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  • Speech Bubbles/Playing With
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  • Basic Trope: Floating shapes with text or images appear when characters speak. * Straight: When someone talks or thinks, a speech bubble appears over his/her head with a text. * Exaggerated: The narration and characters discuss and comment on everything that happens in the comic to the point entire panels consist of nothing but speech bubbles. * Justified: Characters in the series have trouble communicating (language barrier, outer space, muteness, etc) and they've invented floating billboards as a means of communication. * Inverted: A white circle is talking and has a human with text in it appearing on its head. * Subverted: Alice and Bob are talking, but what they say is not shown to the audience. * Double Subverted: The concluding remarks of the conversation appear
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dbkwik:all-the-tropes/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:allthetropes/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
abstract
  • Basic Trope: Floating shapes with text or images appear when characters speak. * Straight: When someone talks or thinks, a speech bubble appears over his/her head with a text. * Exaggerated: The narration and characters discuss and comment on everything that happens in the comic to the point entire panels consist of nothing but speech bubbles. * Justified: Characters in the series have trouble communicating (language barrier, outer space, muteness, etc) and they've invented floating billboards as a means of communication. * Inverted: A white circle is talking and has a human with text in it appearing on its head. * Subverted: Alice and Bob are talking, but what they say is not shown to the audience. * Double Subverted: The concluding remarks of the conversation appear in speech bubbles. * Parodied: As Bob is talking, Charlie takes out a marker and writes something embarrassing in Bob's speech bubble. * Deconstructed: Instead of using Speech Bubbles the artist uses Rebus Bubbles. The comic has empty speech bubbles so the reader can write the story. Every panel is a Wall of Text with a little cut-out window showing the story's events, * Reconstructed: The artist uses speech bubbles as an organic part of the art and narrative, using the shape, color and font to convey information. * Zig Zagged: Some panels have speech bubbles, others don't. * Averted: The comic does not have any dialogue. * Enforced: Speech bubbles provide an effective contrasting backdrop for words, making them the typical method of showing speech, thought and narration in sequential art. * Lampshaded: Characters snarkily comment that the Big Bad's black and red Speech Bubble is tacky. * Invoked: Bob writes embarrassing things on a speech bubble cut-out and pastes it on a picture of Charlie, or on a wall he is standing in front of. * Exploited: Bob doesn't understand German, so he reads Hans' speech ballon and writes it into a translator program. * Defied: The author/artist write on the bottom or margins, they use an audio track, or have a completely silent story. * Bob doesn't want the reader's to hear his conversations, so he dumps ink over any speech balloon. * Discussed: "I wonder what happens to old speech ballons? You think they just vanish or get recycled by balloon fairies?" * Conversed: "Wow! Look at those gorgeous speech balloon in this Show Within a Show!" "Yeah, but they're too artsy to read quickly." * Played For Drama: Bob has been trying to tell Alice that he's in love with her, but Alice is unfortunately blind, and cannot see the floating speech bubbles containing his fiery Love Confession. * Played for Laughs: The speech bubbles are physical objects that consistently get in the way of the action or are used as flotation devices in the event of a crash. Back to Speech Bubbles