
You don't want to know why it's there.
Sometimes an otherwise ordinary, commonplace, and utterly inoffensive object can become disconcerting simply by being found unexpectedly in a place which, by all rights, it simply should not be. Sometimes it's merely in an absurdly remote location, or one so far divorced from the object's apparent function that no one in their right mind would ever put it there, such as a lighthouse in the middle of the desert or a child's shoe in the cavity inside the wall of an old church. Other times, the object's presence is not only unlikely but impossible, such as the wreckage of a modern-day fighter jet embedded in solid rock several millions of years old or an abandoned 1950s-style diner on an uncharted alien world. It shouldn't be there. It can't be there. In any reasonable universe, it wouldn't be there. And yet... there it is, plain as the nose on your face, raising unsettling questions about who (if anyone) put it there and why, and what possible sequence of events could have led it to where it is, sometimes even going against reason at such a fundamental level that it calls into question the very nature of reality as you thought you knew it.
Depending on the story, the out-of-place object may never be explained, and may possibly not even serve any real role in the story beyond contributing to the general uncanny off atmosphere of an already creepy locale, while in other settings these are merely the result of Time Travel or Teleportation, though leaving it unexplained is often the most effectively unsettling.
Related to Ontological Mystery, which is when the thing you find somewhere you can't explain, with no idea how it got there, is yourself. Super-Trope to Saharan Shipwreck, where a ship is found far away from water (e.g. in the middle of a desert), and Ominous Cube. Compare Anachronistic Clue.
Examples:
- In Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth, a flashback to when the Arkham mansion was being renovated into an asylum shows Amadeus Arkham finding a Joker playing card outside of his daughter's room. He says that a worker must've dropped it, but the script notes that he's not entirely convinced by his own explanation.
- Chronos: Time traveler Walker Gabriel, the second Chronos, is stuck in the Wild West and realizes he's stumbled across another time traveler when he finds a music player and headphones amongst her supplies.
- The DC Rebirth one-shot ends with the Comedian's button being found lodged in the wall of the Batcave. Since Watchmen doesn't even exist in the main DCU, its origin is a complete mystery, which Batman and The Flash investigate over the course of the subsequent crossover The Button.
- Played for laughs in the JLA (1997) crossover with WildC.A.T.s (WildStorm). The JLA are stranded in the past with a time machine that's run out of power, so they set out to find any artifacts that may have been left behind by other time travelers. They find several — this is The DCU, after all. The hard part is finding one that's compatible with their specific machine.
- In Orbiter, a space shuttle that disappeared ten years ago returns to Earth. That's only the first mystery. The next one comes when they find soil from Mars in the front wheel housing.
- Robin (1993): During a visit to an archeological dig, Jack Drake comes across an amulet that does not fit the culture or time period, and the overseer decides they don't want to try and account for it and so tell him to go ahead and take the mysterious thing home. It is, of course, a possessed cursed trinket that ended up embedded in the earth years ago while the Justice Society of America was fighting an evil sorceress.
- 2001: A Space Odyssey: The monolith appears before Moonwatcher's tribe without forewarning, and the primates shriek and howl at the ominous block. Later in the story, geologists on the moon uncover a similar monolith, which they estimate was buried there millions of years ago. It emits a piercing shriek across several radio frequencies once the rising sun shines upon it.
- Alien vs. Predator: A Mayincatec pyramid shows up in the middle of Mysterious Antarctica.
- The house where the end of The Blair Witch Project takes place is smack in the middle of the woods. If anything, this makes it even creepier than the forest itself.
- In Heart of Darkness (1958), an untamed jungle is inexplicably divided up by delicate sheer curtains that look like they belong indoors.
- I Am Legend: Robert Neville, apparently the last man on Earth, has set up a whole series of mannequins in specific places, where he interacts with and speaks to them to ease his loneliness. Then one day, one of them is far out of place...
- Immediately after traveling "sideways" in time in Land of the Lost, the characters come across a crashed Cessna on a wrecked Viking ship, overlapping with Saharan Shipwreck. The eeriness is not just in finding either object in the desert, but in finding the two objects from vastly different time periods together.
- Mulholland Drive has the mysterious, ever-present blue box (no, not that one) and its equally mysterious key. This being a David Lynch film, opening the box only raises further questions.
