant but was planted there just to throw you off. If there are a whole bunch of Red Herrings you might be looking at The Walrus Was Paul, where a writer wants to mock fans of Chekhov's Guns by repeatedly messing with them. If there is a very long delay between the introduction of the element and its use in the story, to the point where most of the audience has long forgotten about it, you're looking at a Brick Joke. The MacGuffin is significant for some (possibly even plot-relevant) reason, but we never find out just what it is. If the Chekhov's Gun was hiding on the other side of the Fourth Wall, you have a Ninja Prop. If a Chekhov's gun is set up but dropped (but was neither intended to distract as a Red Herring nor to be brought up later, as a Brick Joke), you have either an Aborted Arc or What Happened to the Mouse?, depending on the importance of the gun to the overall plot. If something looks like a Chekhov's Gun but is really just a piece of Narrative Filigree then that's a Cow Tool.

The Magnetic Plot Device can be a standing Chekhov's Gun to blame the plot on. The Impossible Task may require one. Also see Ass Pull, which is what the viewer can sometimes confuse this with if they miss the gun the first time (or if the gun was edited out in an adaptation).

A reverse Chekhov's Gun is also common. Explicitly showing a normally armed character forgetting his gun when leaving the house for example. The experienced troper knows that this will become the day he needs it the most.

Also referred to as "the Indiana Jones principle" in Thomas C. Foster's How to Read Literature Like a Professor, named after Indy's early encounter with a snake at the beginning of Raiders of the Lost Ark and how it set up his much larger encounter with them later on. Another term for this is "setup and payoff," a technique used by Robert Zemeckis and Bob Gale for the Back to the Future trilogy and regularly taught to scriptwriters nowadays.

Not to be confused with Chekov's Gun (or Chekhov's Pun, for that matter). See also Call-Back, Brick Joke, and Running Gag.

Examples of this trope contain spoilers by necessity. Read at your own risk.


Example subpages:

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That's not the only reason, though...

  • Anime & Manga
    • One Piece
    • Pokémon Adventures
  • Comic Books
  • Fan Works
  • Films — Animation
  • Films — Live-Action
  • Literature
    • Harry Potter
  • Live-Action TV
  • Theatre
  • Video Games
  • Visual Novels
  • Web Animation
  • Webcomics
  • Web Original
  • Western Animation
    • Avatar: The Last Airbender

Other Examples:

    open/close all folders

    Audio Plays

  • In the Big Finish Doctor Who audio play Mistfall, the cobweb filled tunnel in the cave that the Doctor and the New Alzarians do not take plays a major role in the story's resolution.

    Comic Strips

  • The Transmogrifier Gun in Calvin and Hobbes. It was first used for a story arc where Calvin introduces it and wants Hobbes to turn him into a Pterodactyl. He turns him into a tiny one, and a massive transmogrifying fight ensues. In a later arc, Calvin is falling down to earth because a balloon that lifted him in the sky popped. He roots for some chewing gum in his pocket, in the hopes he can blow a big bubble and use it as a parachute, when he finds the gun, transforms himself into a light particle, and zips back home.

    Gamebooks

  • Many of the Fighting Fantasy gamebooks published in the United Kingdom have the reader collect all sorts of strange odds and ends, most of which seem to have no possible justification for the adventurer taking them along. Naturally, those seemingly useless items end up being just what the reader needs to get him- or herself out of trouble, or otherwise make an enemy easier to defeat.
  • Lone Wolf:
    • As a staple of Gamebooks, any item found by the protagonist (even seemingly useless trinkets) can prove surprisingly useful later in the book — or sometimes, one or two books further in the series. However, there are also plenty of random items that serve no purpose but to take up space in the backpack, and thus you must choose wisely what you keep. Also, it is quite possible to miss the specific path were any item happens to be used.
    • For the evil side, the Orb of Death that Zakhan Kimah demands in exchange for his allegiance to the Darklords, and receives in Shadow on the Sand. A savvy enough player could guess it'd show up again, since major villains are rarely left unpunished in the series; sure enough, Zakhan Kimah, armed with the artifact, is the Final Boss of The Cauldron of Fear.

