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- The German movie Der Blaue Engel (The Blue Angel). It starts off with the main character (a respected professor) falling for nightclub singer Marlene Dietrich. He gets fired from his job because he spends the night with his new girlfriend and comes in late for work and joins her group who travel from place to place performing, where he quickly ends up spending what little money he has saved up. They can't make enough money so he's pressured in to becoming a clown; part of his act involving him having eggs pulled from his ear and then crowing like a rooster. Eventually the group decides that they should go back to his home town and make him perform there. He does, to an audience of his old colleagues and students who came specifically to laugh at him. His wife, who he did all this for, cheats on him during his act and he attacks her, while repeatedly crowing like a rooster. After he fails to kill her, he goes to his old desk at the school where it is implied he kills himself. It doesn't sound so bad written out but watching it is just painful and horribly depressing.
- To be fair, the professor in "Der Blaue Engel/The Blue Angel" kind of had it coming. The film portrays him as a cliched evil teacher from hell at the start of the film, and his downfall itself is centered on the fact that he only goes to the nightclub to catch his underage students there in order to further torment them by way of busting them for sneaking into a nightclub.
- It's clear at the beginning that he's a pretty lonely guy, and you see it once it pet bird dies. Guess this makes him a Jerkass Woobie?
- He is not particularly evil, he is just as severe as you can expect from a teacher of that era.
- Stanley Kubrick film Paths of Glory. When soldiers in WWI refuse to continue with an impossible attack, their superiors decide to make an example of them. It Gets Worse: the commanding general orders an artillery strike upon his own men. It gets even worse: when the men fail from achieving their goal, the General orders three men to be picked to be summarily executed by firing squad. Colonel Dax (Kirk Douglas) attempts to save his own men. It gets even worse: the men are shot, even though Dax successfully defends them in the justice. Instead, the general is sacked. The worst of all: the film is based on real life events. The film is still banned in France.
- Lord of the Rings: In Fellowship of the Ring:
- The Fellowship is at one point bracing themselves for an attack by a large horde of orcs. Boromir peers out the door and (after narrowly dodging two arrows) utters the line "They have a cave troll."
- And after fighting off said orcs + troll, another example occurs shortly after that. Hearing more orcs on the way, the Fellowship flees, but eventually they end up completely surrounded by another, much larger horde. The two sides square off against one another, and just as it looks like they're about to fight...a loud roar is heard in the distance and the entire horde of orcs flees in terror.
- No Country for Old Men: It's bad enough that Llewelyn Moss, the protagonist of the story, gets caught in the motel and is shot to death. And then that rotten scum bastard Chigurh hunts down the protagonist's widow and kills her too. Just when you thought it couldn't get any worse, Chigurh, after killing Mrs. Moss, successfully evades the area with the cash in hand and disappears, but not before breaking his arm in a car wreck. Last, but not...uh...best...the sheriff vaguely reminisces on his attempt to bring the villain to justice and admits defeat.
- It's based on a Cormac McCarthy book. It Getting Worse is practically his trademark.
- Trading Places does this to Winthorpe. After being used to a luxurious lifestyle his whole life, he is framed for embezzlement and loses all of his money and friends. Later, after committing several crimes at a banquet, he is out on the street wearing a filthy Santa costume. Then a dog whizzes on him. Then the sky whizzes on him (i.e. it starts raining). He tries to commit suicide, but his gun jams... then fires accidentally when he throws it away, breaking a window and scaring (just scaring, hopefully) a poor cat.
- The kicker really comes when he learns that his bosses put him through the ordeal for a bet! The money they bet with? One dollar!
- The Descent. A group goes caving, there's a cave in, it turns out that the group leader lied and took them to an unknown cave without telling anybody where they were going, one of them breaks her leg... Oh, and there are cave beasties trying to eat them, the main character is losing her mind, and they still haven't found another way out.
- Pretty much the entirety of the Australian Made for TV Movie Scorched can be described as "and then It Got Worse".
