0.0MHz (Movie)
A man kisses and touches an unconscious woman in the hospital.
This film is about a woman who, after a car crash, is kidnapped by a man in an underground bunker. SPOILERS The man claims that an event has left the surface of Earth uninhabitable, and that he saved her. He acts threateningly throughout the movie, and it is revealed that he caused her car crash, and that he apparently kidnapped and killed a girl in the same bunker years before.
Chapter 48-51: photos (arranged by the perpetrator) are taken of the incident.
The 10Th Kingdom (TV Show)
The main character is approached by a girl implied to be an underage sex worker. When meeting the female lead, she trips and the main character catches her, accidentally fondling her breast in the process. She does not appear to notice. When the main character purchases condoms, the store clerk winks at him and tells him "not to do anything against the law". The main character tries to recruit the help of an impoverished mother, offering her money in exchange. At first, she assumes he intends to ask for something sexual and appears uncomfortable at the idea. When the female lead is recounting her experience with her abusive ex-husband, she mentions a "broom" he used for something during their relationship. The main character ponders whether or not this broom was used in a sexual manner, but it is later revealed not to be the case. Later on, the same ex-husband is revealed to have been stalking the female lead. He attacks her and takes her hostage, disfiguring her with a knife and calling her and the male lead derogatory terms for being sexually active. No sexual assault takes place, however.
12 Hour Shift (Movie)
13 Fanboy (Movie)
It is mentioned that a man has groped several men and women who work on the movie he is financing.
While there are no explicit sexual themes, the main lead is mentally and emotionally only thirteen-years-old when sexual/physically romantic scenes occur between her and the male characters. Those moments include waking up with a naked man and being flashed, receiving a strip-tease and being flashed, and kissing and flirting with the thirty-year-old male lead. Some viewers might find the situation of someone with the mental/emotional age of a child in these moments uncomfortable, given minors cannot consent properly. The main characters briefly talk about the game "Seven minutes in Heaven" and the male lead calls it "spin the rapist", making a joke of the nature of the game (54:50-55:00).
A drunk man jokes about sexual harassment before hitting on the female bartender.
There is passing mention of the childhood sexual assault that Oprah Winfrey experienced.
On a few occasions, rape is briefly mentioned in the context of the European colonisation of the Americas.
15 Cameras (Movie)
A man watches women undress and shower through cameras without their knowledge or consent. He also sends a photo of his penis through text to one of them without consent.
1670 (TV Show)
S1E8: a character talks of what he would do to a woman if she was his wife in a deliberate effort to upset a third character.
17 Again (Movie)
An adult male character romantically pursues an adult female character relentlessly, despite a lack of interest from her. It is played off as comedy but comes across as harassment. The main character wakes up at a party after being knocked out. He finds himself on a bed with a girl touching him, only to realize it is his daughter. However, because he is in the body of a 17 year old, she doe not understand what she is doing and he has to resist her advances. She only stops when he says he is in love with someone else.
1BR (2019) (Movie)
A woman is assigned a male partner, who kisses her briefly against her will. However, there is no implication that she is forced or pressured into having sex with him.
2 Broke Girls (TV Show)
Female characters are groped: they smile. Later on, sexual comments are made at other female characters: their reaction is not shown. There are a few jokes about sexual harassment. One character tells another character to "bend over" before ramming the front of her car into the back of another racers. At the end of the film, one character makes a prison rape joke.
A girl talks to a man about how she had sex with an another man and he finished inside her when he said he would not. He laughed and said “sorry”. Worthy of note: before having sex with a man, a woman asks him to do a roleplay in which he grabs her and repeatedly says' I'm sorry'.
21 Days (Movie)
Two of the protagonists sleep in the same bed: the man puts his hand on the woman's rear and she slaps his hand away (0:57:19-0:57:29). Nothing else happens and he is otherwise perfectly respectful towards her.
A character mentions that he is scared of an action that 'rhymes with grape'.
25Th Hour (Movie)
One character in his thirties has a crush on his student, a high school junior. At a nightclub, the student gets drunk, straddles him and he kisses her. A big theme in the movie is the threat of the rape that the main character will likely experience in prison.
27 Dress (Movie)
A taxi driver spies on a woman as she is changing in his back seat.
28 Days (Movie)
Worthy of note: a woman is stripped naked and hosed down in a medical facility.
2Gether (TV Show)
Throughout the show, male characters get drunk and pass out at several occasions. Every time this happens, the characters mention how they could be assaulted, but it never happens. This is all played for laughs. S1E1: a character attempts to drug another character with the purpose of getting him to leave him alone, but does not succeed. S1E6: one character undresses another character to his underwear while he is drunk and takes a picture of him which is posted on instagram. A male character comes to the main character asking for protection from his violent boyfriend. The two boyfriends make up, but the issue is not resolved.
3 From Hell (Movie)
The film contains a lot of threats of sexual assault.
3 Idiots (Movie)
A student gives a speech which mentions rape. Worthy of note: there is a 'hazing' scene where male students pull down their trousers.