- Planet of the Apes:
- Planet of the Apes (1968): The astronaut George Taylor and Nova encounter the remains of the Statue of Liberty on a desolate beach. Up to that point, Taylor thought he had landed on an alien planet where apes had mastery. This sight reveals that this is Earth in the far future, after humanity has nuked themselves back to the stone age, leaving the wild simians to seize dominance.
- Beneath the Planet of the Apes: Brent goes into some kind of ancient subterranean ruin and finds a big sign that says "Queensboro Plaza", cluing him in to what Taylor already know.
- Escape from the Planet of the Apes opens with a derelict spaceship falling into the ocean near San Francisco some time in the early '70s. When the authorities investigate, they find no humans aboard - but three chimpanzees in space suits.
- There's a campfire story about a teenage girl babysitting for her neighbours. The evening is going well, but there's a statue of a clown in the parents' bedroom that she finds unsettling. After she puts the kids to bed, the parents call to check in, and she asks if she can cover up the clown, since it makes her uncomfortable. The parents are alarmed and confused, telling her "We don't have a clown statue... Get the children out of the house!"
Examples by creator:
- H. P. Lovecraft: Typically, the protagonists find some influence of human or otherwise intelligent presence, often a ruined city, in an extreme environment or other place where it would not normally be found.
- "The Temple": The last surviving crew member of a German U-Boat, succumbing to the madness of the ocean, the isolation, and possibly the malign influence of some unknowable entity, finds the Underwater Ruins of a city at the bottom of the Atlantic.
- "Dagon": A shipwrecked sailor washes up on a newly-formed island thrown up to the surface by volcanic activity, covered in the rotting mess of deep-sea life that didn't survive the ascent — but the island already contains a mysterious stone monolith that is unmistakably the product of deliberate craftsmanship.
- At the Mountains of Madness: A ruined city is found deep in Mysterious Antarctica.
- The Statement of Randolph Carter: The cemetery and the tunnel that leads down into the earth are made all the stranger by being set in the middle of Big Cypress Swamp, which is not exactly a place where digging tunnels or graves would be very easy. As Carter gives his statement to the police, they insist that no such cemetery exists in or near the swamp. Carter acknowledges that none of what he remembers makes much sense.
Examples by work title:
- Abarat features a lighthouse in the middle of a field. In Minnesota.
- All Tomorrows: When the star people find a dinosaur skeleton on an alien planet otherwise inhabited by creatures with three limbs, a copper-based skeletal system and hydrostatically operated muscles, they know there is something wrong. Soon after that, an alien power attacks and defeats the star people.
- The Chronicles of Narnia: The iconic lamppost in the forest of the otherwise medieval world of Narnia in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. Not creepy, but its uncanny sense of not-belonging served to make the otherworld feel all the more otherworldly. The prequel The Magician's Nephew explains that it was accidentally transported there from London while Narnia was still in the process of being formed and literally took root as if it were a tree because of all the magic in the place.
- The Famous Five: In Five Run Away Together, the Five discover a little black trunk hidden in the wrecked ship off Kirrin Island, which is quite dry and new. Even more extraordinary is when they later break it open, and find that it contains children's clothes and dolls.
- Giants Series: The first book, Inherit the Stars, begins with the discovery of a man in a spacesuit found dead on the moon. All that's known about him is that he's not from any nation on earth and he's been there for 50,000 years.
- Iremonger Series: Everyday objects frequently appear in strange places, and people mysteriously go missing...
- Johannes Cabal: The titular Necromancer Anti-Hero lives in a townhouse that he transported to the English countryside through unknown, probably supernatural means. The locals stay well away from it, largely because of him.
- The Magicians features a prime example of this in the form of Brakebills South. It's essentially an exact replica of the main Brakebills campus in upstate New York, a stately eighteenth-century English manor house... except it's right in the middle of an Antarctic snowfield.
- In The Magic School Bus In the Time of the Dinosaurs, the class goes back in time to see dinosaurs, and Wanda loses a plastic dinosaur toy. The end of the book shows a paleontologist discovering a plastic dinosaur fossilized in millions-of-years-old rock.