    Myths & Religion

  • Classical Mythology:
    • Older Than Feudalism: Perseus, prior to his fight against Medusa, gets a number of gifts from the Gods. Every one of them turns out to be critically useful.
    • And that note, Medusa's head. While he was meant to simply retrieve it, Perseus ended up using it to kill Cetus and save Andromeda.

    Music

  • The Russian folk band Otava Yo has a variation with Chekhov's Kazoo: If a kazoo is on a musician's neck during a concert, it must be played.

    Music Videos

  • The music video for Nickelback's song "Savin' Me" shows the protagonist walking behind a statue being lifted by a crane at about the halfway point of the video. At the end of the song, it crashes down on the car of the woman the protagonist saves, because he can see her timer running out.

    Podcasts

  • The Firefly game of Cool Kids Table has this, or rather, Chekhovs missiles. Kimmi outfitted the shuttle with them just in case. Subverted in that they don't advance the plot, Kimmi just fires them to destroy the ships at the end and because she really wanted to fire them.
  • This trope was featured in Episode 3 of the TV Tropes podcast On the Tropes.
  • Welcome to Night Vale:
    • Taking pictures of the floating cats is deadly. Established over a year before firing in episode 48.
    • Also the list of seemingly random items that was given out by the Secret Police for summary memorization to grant protection from something. Fired over 2 years later in Episode 57, aptly titled "The List". It was just a drill, fortunately for everyone that forgot it.
    • Cecil's being auctioned off in Episode 37. The gun doesn't fire until over a year later in Episode 63 when Cecil, after having saved Dana's life several times without his remembering doing so, wonders if Dana was the one who bought him.

    Pro Wrestling

  • This trope is the entire idea behind WWE's "Money in the Bank" matches, which give their winner the opportunity to exercise the right to a world title match anytime they like within the coming year—usually at a theoretically unexpected and dramatically opportune moment, like right after the current champion has just been thoroughly beaten up by someone else or at an event where they have better moral support, like Rob Van Dam at One Night Stand 2006, who is the only person to successfully cash in his shot after announcing it beforehand.
  • In their classic WrestleMania 13 submission match, Bret Hart grabbed the timekeeper's bell from ringside midway through the match and set it on the apron without ever getting a chance to use it. Later, as "Stone Cold" Steve Austin attempted to strangle him with an extension cord by hanging him off the apron, Hart grabbed the bell and smashed Austin in the face with it, allowing him to escape, recompose himself, and lock Austin in the Sharpshooter to win the match.
  • Mick Foley brought a chair with him to the ring for his confrontation with Ryback on the April 22, 2013 Raw. Mick left before the chair could be used. Then The Shield showed up and looked to be targeting Ryback. WWE Champion John Cena walked out and it looked like he was going to simply stand back and let the Shield beat up on Ryback in retaliation for Ryback having done the same thing the week before. Instead, Cena grabbed the chair and used it on the Shield.
  • Averted during Jerry Lawler's first-ever WWE Championship Match against The Miz on the November 29, 2010 Raw. The Miz had set up a table outside the ring for him to slam Jerry Lawler through. During the last minutes of the match, after having already disposed of Alex Riley, Lawler managed to push The Miz off the top turnbuckle and through that exact table The Miz set up for him earlier. Averted as Lawler still lost the match due to Michael Cole interfering on The Miz's behalf.
  • Subverted during the Dean Ambrose–Brock Lesnar match at WrestleMania 32 in 2016. According to this review by an ESPN writer, "It was the match that finally put the lie to the Chekhov's Gun principle — they introduced a sea of weapons and managed to use approximately two."
  • The counter to Mike Quackenbush's Finishing Move The CHIKARA Special, since the only reason anyone would insist on coming up with a counter to his own finisher is because it would be important to the story later, which is exactly what happened. note At The Sordid Perils of Everyday Existence on November 17, 2007, Chris Hero defeated Equinox in a Mask vs. Hair match by breaking the CHIKARA Special by kicking Equinox in the head and locking Equinox in the hold instead. Earlier that same night, Hydra, a member of UltraMantis Black's The Order of the Neo-Solar Temple, essentially sacrificed himself to end Shane Storm's losing streak. It would slowly be revealed that Storm had sold out the tecnicos by giving the counter to Mantis who gave it to Hero. Equinox unmasked and wrestled for the rest of his career as Vin Gerard. At Style and Substance on September 7, 2008, Storm officially turned rudo and became STIGMA, forming The UnStable with Gerard, later adding the returning Colin Delaney. It turned out that Mantis and CHIKARA Commissioner Bob Saget (yes, Bob Saget) had made a deal to send Hero to wrestle for Dr. Cube, the Big Bad of Kaiju Big Battel, in exchange for Cube giving Mantis The Eye of Tyr, a Norse Mythological artifact that can be used to control minds. This ultimately led to the debut of Die Bruderschaft des Kreuzes at the end of the 2009 Season Finale Three-Fisted Tales on November 22, 2009, which was the night that Mantis' two years of machinations completely blew up in his face.
  • Averted at ROH Fight of the Century, August 5, 2006. Claudio Castagnoli brought a briefcase with him to the four-corner survival match against winner Nigel McGuinness, Christopher Daniels and Jay Lethal that never came into play.