3-Iron (Movie)
3 Women (Movie)
One character theorizes about the possibility of being raped while she was in a coma. She later enters in a sexual relationship with much older man. Worthy of note: a drunk man breaks into an apartment shared by two women in order to have sex with one of them. Nothing actually happens and they get away.
3:10 to Yuma (Movie)
Rape is mentioned in passing in order to condemn it.
A woman kisses a man while torturing him.
37.2 Le Matin (Movie)
Early in the movie, the male protagonist's boss watches him and his girlfriend sleep naked. The woman wakes up and tells her boyfriend to chases him away. Later, during a fight, that same man lifts up her skirt: he is quickly rebuffed. About halfway through the movie, a man makes several rape jokes. In the second part of the movie, a woman pressures the male protagonist into touching her breast. Briefly after, she surprises him while he is sitting down, and puts his face against her crotch. Worthy of note: at some point, the male protagonist tries to calm down the female protagonist (who is having a nervous breakdown) by grabbing her wrists and slapping her. As they are on the streets at night half naked, policemen interrupt them, thinking that the man is assaulting her.
The 39 Steps (Movie)
A man forcibly plants a kiss on a woman and she clearly does not want it.
S3E9: a female character is sexually harassed by her new boss.
A man describes watching a woman have sex with a horse. A man mentions how a dog licked his bottom as he was having sex with a woman and he says that he enjoyed it. A man tells another man that he should go after very drunk women whilst in a club, to the point where they do not where they are. That same man then attempts to go home with a very drunk woman and they kiss, though she initiates and he is very hesitant to kiss her back. A man is locked in a room where porn is playing and he is shown to be visibly distressed at this. A drunk man films his ass and displays it on several screens in the store that he works in, and nearly displays his genitals before his friend stops him. A group of man hire a sex worker for a man without his consent. A woman finds a mento in a man's apartment and asks him if it is a roofie.
42Nd Street (Movie)
One of the musical numbers ends with the main male and female characters framed between the legs of multiple women dancers with both of the gazing gleefully at them. At another part of the movie, women dancers are asked to show their legs by their choreographer.
There is a song around the middle part of the film where the lyrics mention "when the television rapes us" or something along those lines: the word rape is clear and audible. Nothing on-screen follows the thematic, but it still might be a trigger.
51 (2011) (Movie)
While being chased by rednecks, one of the guys “jokingly” says, “They’re gonna rape us and break our arms.” (14:54)
The 5Th Wave (Movie)
When a girl introduces herself to a team, several young boys stare at her but: she makes a comment about hurting anyone who might touch her. Right after, a teenage boy says something with a sexual overtone.
6:45 (Movie)
A man listens at the door while a couple has sex.
A man is dating a teenage girl. A possessed man tells another man that his deceased sister is being raped in hell. In a later scene he is shown to be the one who killed her by stabbing her to death while they were having sex. A woman has a dream/vision where a man forcibly tries to kiss her.
6Teen (TV Show)
S1E20: one character films another while she is in a dressing room. S1E27: the same character gets a job at a lingerie store so he can watch women in the changing room. He is shown looking through a peephole while describing what he sees to his friends on the phone. In both instances this is played for laughs. In general, the teenaged characters are shown dressed down, naked, getting their clothes ripped off, etc. in a gratuitous way.
A man goes into the bathroom with a camera while a woman is showering. Though he does not try to see her showering, he does talk to her and she tells him to leave when she finds out he has a camera. A woman is unconscious while tied to a chair and she is alone with a man who is recording her. In an effort to force her to "stop pretending to be asleep" he taunts her, threatens to take her clothes off, and post pictures of her online. He does not actually do any of it.
7Seeds (TV Show)
S1E10: a man grabs the breast area of a teenager and scolds her for not having 'titties and period yet'. The series contains scenes of child abuse and an attempt of sexual assault. The series consists of ecchi elements such as partial nudity of the characters revealing their breasts, buttocks and groin area.
8 Mile (Movie)
Child rape is mentioned.
8 Women (Movie)
86 (TV Show)
S1E3: three guys go to take a peek at the girls bathing. However, the girls are not bathing and find the guys before anything happens: the guys get punished. S2E20: a guy mentions that when people are depressed, it is easier to take advantage of them. He says this to a girl who is in love with one of the guys. Another girl says only bad girls do that. It is unclear whether the comment had sexual intent. Worthy of note: S1E7+10: two underage girls are taking a shower and are shown semi nude. In the first season, a teenage girl talks about potential marriage partners. Most of them are really old and one of them is a 5 year old child. She is aware that the child was only set up on this date so the parents could get her money. She is also aware that the older men want to marry her for her money. She is not actually planning on getting married to any of them. No marriage happens and none of the dates are shown on screen.
The 8Th Night (Movie)
There is one mention of a case where the detectives needed to track down a rapist.
9 to 5 (Movie)
One of the female main character's husband admits to stalking her, and breaks into a house to see her.
976-EVIL (Movie)
A high schooler watches his male cousin have sex through the window, then steals her underwear after they both leave. Later, he pins a female teacher against the wall and removes her jacket.
A guy tries to kiss a woman when she does not want it.