- The Red Tower was a manufacturer and distributor of peculiar novelties (unnaturally heavy jewelry, carpets with psychogenic patterns, music boxes that play the sound of a dying breath), delivering them straight to the back corners of messy closets, or to bedroom nightstands, or supposedly even into the body cavities of living people. (The narrator wonders how many were deliberately sent to places they would never be found.) The Tower itself is said to be a monumental factory of fading red brick in the middle of an empty hostile wasteland.
- In Strata, the protagonist, Kin, works for a company that uses terraforming to build new worlds from the ground up, complete with false geological, fossil, and archeological records to conceal these planets' true natures from their future inhabitants. It's her job to find and correct unauthorized out-of-place artifacts left by other builders attempting to troll future archeologists, a prank which the company believes might potentially topple said archeologists' civilizations if left unchecked. One notable example is a fossilized plesiosaur skeleton in the wrong stratum holding a placard reading "End Nuclear Testing Now".
- Subcutanean: The Eldritch Location Downstairs seems to be defined by this trope. Endless empty rooms with the same carpet, same furnishings, same light fittings. The place is so vast that when the characters find something different, like a couch, or a half-built kitchen, or a coat-hanger, it's particularly noteworthy. The room with a swimming pool, or a door with a lock actually turn out to be majorly important locations. Elder Niko speaks of rooms that look totally normal, completely furnished, finished rooms. Rooms that feel like a real, living person actually lives there. He says these rooms are the most dangerous ones of all.
- The Wind in the Willows: A benevolent example occurs when Mole and Rat are lost in the Wild Wood during a heavy snowfall. Mole trips over a door scraper, buried in the snow, and not far from it they find a doormat as well. Mole assumes that some careless person has been dumping their garbage in the forest, but the intuitive Rat reasons a door must not be far off. Sure enough, a bit of digging in the snow reveals the home of Mr. Badger, who happily gives them shelter.
- Doctor Who:
- This was the original point of the TARDIS being a police box — the first story has it mysteriously found in a fog-bound scrapyard, and then appearing on prehistoric Earth. Now forgotten, as the police box is now known by most viewers only as the TARDIS, and it's become an object of comfort.
- "The Ghost Monument" actually pulls it with the TARDIS, again. The titular Ghost Monument is actually the TARDIS caught in a millennium-long dematerialization loop, and when new companions Graham, Ryan and Yaz see it in a hologram, they are all just confused as to why an old police box would be on an alien planet. Of course, the Doctor and the audience have a different reaction.
- FlashForward (2009): The kangaroo. (Of course, it could have simply escaped from a zoo during the blackout. Still, in context it's exactly played as this trope.)
- Lost: The polar bear. Seemingly out of place on an island in the Pacific. This later is revealed to be part of one of the Dharma Initiative's experiments.
- Star Trek: The Next Generation has a few of these.
- In "The Survivors", the Enterprise acts on a distress call and encounters a desolate world where the inhabitants who sent the SOS signal have been annihilated by an alien race, the Husnock. There's just one thing out of place: a quaint little spotless cottage belonging to an elderly human couple, the only survivors on the entire planet. How they remain there alive with everyone else dead remains a mystery until Picard figures things out at the end: Only one of them survived the attack. The woman is an illusion and the man isn't even human. He's an incredibly powerful entity called a Douwd, possibly nearly as powerful a Q. He was also a pacifist, who refused to fight with the colonists. When his wife was killed along with the other colonists, he lashed out in anger and annihilated not only their assailants, but also the entire 50 billion members of the Husnock species. He voluntarily isolated himself to atone for his crime.
- The first part of "Time's Arrow" is kicked off by an archaeological anomaly: in a cave beneath San Francisco, 24th-century archaeologists have discovered the severed head of Commander Data, apparently dating back to the late 19th century. Since Data was only built a few years ago and, more to the point, currently has his head, this obviously suggests some time-travel shenanigans are about to happen.
- Terra Nova: The first season ends with the discovery of an 18-century wooden ship figurehead in the Badlands, 85 million years in the past. Unfortunately, the show was cancelled after this episode, so this new plot thread was Left Hanging.
- In Flanders and Swann's "Bedstead Men
", the eponymous group is responsible for the appearance of bedsteads and other litter in out-of-the-way places, sneaking it there under cover of night.
- Quiet, Please (1947):
- "The Thing on the Fourble Board": The oil drillers find a gold ring in the rock their oil drill has pulled out of the ground. The problem? That rock was a mile deep and had been a mile deep for a million years.