    Radio

  • In an episode of Gunsmoke titled "Last Fling", specific mention is made of a woman's big, fancy hatpin. Later in the story, her estranged husband attacks her and she stabs him to death with it.

    Roleplay

  • Destroy the Godmodder:
    • Slightly more notable that these are often times accidental examples, as their use as a Chekhov's Gun wasn't intended up until becoming such.
    • The Anti-Chuck Norris Turret in both games. It originally popped up a few times in the beginning of the first game, just as a counter to all Chuck Norris attacks, and was forgotten for a while. However, it reappeared later on, in an upgraded form, as the Final Boss of the game. It was so powerful that only the intervention of the Secret of the Void were the players able to defeat it. It later reappeared in DTG2, resuming its original role of the Godmodder's counter to Chuck Norris-based attacks, until Trial 6, when the Godmodder used it to break through the Bedrock underneath the Nether and freeing the Red Dragon.
  • Dino Attack RPG:
    • The T-1 Typhoon that was left in the desert after Zenna and George were attacked by TumTum Tribesmen ended up having a brief but important role in driving an invading army of Mutant Dinosaurs out of the Dino Attack Team's camp on Adventurers' Island.
    • Shortly before the Goo Caverns mission, it was established that Dino Attack Team began developing a weapon powerful enough to destroy an entire army without leveling a city. Think this is going to be important sometime in the future?
    • Hotwire's PDA malfunctioned after Kat's death. Turns out that's what happens when a human consciousness stores itself in a pocket-sized communication device.
  • The Murderverse: Early in A Game Of Mafia 2, the Demi-fiend takes a cheap shot at Timeline Master Awe with an agility-reducing debuff skill, which goes entirely unnoticed and unmentioned by the other characters. Much, much later, during the climax, the agility reduction results in him taking visible damage for the first time in the entire series.
  • Subverted in Nan Quest. After Nan's memories start to fade, the paycheck she receives at the start of the story allows her to remember she was an electrician... but the paper is an ominous note rather than a paycheck, which just throws Nan's state of mind even more into question.

    Tabletop Games

  • Exalted:
    • It mentions in the first edition that one of the daughters of the Scarlet Empress had followed her into the Imperial Manse one night and simply disappeared. It would only be deep into Second Edition when Lillun returned. Unfortunately.
    • Also worth mentioning was the AI "Eyem," named for the first thing it said to those who discovered it, a throwaway mention of a wonder of the First Age, or at least the Shogunate. Again, fast forward to the second edition, where the First Age version of the internet is a sentient network known as I AM.
  • In a game module in the Star Wars RPG, a couple of Squib merchants arguing with another group of merchants near the entrance to a ruined Jedi Academy have a burned out lightsaber for sale. This lightsaber allows you to interact with an important NPC later on, finding out some key info.

    Theme Parks

  • In The LEGO Movie: 4D — A New Adventure at LEGOLAND, Risky Business's Micro Manager replica sprays lemon water, which he mentions is only harmful to electronic devices. Emmet and Wyldstyle later get the idea to use it to short-circuit the mind control devices brainwashing their friends.