The Abandon (Movie)
During a phone call, a woman says that she was abused by her male partner and then angrily asks a man if he beat and raped his wife.
A principal routinely makes harassing and flirtatious comments to one teacher. This is played for laughs.
There is no direct discussion of rape or sexual assault in the documentary itself, though multiple books they talk about have this content in them, and that served as the reason that some of them were contested or banned.
A women is being filmed by a group of misogynistic and abusive filmmakers. The men strip her down, grip her face and breasts, shove their hand into her mouth, and make rude gestures.
Abhijan (Movie)
Human trafficking is a subject of the plot. One woman is clearly a victim of trafficking as she recalls being abused and isolated and is kidnapped at one point into more trafficking, only to be saved. There is a potential implication that she is a victim of sex trafficking.
A news report states that abortions will have a 72 hour waiting period, even in cases of rape and incest.
Abracadabra (Movie)
Two characters (a woman and a man) accidentally goes to a couple of swingers' apartment, who think they are their date. The female protagonist leaves when she understands the situation (as she is alone with the man, who does not appear threatening), and takes her male friend with him before quitting the apartment (the man was willingly engaging sex with the swinger woman). A woman is grossly catcalled by a man on a construction site. It is revealed that the antagonist of the movie probably had a sexual relationship with his mother.
Abruptio (Movie)
A character tells another character that a group of men attacked her. The person she i talking to says “Did they-?” and she says “I’m not sure, I blacked out. But I think so.” Later in the film, a nurse tries to seduce a patient and touches him inappropriately.
The author discusses general statistics on sexual violence on college campuses, statistics related to how disabled people in general and disabled women in particular are disproportionately victims of rape and sexual assault; and sexual violence in films.
Acapulco (TV Show)
Throughout the show, women are subjected to sexual harassment. Both seasons 1 and 2 feature sexual relationships between bosses and subordinates. S2E1: one character admits that he got a job because he was sleeping with the boss. This is played for laughs. S2E2: someone threats to cut off a penis.
Acca-13 (TV Show)
A young policeman is in love with a high school girl. Her age is unknown, but if the story is followed she would be around 17 to 18 years old. He is a rookie agent and it is mentioned how he had to take an entrance exam. Depending on how long the police academy is, he would be around 19 to 22 years old. He stalks her in the hope of getting to know more about her. She never finds out about him stalking her and she also does not know he is in love with her. No relationship develops between them.
Accepted (Movie)
Starting at 26:00, a character is roasted by another character implying that when he does not get his way with women, he had to drug them.
The Accident (TV Show)
S1E2: a man enters his martial bedroom in a state of drunkenness, and proceeds to describe how he plans to assault his wife. He ends up not going through with this as he passes out drunk. S1E3: a man is ordered by a woman to take off his clothes. He repeatedly states he does not want to, but ends up disrobing. The woman then proceeds to touch the man sexually, with the man stating a number of times he does not want this.
An armed man breaks into a woman's apartment and catch her before she manages to escape. A character threats a man to rape his wife.
The author covers in detail the case of Carrie Buck, a woman who was raped and impregnated by her adoptive parents’ nephew. She was then institutionalized and sterilized. In chapters 8 and 9, the author explores the ways in which sex can be consensual but still unwanted, and she argues that the phrase “rape isn’t sex” is often unhelpful for asexual and aromantic people. Throughout the book, there are references to the rape of enslaved women, as well as legal and societal understandings of marital rape.
Ace Attorney (TV Show)
There is a recurring plot device where two girls, a teenager and an 8-year-old, are spirit mediums and can channel the spirit of a dead adult woman. When this happens, the girls’ physical appearances change to those of the woman they summon, meaning that they suddenly look like her and have larger breasts and cleavage. In the third arc, Turnabout Samurai, a TV show director stares at a teenage girl’s breasts and legs, and imagines her as a super hero; the audience sees this superhero as the teenage girl with much larger breasts.
S1E19: a male character grabs another male character's private parts. This is not done in a sexual way, but to see ‘if he still has balls’ after the other character gets very nervous. S1OVA2: a male character makes a comment about the breasts of a woman in order to embarrass his grandson. The grandson is caught looking at her breasts. The woman is present when the comment is made and laughs it off. S2E39: the guy from S1S19 tries to grab the private parts of the same character again. This time he is stopped before it happens.
A man is transformed into a fly and spies on his friend's having sex. A man pushes a woman down onto a couch in an attempt to get her to have sex with him.
The movie takes place during the Vietnam war, and a Vietnamese character says something about "raping and pillaging all the girls who look like me".
One man recalls his desire to sexually assault women and specifically goes into detail about sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl.
Actors (Movie)
During a back and forth conversation between an adult and the child version of himself, another character makes a "joke" about telling a therapist where the bad man touched him (11:46).
Chapter 15: a young female character kisses another female teen after the second character has stated that she is straight. She decides she is into it, but did not actually consent. Chapter 31: a female teen is forced to strip and undergo medical examination against her will (by female doctor with male assistants) Spoilers: a love interest entered a relationship under entirely false pretenses. The teen girl protagonist regrets dating that love interest once her story and motivations are revealed.