- In "Whence Came You?", the narrator sees a beautiful woman in Cairo — then sees her portrait on a slab from a 2000-year-old tomb. Then he sees his own name, written by her, among the inscriptions in the tomb.
- "Northern Lights" is about a teleportation and time travel experiment in which a lighter was transported to somewhere freezing cold. And it came back with a woolly bear caterpillar.
- John Mulaney recounts being very perturbed by the sight of an empty, overturned wheelchair on a dark, deserted street in New York City:
"That's a bad thing to see. Something happened here. You hope it was a miracle... but probably not."
- Delta Green: In Project Rainbow, a kind of special radiation related to Crawford Tillinghast's invention from "From Beyond" allows for an extremely limited (and potentially accidental) form of time travel. In one of the sample adventures provided, the Game Master is encouraged to have a Player Character come across their own fossilized remains, foretelling that they will fall victim to a time travel malfunction very soon.
- Batman: Arkham Origins: While exploring Cyrus Pinkney's crypt you can find a red-tinted doll missing an eye in a basin. There's absolutely no explanation for what it is or why it's there.
- Castlevania: Dawn of Sorrow has the random vehicles in The Lost Village by the virtue of being one of the few reminders, along with the occasional handgun, that the game takes place in the future - 2036 in fact. This doesn't make them any less out-of-place in a jarringly way.
- Emperor: Rise of the Middle Kingdom: Spies appear as random workers walking around the city. The location and occupation are random, so they could easily be a completely inappropriate worker, such as a food salesman in the industrial district or a miner walking around the residential area.
- Gliding around in your submarine in Grand Theft Auto V can quickly become creepy in many ways, not least of which because the ocean floor is littered with sunken planes. There's something unsettling about seeing something that's supposed to fly now resting and buried beneath the water, far away from the light.
- In The Last of Us, you will find children drawings and toys inside an underground shelter that is flooded with infected. Joel tries to calm Sam by saying they probably escaped. They didn't.
- One of the driving mysteries of Lifeless Planet is an abandoned Soviet town on a barren, supposedly unexplored planet.
- Part of the horror of The Mortuary Assistant is when things suddenly appear where they should not be. The various creepy ghosts and ghouls are certainly problematic, but when you turn to look at the morgue and see the cellar doors leading to the basement in the center of the room, when they're supposed to be outside, it will give you pause. More so when a standing coffin shows up in one of the hallways. Whatever is inside cries and begs to be let out, before demanding it in a different voice.
- In Returnal, you've crash-landed on a hostile world surrounded by the ruins of ancient alien civilizations... and then, in one cave, you find a normal suburban house. Your house.
- Silent Hill: This pops up a lot throughout the series. Often the objects have some associated significance to a character in the story, even though they may or may not have put it there, but sometimes there will be a single colorful toy or baby carriage inside a bloody, rusted-out Otherworld room, just for the sake of unexplained, incongruous creepiness.
- A wheelchair is a common sight in hospitals or around handicapped people. Lying on the side in the middle of a road or back alley, with not a single person in 1000 meters around it, however, is not a good place for it to be. Doubles as a recurring reference to Jacob's Ladder.
- Lightbulbs inside a sealed tin can in Silent Hill 2.
- In Silent Hill 4, one of the rooms in the Hospital World contains a flower pot right in the center of the floor, filled with dried-out flowers.
- Stellaris:
- Played for Laughs with one anomaly you can find being... a teapot. Floating in orbit around a star. No explanation is ever given for why it is there or how it came to be, and the best outcome is that your scientists say they will never know (while also giving you some physics and engineering research points). The worst outcomes? Your chief scientist will go insane and kill themselves at the inexplicable impossibility of the dang teapot.
- Another anomaly features an asteroid made entirely of coprolite (fossilized animal feces). Not a scary or dangerous kind of stone, but floating in space, the size of an asteroid, it raises... implications. The thing or things that created it are definitely still out there. You might even get to meet it!
- The Xenosaga series features the Zohar, an object (inspired by the Monolith from 2001: A Space Odyssey) that seems to be constructed from highly advanced technology first discovered at the bottom of an African lake. Later games imply that it might have originated at the same time as the universe, and appears to be U-DO's method of trying to communicate with humanity, but the specifics of how and why it turns up in particular places and times remains mysterious.
