Crowd Panic - TV Tropes
- ️Sun Apr 05 2009
"The human mass panicked", wrote Edek. "Mothers cried, terrified children screamed, the moans of the wounded, the dead, the road blocked by overturned carts and dead horses".
— Full Circle: A Homecoming to Free Poland
Often seen in natural Disaster Movies and works with apocalyptic settings, it's when a group of people starts running and screaming in panic during a life-or-death situation, be it a giant monster, a terrorist attack, or a tsunami, whatever the threat may be, it will cause absolute pandemonium, no, not that one, the other one that means chaos.
It's a stock reaction usually Played for Drama, but it's also Truth in Television as it reflects human behavior during times of disasters and fear.
Expect to see someone in the crowd to trip or get stuck and delay the others, or a shot of a lost kid looking for their mother. "Hurry up!" and "Don't push!" are common phrases that get yelled out in these tense moments, and as people just want to escape unharmed as quickly as possible, they typically act on autopilot. In animated works, this is usually accompanied by a visual effect to indicate rapid movement (with still images for added drama).
When the Living Prop folks do it, and they end up dying amid the mayhem, then they are Red Shirts, but if others besides the living props do it, then it's a Mass "Oh, Crap!", and if they die, as well, it means that Anyone Can Die. May involve Deadline News.
Examples:
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Anime and Manga
- Very common in Attack on Titan due to its apocalyptic Crapsack World setting. Whenever groups of civilians see titans coming their way, they immediately start running, screaming, and pushing each other out of fear.
- Full Metal Panic? Fumoffu: Sousuke finds his bottle of biowarfare agent has been opened, so he puts on an NBC suit and puts the class into Lock Down. Naturally his classmates Freak Out!, and when Sousuke tries to calm them down, he says it's all right for him as he's the only one wearing a Hazmat Suit. Sousuke then takes off his suit in a gesture of solidarity, which is immediately subverted when everyone beats him up for bringing a deadly virus into the classroom in the first place. They then panic again and try to break down the sealed door until Kaname succeeds in Shaming the Mob with a Rousing Speech. Unfortunately, Sousuke stuffs things up again by saying how there's only one antidote.
Comic Books
- Monty the Dinosaur: In a flashback, Monty wears a fake mustache (and absolutely nothing else) in public in hopes of getting close to humans. When he sneezes it off, people see he's a dinosaur, and everyone in the immediate vicinity runs away screaming.
Fan Works
- Death Note Chaotic: The city of Tokyo is full of panicked people after a number of bombs are detonated.
- Rosario Vampire: Brightest Darkness Act III: In chapter 41, the entire student body freaks out when they discover that Kuyou has returned.
Films — Animation
- In Turning Red, the 4*Town concert crowd starts running for the exits after Ming shows up.
Films — Live-Action
- 28 Weeks Later: When the rage virus has broken out again in London, as the panicked crowd of people flee in every direction, the military snipers on the roofs are given orders to shoot everyone in a desperate attempt to contain the virus.
- The Abyss. When the giant tidal wave threatens the city, the people at the beach flee in terror.
- Attack of the Killer Tomatoes!: Several examples of people fleeing the tomatoes, but special mention to the scene
where a grinning guy causes a comedic stampede just by saying "To-mato!"
- Attack on Titan (2015) is faithful to its adaptation of the manga and anime of the same name, where it depicts people panicking en masse the moment they see an incoming titan to show how frightening the situation is.
- Batman
- Batman: The Movie, the movie of the 1960s Batman (1966) TV series. Batman runs with into a restaurant with a Cartoon Bomb and urges everyone to flee for their lives. The crowd promptly panics and escapes (except for two ladies who ignore Batman and keep eating their lunch as if nothing had happened).
Some days you just can't get rid of a bomb.
- Batman (1989). When the Joker's balloons release the Smilex gas, the crowds panic and try to get away.
- Batman: The Movie, the movie of the 1960s Batman (1966) TV series. Batman runs with into a restaurant with a Cartoon Bomb and urges everyone to flee for their lives. The crowd promptly panics and escapes (except for two ladies who ignore Batman and keep eating their lunch as if nothing had happened).
- Battle of Britain: Berlin, when the lights go out and the air raid sirens start up, announcing that the Royal Air Force has decided to return the favor after the Luftwaffe (accidentally) bombed London. The Berliners understandably freak out and flee in search of shelter.
- Blazing Saddles. When Mongo first arrives in Rock Ridge, a crowd in the street sees him, panics and runs away.
- Invoked in Conspiracy Theory Mel Gibson's character is followed into a movie theater by bad guys and shouts that there's a bomb under his seat in order to escape in the resulting panic.