Shortly into the film, a man is talking to his brother and tells him someday he'll, "find a nice girl... one who won't press charges!" after which they both laugh. This could be taken as a reference to sexual or other domestic violence. One main character spends most of the movie in a relationship where he is controlled by sex and is frequently verbally berated.
The Addiction (Movie)
In the last scene of the movie, the female protagonist reveals that she got pregnant from her boyfriend (a 20 year old man) when she was 15, and that the man was charged with corruption of a minor but escaped the judgment. A male protagonist mentions that the man thus was a paedophile. Near the end of the movie, it is revealed that a man is stalking a woman (to the point of moving in the same neighborhood as her): this is portrayed as romantic. The woman, who explains that she was worried by the anonymous letters she received, seems pleased to learn who her secret admirer was.
Adieu Poulet (Movie)
A police officer dressed up as a patient in a hospital slaps a nurse's bottom.
Adolescence (TV Show)
Talks between a therapist and accused criminal (a teenage boy) include sexual questions and topics, all professional: the therapist is not predatory. There are mentions of a teenage girls nudes being sent around school. The teenage boy accused of a crime is forced to be strip searched. There is nothing visual but we can hear the audio which includes an officer instructing him to lift up his genitals.
Adulthood (Movie)
A woman discusses how she was gang raped. Later, a man threatens her by saying it will happen to her again.
Adults (TV Show)
S1E1: two characters masturbate in public, causing dismay to the other subway passengers . A different character said ejaculate ended up her shoe. The friend group finds out someone they know is now in the news for speaking out for being groped/harrassed at work. One character reaches out to one of his exes after his friend makes a remark about how “men don’t realize when they cross a line sexually". It turns out he did sleep with one while she was under the influence and she even half jokingly says “you sexually assaulted me”. He feels guilt around it but multiple people he tells encourage him to brush it off. Another of his exes calls him out on his behavior when he confesses what he did. Some of the characters encourage another character to use the “window” after a sex scandal to advocate for a promotion since they think the executives will take her concerns more seriously so they also will not get in trouble. She ends up trying to do so but they keep trying to push back a check-in meeting and leads to her getting fired after cursing at her boss. There is a rally/fundraiser for held by the harassment victim but the character use it as a social event rather than wanting to actually help. Someone who is part of the news crew even repeats “my boss groped me” when being a stand in for framing the shot for an interview.
Early in the movie, a character jokes that he would like to be raped by another character.
At one point, the trans man main character is being seduced while under the mind control of supernatural beings who clearly intend to kill him. He is rescued before things go very far and the specifics of the seduction are not much detailed.
The protagonists, all men, joke about coercing a really drunk woman into having sex with one of them. In the last scene, the protagonist prepares to kill a man who is implied to have harmed a young girl in some way that may or may not have been sexual.
Affliction (Movie)
An alcoholic and abusive man grabs a woman's bottom.
About halfway through the movie, it is revealed that the protagonist (who had been a teacher) sexually abused school children.
The relationship between a high school professor and his high school student is romanticized and not seen as an issue, other than the fact that said student has a boyfriend. They also share an on-screen kiss as part of the actual plot as well as a on-screen sex scene (statutory rape) in the thought experiment that they are taking part in.
After Hours (Movie)
A woman discusses in detail how she was raped by her ex-boyfriend.
After Life (TV) (TV Show)
S3E3: a woman reveals that she has been abused by her brother in her childhood. S3E4+6: two male characters make offensive and disgusting jokes about sex, masturbation, etc.., while mimicking sexual gestures.
After Sex (Movie)
A woman mentions how she was molested by a relative when she was younger.
There is passing reference to coyotes raping women they are assisting to cross the border. Worthy of note: a character calls his girlfriend bitch and whore for having a baby with another man.
The Afterparty (TV Show)
S1E4: a woman talks about her plan to drug a man and take photos of him naked. She does not go through with the plan. S1E5: a teenage boy tries to kiss a teen girl while they are both drunk; she refuses. He leaves her alone but, along with another boy, lies to their friends about having a threesome with her.
A man walks in on a couple having sex with the intent of filming them. He does it for a minute or so before the boyfriend sees him but continues to have sex. When the girlfriend notices, she covers up and tells the man filming to leave and he does.
S1E6: a man forces his wife to visit another man on a late-night errand. It is later implied that he did this whilst believing that she would be sexually assaulted by the other man (but she was not).
S1E4: a female main character locks a chasity device on her husband with an app without asking his permission. A young employee of a film set get harassed by an actor: he is stopped by another actress. Worthy of note: this entry is relevant only to the first series.
S4E2: a character talks about having been sexually assaulted by her brother (between the 1:16:30-1:17:20 marks). S4E4: discussion of the sexual violence experienced by one character (between the 1:16:40-1:17:15 marks).
A brother and a sister are involved in an incestuous relationship: they discuss their parting. There is a five year old difference between them, with the earlies sexual encounter taking place when he was 12 and she was 7. Nothing is shown on screen and the movie consists only of their dialogue.