- The crux of The Oldest View is an amateur urban explorer discovering in a random field an Absurdly Long Stairway that goes deep underground, leading to — of all things — a replica of a shopping mall, specifically based off the Valley View Center in Dallas, Texas, which is most definitely not underground. This mall somehow has light coming from the atrium's sunroof yet has doors to the "outside" that lead directly into solid rock, and for some reason, the lights are running and generic mall music is playing despite there not being a single soul inside of it. Aside from a giant malevolent sculpture, of course. Even worse, the "mall" is strongly implied to be alive based on the way it traps its protagonist in through an unexplained cave-in of the stairwell, and no explanation ends up being given as to where the heck this place even came from.
- These are quite common in the world of SCP Foundation. One example is an indestructible floating cheeseburger in the middle of nowhere that makes people go crazy trying come up with an explanation for why it is there.
- Staircases in Search and Rescue Woods, standing in the middle of the forest with no other structures around them. Don't touch them. Don't look at them. Don't go up them.
- These pop up occasionally in Welcome to Night Vale, with one of the more notable examples being the lighthouse with the red beacon on the top of the mountain in the middle of a desert otherworld with no human inhabitants, and a miniature (and very hostile) civilization beneath the floorboards of the bowling alley. The latter eventually declares war on our world and is revealed to be the result of one of the more important chunks of lore, while the former plays an important and very un-lighthouse-like role in one of Night Vale's larger and more mind-screwy crises.
- This is a BIG sign that Tricksy the Pixie has struck in StarBeam, as she has a habit of switching objects: some examples of this include pizzas replacing proper bike wheels in "Summersette Spectacular" and a giant snail in "Beachy Blunder."
- Archeologists refer to such things as "out-of-place artifacts", or "OOParts", artifacts of historical, archaeological, or paleontological interest that is claimed to have been found in an unusual context, whether because it represents a level of technological advancement that doesn't correlate to what is believed to have been common at the time and place, or it suggests the presence of humans (either of a particular culture, or just in general) in times and places that also don't correlate. While the mysteries surrounding them can fall into fringe sciences, conspiracy theories, or just plain hoaxes, there are still many OOParts that are considered legitimate and of interest to high-minded archeological societies, though whether a "legit" OOPart is actually what it's purported to be or merely a misinterpretation varies heavily.
- In 1933, a terracotta head
(possibly belonging to a larger figurine lost to time) was discovered in Toluca Valley, smack dab in the middle of Mexico, in a grave site made by the Matlatzinca people, itself dated to sometime between 1476 and 1510 AD. The head caught attention as an OOPart due to it being carved in a distinctly Ancient Roman style (which has no resemblance to any Mesoamerican art native to the area), with experts on Roman art pinning it to being made sometime in the 2nd or 3rd century AD, and thermoluminescence dating proved that it wasn't a modern forgery. How exactly a 2nd century Roman statuette ended up in a 15th century Mesoamerican tomb is anyone's guess, but many historians believe it to be evidence of pre-Columbian transoceanic contact.
- The "Maine penny
" (aka the "Goddard coin", named after the archeological site it was found in) is a coin discovered in 1957 whose design has left little doubt to it being a silver coin dated to the reign of Olaf Kyrre
from the 11th century, a bona fide viking artifact found in America. Archeologists continue to debate how it got there — many believe this to be proof of vikings having traveled across the ocean to the Americas before Columbus, potentially having traded the coin to the Native Americans the site originated from, others speculate it may have been planted there by someone in modern times — but either way, it's considered a genuine artifact and a genuine find that raises a ton of questions to its origin that continue to be discussed.
- A bronze coin
whose design implicates it being from the reign of Ptolemy IV (between 221 and 204 BC) was unearthed in 1912 a mere few centimeters underneath the dirt on a private property in Queensland, Australia. The coin was also verified to be a genuine artifact, though again, it's unclear how a coin from ancient Egypt found its way to a rainforest in Australia, theories ranging from it having passed hands between Indian Ocean trade routes and somehow having passed way beyond the Wallace Line, to possibly being an heirloom to an Australian miner who brought it during a gold rush in the area and carelessly dropped it in the dirt.
- In 1933, a terracotta head