- The Mist. The final ten or so minutes. David Drayton survives the horrors of a past few days, escapes with his son and three other people, sees his wife killed by spiders from hell, only to get stuck in the mist in the middle of nowhere, without fuel and with a gun. Then they all decide to kill themselves, so David kills them all, including his 10-year-old son, only to discover that the gun only had four bullets, leaving only him still alive. He THEN discovers 1.5 minutes later that the mist is beginning to clear and the army is successfully battling the creatures from the mist. Two things make this scene particularly depressing — he sees the woman with kids whom he refused to help in the beginning of the movie and the Dead Can Dance song "The Host of Seraphim" is playing during the whole scene.
- Make that three things. If you notice, the army caravan was headed in the same direction they were. They had been driving away from help the entire time.
- Make that four things. The mist and monsters don't go away until after David kills his son. Ms. Carmody had previously wanted to sacrifice Billy saying his death would save them all. It seems that, in the movie version at least, she was right.
- In the story version, in which the main characters mostly survive, Ms. Carmody is only shot once, giving her time to utter one last "You will all die out there!" For the film, before she can say anything, they probably deliberately had the character be shot again, in the head, so as to prevent her from saying something that basically turns out to be true in the movie's ending, which would give her followers a last laugh and, in their eyes, vindicate her claims in a way that the film makers probably tried to avert on purpose. Given the room for a "Billy as a sacrifice" theory above, they may have subtly, and perhaps accidentally, failed to avert it entirely.
- "It Got Worse" is a fairly good summary of the second half of The Dark Knight. The Joker and all the gangsters are in custody, the city is safe, Gordon is alive and the new commissioner...then it's revealed that The Joker's gang took Harvey and Rachel and strapped them to bombs. Batman goes after Rachel and the police after Harvey, but Joker switched the addresses, so Batman saves Harvey, with serious injuries, while the police are too late for Rachel. Meanwhile, one of the Joker's men has been fitted with a bomb that destroys the police station, allowing everyone else, including the Joker, to escape. Then Batman's Secret Identity is compromised until the Joker puts out a general hit on the blackmailer with the consideration of blowing up Gotham General...which he does, right after giving Harvey a Hannibal Lecture that turns him into the Ax Crazy villain we know and love and sends him on a Roaring Rampage of Revenge. Then he threatens the whole city, with an implied threat to destroy the bridges and tunnels out - naturally, him being the Joker, this is just a ruse to get everyone on the ferries for a little "social experiment." Only then does the film present a glimmer of hope.
- This has led a number of fans to the conclusion the only possible story for the third movie is Knightfall.
- Darryl Revok's backstory.
- Mrs. Terrain's declining health — "there's been a little complication with my complication" — in Brazil.
- And on that note, the entire movie itself. Any time It Gets Better is a Hope Spot whose sole purpose is to make the protagonist fall from that much higher.
- Schindler's List is a steady descent to hell for the Jews in Poland, even when some of them say that things cannot get any worse, they do.
- Given the story's setting and subject matter, this isn't surprising at all — the Holocaust in general was a long series of things getting very, very worse for the Jews during World War II, along with everyone else that the Nazi regime considered undesirable or inferior.
- Roman Polanski's Chinatown is this trope in a goddamn nutshell. When we say that Jake Gittes, the protagonist of the movie, does not know what he is dealing with, we mean every word.
- Pretty much all of Aliens involves things steadily getting worse. But a particular standout is when having already had most of the squad killed and their dropship destroyed, Bishop discovers that the entire facillity is about to suffer a nuclear explosion.
- And then there's Alien 3.
- A Serious Man has a snowballing string of problems mounting on Larry Gopnik, the main character. Lawyers for divorce, lawyers for property claims, lawyers for his brother in law, a colleague whos cheating on his wife, blackmail. Just as Larry starts to see a little bit of light ,after accepting a bribe for much needed money. The doctor calls with news about x rays. And his son might be about to get sucked up by a tornado. It's unclear what is going to happen in the minutes after the movie ends, which is probably the point.
- The Butterfly Effect takes this trope and runs away with it.
- In fact, the main character is responsible for the worsening situation, by his attempts to make things better. The message of the film, more or less, is "Make your peace with 'imperfect,' because trying to make everything perfect will screw it up unbelievably."
- There's an alternate ending that seems to suggest a message of "The mere presence of certain people just messes everything up," but this troper likes the ambiguous ending better.