The male lead repeatedly abruptly crosses the female lead's boundaries, including grabbing a taxi cab window to stop her from leaving (after she clearly rejected his advances) and finding out the female character's address without her consent or knowledge. The movie treats this as "romantic".
Chappelle tells a joke about a superhero who has to rape women in order to sustain his powers (22:00-24:00). Chappelle makes a series of jokes about transgender people, including one (37:20) about ‘tricking’ people into sleeping with him by posing as a woman. Chappelle jokes about people giving oral sex in exchange for basic resources such as food during World War Two (45:00-47:00). Chappelle mentions the fact that Bill Cosby allegedly raped 54 women during the 70s, joking about the high number of women involved (48:20-49:20). He speaks in general terms about Cosby, the related rape allegations and backlash against jokes Chappelle has previously made on the topic until the 55:00 minute mark. From the 1:00:00-1:02:02 mark, Chappelle mentions Cosby again, saying that ‘[he’s] not defending him,’ but observing that Cosby has ‘a valuable legacy,’ that cannot be ‘thrown away,’ comparing him to the superhero mentioned earlier in the show.
Aggretsuko (TV Show)
The main character is picked on by her misogynistic boss multiple times throughout the series. S3E9: a male character meeting the female lead holds her hands and uses sexual language to insult her. S3E10: the same character attempts to stab her with a boxcutter.
Rape is mentioned in passing as one of the terrible things than humans do.
Ahiru No Sora (TV Show)
S1E1: a male character secretly watch girls change in their locker room.
AI: the Somnium Files (Video Game)
The main protagonist frequently engages in sexual harassment, and it is played for laughs. He is also sexually harassed by his boss. A major plot point is that a grown man impregnated a 19-year-old. A serial killer is motivated by his fetish for women's eyes.
The book contains conversations about whether it is ethical for the protagonist to have sex with the titular AI character, considering that he might interpret his programming to mean that he has to do whatever a human wants. The AI character dismisses this ethical dilemma and says that he has the ability to choose what he wants.
S2E2: a sexual assault is suddenly shown on-screen, the face of the perpetrator being blurred (25:30-26:20). The assault is briefly mentioned in S2E4 and the victim is shown crying after the act (8:10-8:19).
Air (Movie)
Airheads (Movie)
There is an aside joke where a woman despairs at the fact that she had perform oral sex to keep her job.
Airplane! (Movie)
A pilot asks a series of increasingly suggestive questions to a young boy who has asked to see the cockpit. The boy is oblivious to the suggestive nature of these questions. This is played for laughs.
Aiyou De Mishi (TV Show)
S1E6: two men harass a woman. S1E9: a character mentions that the disappearance of a woman could be a raping murder case. S1E13: the main protagonist accidentally touches a woman’s chest in the dark. He apologizes. She later on tells him she cannot get married and he tells her that if she does not let him go, he will make sure she never marries again. He pins her down and starts tickling her. He later on pins another woman down and draws on her face. Although these two instances are not sexual assault it does look like it if we do not finish the entire scene. Everyone is laughing and nothing else happens.
Ajin (TV Show)
S1E2: a girl is kidnapped. Men tell her not to worry as they are going to have fun with her before selling her. The girl escapes a few moments later. S2E6: it is implied that a teenage girl became a prostitute after running away. In the manga, her stepfather tries to rape her, but fails. This is implied at the beginning of the episode. It is not shown on screen. Worthy of note: two female are forced to work with the police. They are threatened with violence if they do not co operate. One of them has been tortured multiple times. This is not shown but it is discussed in the anime.
Ajosepo (Movie)
The plot heavily features a situation that begins as consenting heterosexual adultery. The pair are physically unable to separate, and swiftly find that their prolonged conjoining is uncomfortable physically and emotionally. They are forced to seek intervention from multiple other people who they would rather not have see and touch them so intimately. Some of those helpers shame them harshly for their sexual activity.
A woman (a sex worker for the yakuza) propositions a teenage boy and tries to kiss him, laughing when he looks the other way.
A boy uses magic to make a girl's clothing tighter across her breasts in front of a group of people.
A 16 years old girl is imprisoned by an older man, whose sexual intentions are heavily implied. The man attempts to force the woman to fall in love with him. At one point, the woman kisses the predatory antagonist man as the only means to distract him from the actions of her rescuers.
The Alamo (Movie)
In the first part of the movie, the main protagonist tries to help a woman he thinks is being harassed by a man. She tells him that she is not in danger. However, it is then mentioned that she will be part of a forced marriage.
There are mentions of rape as a crime. Chapter 4: a captured angel is threatened with rape as a means of torture, this is referenced again in later chapters.
Alex Rider (TV Show)
S1E4: a character is touched on his thigh and gets clearly uncomfortable. He is then kissed despite saying no.
This film is about a woman caught in an psychologically abusive relation with a man. Early in the movie, they have a sexual encounter in the shower. Later, flashbacks of it are shown while the woman seems distressed. It can thus be assumed that it was not entirely consensual. Near the end of the film, the couple initiates another sexual relation: the woman is not into it but tries to hide it (she goes to the bathroom and hyperventilates). She then returns to the bedroom, and when the man gets on top of her while kissing, she turns her head and pushes him back, while still "playing along". In order to get the upper hand, she pushes him to the floor and pins him down. She then orgasms on top of him, without any penetration: he laughs while she stays visibly distressed.