- Damnatus: Complete with bell-ringing doom prophet.
- The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951)
- When Klaatu's spaceship first lands at the park, the crowds of people there run away in terror.
- Sometime later, a crowd of people (and Army personnel) surround the spaceship. When Gort first appears the crowd panics and take off.
- D.E.B.S. When Lucy Diamond is spotted at the Endgame celebration, the crowd panics and flees.
- When the reporter on the airplane manages to get the fact that terrorists have seized control of the air traffic control systems of the airport in Die Hard 2 on the evening news, everyone in the airport panics. This mainly serves to ensure that the cops can't get through the crowds to attempt to do anything about it.
- Dogma: After Bartleby breaks Officer McGee's neck.
- Numerous films in the Godzilla franchise feature mobs of Tokyo citizens stampeding away when the big green guy (or one of his opponents) appears on the scene.
- Independence Day: People are temporarily in awe at seeing the alien ships arriving. Then once one of them starts to park itself over New York City, they break out into a panic to get out while they can.
- Iron Man 2: The result of the attack at the Expo. The matter of having to evacuate a huge, displaced crowd is followed up on later.
- Jurassic Park:
- The Lost World: Jurassic Park includes a homage to the Godzilla films; when the Tyrannosaur starts rampaging around San Diego, among the fleeing crowds are some Japanese guys who probably left Tokyo to get away from this sort of thing.
- Jurassic World has one when the pterosaurs let loose by the Indominus Rex rampage head toward the Main Street area of the park, where lots of visitors panic and run for cover.
- King Kong:
- King Kong (1933): When Kong attacks the native village while searching for Fay Wray, the natives leave in a justifiable hurry.
- And in the 1976 Kong remake, the crowd of New Yorkers has a similar reaction when Kong breaks out of his cage.
- The Naked Gun 2 ½, where Frank Drebin tries to evacuate a crowd in orderly fashion.
- "Thanksgiving (2023)" The killer uses the panicked crowd as cover after disrupting the thanksgiving parade to capture his targets,
- Quantum of Solace when an escaping QUANTUM agent shoots a random girl.
- Scarface (1983): Happens at the night club when Frank tries to have Tony assassinated. Several people start freaking out and evacuating.
- Titanic: Once the final plunge of the ship begins, there is a massive wave as everyone still on board desperately tries to reach the stern.
Literature
- In Artemis Fowl: the Lost Colony, after the first demon appears in the street, it disappears. The crowd "froze", but when it disappeared, the crowd "unfroze violently".
- The ending of the Twelfth book of A Series of Unfortunate Events implies this. Almost all the major characters throughout the entire series are trapped in a burning building, and other than the Baudelaires and Count Olaf, whether or not they survive is ultimately left up to the reader.
- The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy: Described in great detail when the Vogons show up in orbit and announce that they're going to blow up the planet.
- In The Purple Cloud, Adam returns home After the End and finds the streets littered with people killed by the titular Fog of Doom. He learns from discarded newspapers that the fog originated somewhere in the South Pacific and expanded north and west at a rate of about four miles per hour, giving millions of people months to try to escape. In Norway and England, the bodies of Europeans are outnumbered by foreigners who travelled thousands of miles before the fog caught up with them. Docks and train stations in particular are completely packed with bodies, some of whom were run over by trains trying to outrun the cloud. Adam also finds that some people tried to hide in blocked-off mines, only for panicked crowds to break down the barriers and let the cloud in.
- Shrine: In the field of eleven-year-old Alice Pagett's alleged vision of the Virgin Mary, an earth tremor sends the thousands-strong crowd into a lethal panic.
- The War of the Worlds (1898): Features a long segment where the narrator tells of the masses of humanity desperately fleeing London ahead of the invading Martians, as witnessed first-hand by his brother.
Live-Action TV
- Best exemplified in the outbreak in "All of Us Are Dead"; as On-jo heads to the cafeteria exit, a stampede of panicked students block her way fleeing from the oncoming zombies into the cafeteria.
- Invoked in an episode of Chuck as FULCRUM agent Tommy marches Chuck at gunpoint out of the Buy More during Black Friday. Chuck tells Jeff the Covert Distress Code "pineapple," which initiates a no-questions-asked full-store evacuation. The result is that the shoppers stampede toward the exit, thinking there's a fire. In the chaos, Casey is able to rescue Chuck.
- Get Smart: After Maxwell Smart reveals there's a bomb in Harvey, the delegates at a conference flee in panic. The Chief gets on the microphone and delivers a tongue-lashing, telling them to set an example by leaving in a calm, orderly manner. Everyone looks shamefaced...then flees the same way as before.
