tvtropes.org

Practical Voice-Over - TV Tropes

  • ️Mon Aug 27 2007

Practical Voice-Over (trope)

In fair Verona, our scene is conveniently explained...

A sequence needs explaining and the writer has chosen not to go to a voice-over but has inserted good cause for someone to narrate the action. A television or radio reporter's voice is used, in some cases. This also serves to give the action some scope, making it clear that this is important stuff.

Sports-themed films typically include snippets of a radio or television play-by-play announcer describing the action in the Big Game.

When played for laughs, this is Kent Brockman News. Depending on how it's used, might overlap with the L-Cut (the audio from the previous scene lingers onto the next). See also Mr. Exposition and Coincidental Broadcast.


Examples:

open/close all folders 

Comic Books 

  • Ultimate Marvel
    • Ultimate Spider-Man (2000): The explosion in Oscorp in the first issues was introduced with the narration of a news voice over.
    • Ultimate X-Men (2001): The first issue starts with one of those, to explain the reader the existence of mutants, the terrorist mutant group led by Magneto, and the Sentinels issued as a response.

Films — Animation 

Films — Live-Action 

  • 9/11, a documentary on the September 11, 2001 terror attacks by the Naudet brothers features these after the attacks begin to unfold. After major events take place, the shots of New York City are interspersed with voice-overs from real news anchors talking about what's just happened.
  • Apollo 13: The crew's plight was a major news item at the time, with former CBS News Anchor Walter Cronkite providing the opening narration, which was in the form of a new clip (confirmed by director Ron Howard in the DVD commentary) and archive footage of actual news breaks was mixed in with scripted ones throughout the film.
  • Black Hawk Down had amongst its many supporting characters a group of personnel in a helicopter high over the battlefield coordinating the ground forces and relaying messages back and forth with Mission Control back at the airfield. They are responsible for the movie's Title Drop when a UH-60 Blackhawk is shot down in the city.
  • The Flying Man: Used at the beginning and end to narrate the Flying Man's appearance and Mike's fate.
  • Hamlet: Some of the exposition in the film, which is set in the corporate world, gets handed to a business news reporter.
  • Invincible, the Vince Papale biopic, used news reports and play-by-play modeled on real coverage from the 70s to help tell Vince's story.
  • L.A. Confidential: Sid Hudgens's voice (Danny DeVito) reads from the gossip magazine he ran.
  • Miracle depicts the 1980 "Miracle On Ice" between the United States and the Soviet Union at the Winter Olympics. Disney used ABC's actual video footage of their Olympics coverage. Al Michaels re-enacted most of his original commentary, with the exception of his famous "do you believe in miracles" call, which was from the original audio of the game.
  • Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow: A radio announcer (along with a Spinning Paper montage) is used to show that the robot attack on New York is part of a worldwide phenomenon.
  • Starship Troopers: A lot of the backstory of the movie version is given through faux news/military recruitment ads. Would you like to know more?
  • William Shakespeare's Romeo + Juliet: Shakespeare's play has a narrator at the beginning and the end; the film handles those lines by making its main story the subject of a news story...

Live-Action TV 

  • Friday Night Lights: As in the movie, a guy called Slammin' Sammy has a radio show that exposits 24/7 about the prospects of the Panthers on "Panther Radio," ideal for listening to in those tense driving-your-car scenes. Even when you're rooting for the Lions.
  • The King 2 Hearts: The conversation where her father tells her that she's ineligible for South Korean princess bridehood is delivered via voiceover in episode 5 while Hang Ah plays minesweeper. As soon as she hits a bomb, her father's voice gives the bad news and Hang Ah dissolves into tears.
  • Tales of the Unexpected: Albert’s appearance on television gives the viewers his backstory with his bees in "Royal Jelly". It also gives present-day Albert his idea for helping his daughter.
  • War of the Worlds (1988): The opening sequence of The Second Invasion is as follows: "There's rioting breaking out from the city...fire is continuing to burn everywhere, troops are shooting people... there are conflicting reports about who or what started the chaos. Will someone tell me what's happening? This is madness! What is this world coming to?" This may have been inspired by the most (in)famous production of War of the Worlds in history: The radio broadcast, done as though it were a breaking news story, which many listeners thought was really happening.

Theatre 

  • The Quality Of Mercy: The last scene ends with Fred holding the noose he has created. The light dims, so that the names of his victims are all that is still visible. A final voiceover news report confirms his suicide and reports the political reaction.

Western Animation 

  • Exo Squad begins with a documentary about the history of the Neosapiens.
  • The Legend of Korra: In "Long Live the Queen", this is how Korra and everyone else hears about what has happened in Ba Sing Se. The news reports on the Earth Queen's death and the violence consuming the city.