Alice Junior (Movie)
A teenage girl has her bikini top ripped off by two teenage boys. She jumps into the pool to shield herself from people looking.
Alien Factor (Movie)
A man tries to kiss a woman again after she tells him no. She pushes him away and he leaves after the second rejection.
A male antagonist gets close to the female protagonist, makes a sexually implicit comment and smells her hair (22:40). The same man makes a sexually explicit comment towards another female character ( 1:15:40).
Toward the end of the film, there is a graphic, traumatic birth scene. The father to the baby is the girl's cousin. There is a weird scene that depicts the tension between the characters and can feel rather awkward. SPOILER: After the woman gives birth to a mutant, it rapidly matures into an adult being. There is a breast feeding scene which may be disturbing to some viewers.
Alien Stage (TV Show)
In Round 6, one of the main characters is implied to be sexually assaulted by the aliens in power. No sexual violence is shown, but the before and after are heavily implied. In the same episode, one of the contestants kisses another non-consensually, as the one being kissed tries multiple times to pull and push away. This act was not done out of romantic or sexual gain, but rather to inadvertently save the other’s life. In multiple episodes, one of the characters is shown to be very touchy in inappropriate ways to other characters, and is implied to have sexually assaulted one of his peers in a flashback. This is not done maliciously, as he is incapable of human morality, but makes all others involved uncomfortable.
A character gives a very graphic description of her sexual assault by a family member.
The male main character is given a bondswoman concubine. It is implied that they had sex, with no details about the circumstances or the woman's feelings on the matter.
Soldiers catcall women, who only become interested in them once they know the soldiers have food.
There is one scene where several characters are under a siren spell and are kissed by said siren to break it. They do not consent to this kiss.
A man continually makes advances towards a woman, finally grabbing and kissing her without consent after she turns him down.
All That Jazz (Movie)
A joke about a man flashing women in the subway is made. The protagonist repeatedly touches a nurse's bottom while he is admitted in a hospital: it is played for comedic purposes.
The relationship between the child, starting when she is 9 and a 24 adult man, is romanticized.
A Black woman publicly testifies about how she was arrested, beaten, groped and stripped by Southern policemen in a cell.
Alligator (Movie)
While they are investigating sewers, a cop grabs a detective's bottom as a means to surprise him.
Alligator X (Movie)
A man insinuates that he assaulted a woman before the camera pans over to her tied up with her shirt ripped open. The man grabs at the first woman beneath the camera's view while she struggles and says that he'll "come back for her".
Almost Famous (Movie)
One teenage girls suggest that they had sex with a boy who they believe was a few years older his actual age of fifteen.
Alone (Movie)
The protagonist is restrained against her will and beat in the face multiple times over the course of the film. SPOILERS: At 32:50-39:50, she is kidnapped and held in the basement of a killer/stalker. The kidnapper orders her to remove her clothes. While no sexual assault occurs and she is not undressed, the abductor restrains her from behind on the ground, presses himself against her body, and holds her by the face while he looks through her phone and forces her to answer his questions about her deceased husband. She is visibly distressed and crying during the entirety of the scene, making it a potentially disturbing watch for those with relevant triggers
The Alpines (Movie)
One of the male protagonists kisses a female protagonist on the neck while she giggles and says 'stop' a few times (12:30). It seems semi-consensual, and does not go further. A couple is having an argument in bed (32:30). The man kisses her forcefully mid-argument, and she pushes him away. He comments that that 'always used to work'.
Alps (Movie)
There is a scene where a woman attempts to grope her father but he immediately rejects her.
S1E5: a girl is alone in a pool and a man approaches her in a very gross way. Nothing bad happens to her but she gets victim-blamed by a teacher. The show makes social commentary about jordanian culture where victims are blamed for bringing things like this onto themselves for not "dressing appropriately".
Alucarda (Movie)
There are two scenes where a woman is stripped naked without her permission. She doesn't protest but in one of the instances, she is tied to a cross and cannot stop it from happening.
Always Shine (Movie)
A woman mentions that her boss sexually harassed her (13:18-13:26).
Am Fear Liath (Movie)
A man pins a woman to the ground and licks her face.
S1E9: one of the supporting characters is forced by nobles in the academy to strip and dance in front of them, She is almost naked just only her panty and open chest but her hand is covered, and MC comes to save her before the thing goes too far.
Amadeus (Movie)
In the extended cut, a character blackmails a married woman into sex to help her husband. She accepts and begins to strip but the man changes his mind and has her escorted away. The next scene shows her being very emotionally distressed.
Worthy of note: S1E3: the female protagonist is held back and in order to get free, she accuses the male protagonist of sexual harassment. He was not actually sexually harassing her.
Amelia 2.0 (Movie)
In the last 20 minutes of the movie, the creator of a female robot that houses a human mind kisses her while she is in a vulnerable state.