    Web Videos

  • Atop the Fourth Wall:
    • Linkara's Magic Gun, which he's been wielding since the beginning, turns out to be rather important in the Silent Hill: Dead/Alive review, going from prop to plot point and character.
    • In his review of a World of Warcraft comic, Linkara finds a working pokeball. He later uses it to capture a pyramid head
  • In The Cartoon Man, Roy and Karen find a number of random objects in a hollowed-out tree, including a pen, a feather, and a glove. The pen turns out to be a "transponder" that opens a portal to an Alternate Tooniverse, and in the sequel, the feather magically turns a man into a talking piece of paper.
  • In this episode of CollegeHumor's Hardly Working, David casually references a book that Sam borrowed, and never returned. This is largely ignored until the end of the episode, when David realizes that Sam was trying to kill him so he wouldn't have to return the book. He even goes so far as to Break the Fourth Wall by looking at the camera and saying "Remember? From the beginning?"
  • Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog has the Freeze Ray, mentioned throughout Act I and II as something of a joke, comes back with a vengeance in Act III.
    • Penny sings, "So keep your head up Billy buddy" to Dr. Horrible in Act II. Later, when Dr. Horrible gate-crashes the Captain Hammer statue unveiling at the end of Act III, he pep-talks himself into killing Hammer, singing, "head up Billy buddy," thus cluing in Penny that her friend Billy is the villain.
  • The web series commodoreHustle (by the guys at LoadingReadyRun) introduced Mr. Ballsmatron in episode 7, and other than a few cameos, it never played a role until the season finale, with an ultimate ball kick and its destruction. Making it possibly the first appearance of a Chekhov's Ball-kicking robot.
  • Mocked in The Nostalgia Chick's review of Showgirls. During Nella's song at the end, she mentions the Chekhov's Stairs (that the lead pushed someone down at the climax of the film) that have been there since Act One.
  • In I'm a Marvel... and I'm a DC, Spider-Man telling Batman that he thinks he might have been married once would help Batman realize how Spiderman was immune to the Joker's brainwashing.
  • Both subverted and parodied in one episode of Ashen's Tech Dump when, after showing off a highly toxic action figure sealed in a glass case with a biohazard sticker on it, he blatantly sticks it so that it's balancing precariously on the front of the desk and continues with the episode. When the case spends the whole episode without falling off, he finally just reaches out and pushes it off the desk himself.
  • Mahu, in this case uses a "Chekhov's Game Bug". During his narrative let's play of "The Crownless Eagle", for some odd reason Istanbul makes the game turns go at a snail's pace. In his next series, "Second Chance", it is discovered the reason for this: The hidden portal which will allow humanity to flee their doomed planet.
  • TV Trash: The Mighty Ducks review begins with Hewy Toonmore (from Hewy's Animated Movie Reviews) breaking into Chris's show by using a remote, mentioning that all online reviewers have this. This is used as a chekov's gun twice. Chris would later obtain a remote, and used it to team up with The Cartoon Hero to review the animated adaptation of Ctrl+Alt+Del. On a much more serious note, Malicia was able to track down the remote's frequency to find Chris and attack him after his review of Masked Rider .
  • Inverted and played for laughs in the 15th 5 Second Films} Kickstarter sketch.
  • During the 2012 campaign of D 20 Live, Spoony makes sure to have his character, Tandem, put a piece of glassware in a small sack and crush it to chunks. Later on in the game, when the party encounters a mutated man-giant, Tandem's first action is to throw the crushed glass in his face.
  • Boat Comedy did a sketch where people at an antiques show grossly mishandle a fancy loaded flintlock pistol "owned by Anton Chekhov" with various gunshot-like noises happening over and over again as incidental events. It plays on the trope by deliberately averting it again and again. The gun never fires.
  • Petscop: In Petscop 1, Paul follows some introductions telling him to "walk downstairs and, in the bottom, turn right instead of proceeding to become a shadow monster man" (actually, access the menu and press Down several times, then Right). This allows him to enter the Newmaker Plane. Much later, in Petscop 9, Paul follows the same instructions, this time more literally, and becomes temporarily a Living Shadow, something that gives him access to the windmill.


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Source: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/ChekhovsGun

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