- The whole plot of District 9 is a series of It Got Worse on both overall and individual scales:
- A horde of aliens strands to Earth after their superiors die of an epidemy. They have no way to return home and are starving. Then humans relocate them to the surface and even establish contact of a sort but then quickly get dissillusioned about them and leave them to the mercy of a greedy and unscrupulous corporation. Ensues 20 years of neglect and oppression, 20 years of living in unbelievable slums, starving and dealing with cannibalistic criminals and cruel mercenaries. And then aliens are finally moved...into a regular concentration camp.
- The pen-pusher desk-jockey pin-stripper Hero Wikus "Spineless" Van Der Merwe resided more or less happily in his cubicle in the bowels of the
Omnicidal UnitedMNU, when he is yanked out of there and entrusted with evicting a horde of extra-strong irascible aliens from their slums into the said concentration camp and is accompanied by a Colonel Badass who despises him and treats him like crap. Then he accidentally gets sprayed with alien substance which slowly, seemingly painfully and oh so gruesomly mutates him into an alien. Then the Corrupt Corporate Executive decides to dissect him alive so they could study the mutation process and gain access to the alien DNA-based weponry. Then he escapes but has nowhere to go, since MNU spread lies about him being a terrorist and having sex with aliens and even his wife denounced him. So he rushes to find the alien who created the substance, finds him, together they obtain the substance needed for the cure. Then Wikus learns that the alien was forced to change plans and will only be able to cure him in three years. then panic-stricken Wikus knocks the alien down, hijacks his shuttle and makes a desperate rush to the mothership but gets shot down and is forced to fight a whole platoon of mercenaries while wearing alien power armor.Ok, the rest perhaps classifies as "It got worse but hell more awesome" but still worse.
- The Re-Animator franchise is made of the this trope. Just when you think it can't possibly get any worse, it does, and then keeps going off into the sunset. It doesn't help that Dr. West has the unfortunate habit of reanimating people who are either crazier than him, hold a severe grudge against him, or both.
- In the film Precious, the titular character is grows up poor, abused, and raped by her father which results in two children, one of which suffers from down syndrome. After the father dies of AIDS everyone involved finds out they too are infected. Then Precious finds out her mother hates her because she believes Precious stole 'her man'. Roll credits. Suffice to say it starts out bad, got worse... then worser.
- It's more of a Bittersweet Ending if anything. While Precious escaped the hell her parents put her through and her education kept improving, getting infected with HIV puts a damper on her victory. And yet, even the HIV hasn't kept her spirits down entirely. In some sense, things get better for her.
- LoveHKFilm uses the phrase "IT ALL GOES TO HELL" to describe things in an HK movie taking a sudden and dramatic turn for the worse.
- Requiem for a Dream is basically 90 minutes of It Got Worse put through a pain distillery until it's pure enough to make BSG step back and say "...whoa."
- The short film The Dance Of Jim Beam lives off this trope. The main character's day starts off bad and gets worse- by the end of it, he's lost several fingers, a substantial amount of money and his wife.
- The feature film version of Shane Acker's award-winning short film 9 does this at least twice. At least.
- Gojira. Boats mysteriously sinking? That's bad. Explosions causing it? Worse. People dying of radiation sickness? Much worse. A radioactive dinosaur hell-bent on wiping out all of humanity and destroying Tokyo in the process? Oh Crap.
- One of the sequels, GMK, has this as well. Godzilla has returned and is driven by the souls of those who died in WWII and want revenge on Japan. Not too bad so far. And then Godzilla brtually kills the three gods (Baragon, Mothra, and Ghidorah) that were awakened to kill him. Oh, wait...One of the human protagonists just blew Godzilla up. YAY! Godzilla has been defe-What do you mean Godzilla's dismembered heart is still beating at the bottom of the ocean!?
- Godzilla VS King Ghidorah. Ok, a bunch of people from the future want to go back in time and erase Godzilla from existing? Doesn't seem too bad so fa-Wait, what do you mean they just left behind three cute creatures that will mutate into a three-headed dragon? That doesn't seem so ba-Wait, what do you mean said three-headed dragon is under their control and they're using it to destroy Tokyo and prevent it from becoming a superpower. Well, it can't get any worse, right? What do you mean Godzilla's back and he's bigger and more powerful than ever before!?!