Amelie (Movie)
Woman is shown having sex. She is largely disinterested in the encounter but her consent is not violated. The main character enters a house of horrors theme park attraction. She notes that one of the main scare actors has a reputation for touching women (i.e. stroking their hair, making ghost noises in their ears) as they pass through the ride.
Amer (Movie)
In this movie, all sexual assaults and sexual threats are eroticized. In the first segment, the protagonist (a young girl) is tormented by a shadowy, ominous figure in black, who makes her fall down and grabs her feet. In the second segment, an adult man forcibly puts a lollipop in the mouth of the protagonist (now a teenager) while lustfully telling her that she has grown up. Shortly after, a boy tries to kiss her (she rebuffs him) and looks insistantly at her breaast (uncomfortable, she covers her breast). After that, she walks in front of a group of lustful bikers, who stare are her: she is shown feeling uncomfortable. Immediately after that, a suggestive scene mimicks an unconsensual sexual relationship: it is then revealed to depict the protagonist entering a subway wagon. In the third and final segment, the protagonist (now an adult) takes a cab and dreams/fantasizes that the driver (who acts threateningly) tears off her dress and expose her breast: she wakes up. She then goes to her childhood home, where she is assaulted by a killer: he firstly tries to drown her while she is masturbating in her bath, touches her while she is sleeping in her bed, pursues her, fondles her while holding her a knifepoint, and eventually kills her. The final scene shows her naked dead body being prepared for her burial: the process is eroticized.
There are two moments during the film when men pay for the services of prostitutes. The main character is forced to marry a woman because he desperately needs her father's money. Later, it is implied that he is selling his sexual services to an older woman.
A grown man's sexual fixation on a teenager is central to the plot of this film. A middle aged man observes his teenage daughter's friend and has sexual fantasies about her. The same teenage girl implies that this kind of behaviour is a regular occurrence from older men. She implied that she was once sexually exploited by a photographer. Later, the same adult man who has fixated on her throughout the film makes sexual advances towards her, undressing her (with the intention of committing statutory rape), but stops when she discloses that she is a virgin. In other scenes, an adult films the household without their knowledge, the implication that this is a regular occurrence and is done with the intention of capturing intimate and private moments on film without consent. In one scene, an adult man forces a kiss onto another adult man. Worthy of note; virulent and at times violent homophobia is an ongoing theme.
American Dad (TV Show)
Sexual violence in the show is handled in a comedic manner. There is not a serious tone to the rape and incest that happens on screen. Two character are often the main ones who perpetrate or are victims of the sexual violence in question. S2E8: two men discuss the plot of a comedy called 'Quantum Rape'. S2E9: a rapist is mentioned several times throughout the episode and played for laughs. S5E18: several rape jokes are made. S8E12: when the main character tackles another character in a living room, the latter says "this is the tallest rape ever." This show occasionally makes rape jokes in other seasons/episodes too.
At 55 minutes, a passing incest joke is made. Rape is mentioned at 01:26:00.
A young girl tricks an older teenage boy into letting her ride around with him in his car. She threatens to lie and tell a police officer that he tried to rape her. (He is trying to find her older sister and return her because she is too young for him) There is a teacher at a sock hop who calls a group of teenage students sexy. He is later seen talking privately with a teen student where it is strongly implied they are having an inappropriate relationship. A car full of boys whistles at and follows a 12 year old girl. An older teen pretends he cannot control his attraction to a 12 year old girl to manipulate her into telling him where she lives so he can take her home. A couple is breaking up and the boy pressures the girl for sex. They do not end up having sex and she kicks him out of her car.
One of the main characters gives a fairly graphic description of getting raped in prison (38:08-39:16).
A male teacher has a relationship with a high school girl.
A girl on her 18th birthday is very drunk and comes onto one of the men, insisting despite his refusals. She then gets naked and passes out, and another man repeatedly tries to touch and grope her whilst she is unconscious (and only just turned 18 when these men are about double that age). A main character touches a coworker's butt without her consent (around 7:30). Later, he touches some girls' private area underwater (around 24:00). A group of young boys steal girls' bikini tops at the beach (around 27:00). Boys arrive at a high school party and warn one of them that the girls there are half his age: he says that he knows in a smiley-creepy way (around 32:30).
American Vandal (TV Show)
S1E7: rape or sexual assault mentioned. The entire season 2 contains lot of talk about fake claims of sexual intercourse. A fake account, leaking nudes and other private conversations, intervenes. Sexual assault is implied too.
Amici Miei (Movie)
A husband makes a joke about rape when he and his wife are on a dinner date. He tells her to drink and she asks, “Trying to get me drunk?” and he says, “That’s the appeal of marriage; I won’t have to.”
A man possessed by a ghost sleeps with his teenage sister. Consent is dubious as this encounter is a result of the possession, rather than any conscious desire.
Ammonite (Movie)
A character kisses her lover amidst an argument, and because of said argument the kiss is unwarranted so she is quickly pushed away.
Amorous (Video Game)
There is an optional route for the player to have a sexual encounter with the main character's stepbrother. The stepbrother briefly mentions feeling attracted to the main character since they were children. All sexual scenes in the game are consensual.