- Monarch: Legacy of Monsters:
- A relatively (emphasis on relatively) orderly one occurs in the premiere when the new Titan warning system goes off in Tokyo and everyone starts rushing off the streets into the designated subway shelter.
- In "Will the Real May Please Stand Up?", the Bavarian Fire Drill of the Titan warning system sends a crowd of civilians fleeing in the streets of Seattle to the Titan shelters.
- In "Operation Hourglass", when the titular Monarch project begins to malfunction, it triggers a justified panic and rush for safety among the crowd of spectators.
- This is what dooms most of the players in the first event of Squid Game; everyone walks into "Red Light Green Light" thinking losing just means going home with no money and hurt pride. Once two people are shot and it sinks in that losing means death, most of the players panic and run for the doors, resulting in their own deaths since they moved during a Red Light. Only those lucky enough to have a Deer in the Headlights reaction (or just have the presence of mind to not freak out) survive and move on.
Video Games
- ANNIE: Last Hope have this happening whenever mutant crabs, tiny critters that spreads the zombie virus, appears in crowded civilian areas. The game opens with the main characters, the titular Annie and her policeman fiancée Jack, invited to a crowded town for a Halloween party before a horde of zombies appears, and in the ensuing panic both Jack and Annie gets separated.
- The Assassin's Creed series have this, normally when you kill someone in full view of them. Oddly, people will cheer you on when you fight with the guards, but flee in terror when you kill one.
- The Getaway: People would freak out and run during the first half of the game if you were seen with a gun in public, and just like they would in real life, at least some of them call the cops. Less of an issue in the second half, as you're playing a plainclothes police officer and usually accompanied by some uniformed colleagues.
- In The Godfather: The Game, whenever you get seen with a gun... or someone starts shooting... or you crash your car into something... or some other stuff, the passersby quickly start running helter-skelter.
- In the entire Hitman series, the civilian NPCs panic and flee at anything vaguely violent or seeing someone with a gun in a non-military context. They'll also run if they find evidence of your handiwork, i.e. corpses or in some cases bloodstains.
- In some of the urban areas in Justice League Heroes: The Flash you pass groups of pedestrians fleeing the scene of the battle.
- In The Matrix: Path of Neo during the 'Get me an Exit' mission, when the Agents fire at Neo the crowd freaks and some people start running around.
- Octopath Traveler: One post-Chapter 4 sidequest involves finding a replacement fencer for a theatrical play. You can either get Olberic the role, or H'aanit. Having the latter get the role has her bring out her Animal Companion Linde, which causes the audience to clear out in a panic because there's now a snow leopard on stage, which even causes Linde to look at the fleeing crowd and you can imagine how even she knows this was a bad idea.
- [PROTOTYPE] had this, though normally someone won't start panicking until you pick up cars, kill people, or use your offensive powers.
- In Thwaite, the villagers inside a house that's threatened by an incoming missile head for another house. Panic ensues in the faster levels where almost every house is threatened one after another.
Web Comics
- Champions of Far'aus: The people in the coliseum for the champions tournament at the beginning of the story panic when Parthelax warns them about the building they are in being under attack.
Parthalax: LEAVING IS ADVISABLE.
- Schlock Mercenary has it as part of a plot to blow up a building without any innocent casualties. They stand still on the initial command to evacuate and thus need a little nudge.
Schlock: We have confirmed reports of a firefight in the building!
Random crowd member: If there's a fire, then where's the smoke?
- In El Goonish Shive when the Omega Goo attacks
a blond girl calls for a crowd panic.
Ellen: Dammit, if the goo starts to eat people I hope whoever that was is the first to go...
- Waterworks: Less of a panic and more of a mass jaw drop
, in answer to the protagonist's sudden rage attack.
Western Animation
- Duckman: "Apocalypse Not" begins with Duckman's home city under attack by some sort of giant monster (actually a blow-up doll Duckman accidentally left connected to the airpump for too long), with the citizens fleeing in a massive panic. It then turns out this is being retold at a public preparedness meeting, with the mayor stating that the panicking crowd caused more damage to the city than the doll did, and the point of the meeting is to teach the citizens to stop blindly panicking every time there's an emergency. The crowd panics twice more during the meeting itself just from the mayor mentioning the POSSIBILITY of a disaster. And by using the word "tidal wave" as an analogy.
- South Park: This happens constantly in South Park, as the adults of the town will freak out over anything even resembling a threat, both real ("Mecha-Streisand", "Summer Sucks") and largely imaginary ("Cow Days", "Two Days Before The Day After Tomorrow", "Night Of the Living Homeless") and will often cause more damage and deaths with their blind panic and idiocy than the danger itself could.