- Godzilla vs. Destoroyah. First Godzilla Junior seemingly vanishes, then it's revealed that Godzilla is dying of "Nuclear Overload" and will essentially go into a meltdown, and it's revealed that the Oxygen Destroyer (the very device wich killed the original Godzilla) has spawned something much more evil than Godzilla.
- At least there's a Hope Spot where Junior and Godzilla reunited and- Oh, wait, Destoroyah just brutally killed Junior and is now tormenting the mourning Godzilla. Oh, and Godzilla's grief has caused him to go into a meltdown.
- House of 1000 Corpses is just one It Got Worse moment after the other. To sum it up: The good guys do not win.
- Kick Ass does this at a few different points. Most notably when the mobsters first kidnap Kick Ass and Big Daddy... then pummel them half to death... then make preparations for burning the two of them alive on a live camera feed
- Alatriste (the movie, not the books) is two hours of "The lead character has really hit bottom now. Wait, there's more?"
- It's amazing that Star Wars: A New Hope isn't on here. Bad enough that the heroes find themselves trapped in the detention area with stormtroopers crowding through the only exit and have to resort to throwing themselves in to the garbage compactor, but then a horrible sewer monster starts swimming around them.
Leia: Well it could be worse.
Han: It's worse. |
- The Cat in the Hat has this: first, the the beetle that is the key to the box gets attached to a dog, which runs away, then, the attempts to ensure the crate stays closed fail, leading to the house being transformed into an Eldritch Location. And then when the house is transformed back, the strain wrecks the actual house...
- Watching it, ironically, is also an example. The movie is ripe with unfunny and/or crude jokes from the first minute, and then The Cat shows up...
- For the record: The Cat is played by Mike Myers - and is as scary as Michael Myers.
- The Wind That Shakes The Barley: Set in Ireland, 1920. The British are committing atrocities against the Irish. The Resistance is fighting back. Yeah...
- If you've never seen Falling Down, watch it. This movie is quite possibly the best example of this trope. It paints the picture of just how much one man can take before he has a complete mental breakdown and crosses the Moral Event Horizon. The main character even lampshades this when he calls his wife after killing the surplus store owner.
Bill Foster: I've passed the point of no return. Do you know what that is, Beth? That's the point in a journey where it's longer to go back to the beginning. It's like when those astronauts got in trouble. I don't know, somebody messed up, and they had to get them back to Earth. But they had passed the point of no return. They were on the other side of the moon and were out of contact for like hours. Everybody waited to see if a bunch of dead guys in a can would pop out the other side. Well, that's me. I'm on the other side of the moon now and everybody is going to have to wait until I pop out. |
- A filmography example. Lars Von Trier has described his film Melancholia as the first of his films to have a sad ending. Note that previous Lars films had such happy endings as — An entire town being slaughtered after systematically torturing a woman and A man murdering his wife after she is driven crazy by grief, among others. Reassuring.
- Basically any time the Mystery Team follows a lead.
- The 1956 Invasion of the Body Snatchers is a very big "It's getting better! Happy ending in sight!-- Hah! Fooled you!" It got way, way worse....
- Little Shop of Horrors The original ending: Seymour's fiance gets eaten by Audrey 2,a company plans to mass produce the plant, which is trying to destroy the world, and Seymour is also eaten by the plant. Then America is taken over by giant sing plants.
- Sleeping Dogs starts as the Prime Minister of New Zealand is coming home from the Middle East, having been unable to restore oil supplies. The waterfront workers go on strike as shipping stalls, then it grows into a general strike. Soldiers sent in to take over at the waterfront clash with pro-union protesters. A member of the government has thugs fire on the soldiers, giving them an excuse to institute a police state. Then it erupts into open civil war...
- Hunger - as the film is about prisoners dying on hunger strike, this is essentially the entire plot. When a film starts out with characters smearing their own faeces on the walls and being beaten by prison officers whilst naked and goes downhill from there, you know things are pretty grim.