Amour Fou (Movie)
Amy (Movie)
Brief mention of sexual assault when one of Amy's previous partners recalls a conversation they had about whether she had been assaulted when she was younger. She says that she never was.
Amy's Orgasm (Movie)
Of An Age (Movie)
A character tries to pick up a feather that has fallen in someone else’s cleavage. The latter character slaps his hand away.
A female child character is seemingly groomed by an adult male character into being a saloon singer, including having her dressed in a Burlesque dress by other characters.
A nurse says she looked at a patient’s genitals while he was in a coma.
An Education (Movie)
The plot follows the relationship between a high school girl and a man twice her age.
Anatomie (Movie)
In the opening, a dead body is caressed in what seems like a sexual manner. A young woman is frequently touched by her professor and is very uncomfortable. She discusses it with another woman later. The same woman is kissed by a classmate and sometimes pushes away/is uncomfortable.
The film is about a murder trial; a large part of the prosecutor's case is depicting a woman as a flirtatious nymphomaniac who deserved to be raped by the murder victim.
Anchorman 2 (Movie)
In the beginning of the movie, the main character makes light of sexual assault and downplays its seriousness by telling his boss he sexually assaults a starfish every morning. In the middle of the movie, the main character says he thinks he was raped by his boss (in the previous scene his boss pins him to the wall and he is afraid): it is played for laughs.
One of the main storylines is about a woman who becomes the first female news anchor and she is sexually harassed by male coworkers throughout the entire film. These scenes are all supposed to be funny.
The age gap in the romance between the two main characters is ambiguous - a 17 year old and an ancient inhuman entity. It is also unclear whether or not this age/power gap is fully endorsed by the narrative. There are scenes in which the older character becomes posessive and violent towards the younger character. These incidents are taken seriously by the narrative and other characters, but they are forgiven by the younger character. The young female protagonist's story begins when she is bought at a slave auction by a master who intends to marry her.
Andi Mack (TV Show)
S1E11: a new principal says that the titular character's leggins are not up to the dresscode and that the pupils should not "distract each other with [their] body parts". Worthy of note: the first ten episodes of this series have been taken out because an actor who played the protagonist's grandfather tried to meet a 13 year-old and take him to a hotel.
Angel Eyes (Movie)
Sexual harassment occurs between 09:50 and 11:09.
Episode 9: mention of footage showing rapes.
Angels of Death (TV Show)
Early on in the show, a 'doctor' character pins down the young female protagonist on a table, whilst licking his lips and looking menacingly.
In the opening sequence, it is mentioned that a woman in trial for stealing said to the policemen to go after the real criminals like rapists. Near the end of the movie, policemen ask the three main male characters to lift up their kilts. This is played for laughs.
The main character's same-aged cousin attempts to kiss her on the lips and later gropes her. This is played for dark comedy. The main character's love interest is 17 years old, while she is 14. The age gap is brought up as an issue.
A teenage boy tries to force a kiss on a girl and they fall over, making it appear that they were lying on top of one another. They are seen and the girl is embarrassed.
Animal Control (TV Show)
Throughout season 1, a veterinarian is called "Hot Vet" by his coworkers: they constantly try and date him. S1E1: a main character puts a beef stick in a fellow officers pants and then tells him to take off the pants and shirt as a joke when ostriches are attacking him. He also asks that same coworker to moon another coworker. S1E3: a coworker catfishes another coworker. S1E4: a coworker continues telling sexual details after another coworker told him to stop.
Animal Jam (Video Game)
Animal Jam is an educational children's game about animals and the environment where players can become animals and interact with the in-game world. The chat filter as of now is strong and has a small chance for inappropriate language to bypass through the filter, although some players can still bypass it to say inappropriate sexual content. The game has implemented safety features to prevent players from "hopping" on another player's sleeping character, which was used to simulate sex before. It is also worth noting an incident where the game's developers unbanned a notorious pedophile from the game, which should be a cause for concern. Inappropriate and sexual "masterpieces" (artwork that you can display in your personal den or on your trade list) has also slipped through moderation at times.
Animal Kingdom (TV Show)
Animal World (Movie)
A nurse is sexually harassed by one of her male patients.
The Animatrix (Movie)
There is a scene of people beating an android that looks like a human woman while she screams. They rip her clothes off revealing her naked body and continue to beat her until her human exterior rips off. Although this is not done with sexual intent, the scene is quite horrifying and may be triggering.
Anita & Me (Movie)
It is strongly implied that the main female protagonist, a 18th century housemaid, has been sexually abused by her master (off-screen). In the beginning of the movie, he unknowingly watches her while she is washing and later tries to kiss her. Worthy of note: a little girl of the family entertains a ambiguous relation with the maid. In one scene, she kisses her on the lips and later asks if she can touch her breast (both times without any negative reaction from the adult).
Anna Karenina (Movie)
Anna Lucasta (Movie)
Annette (Movie)
Six women come forward with allegations of sexual violence towards one of the main characters. There are no details given and the women are treated with respect. Worthy of note (spoiler): this man later describes and acts out murdering his wife, and accidentally murders a woman.
The protagonist is a "cuddle bunny," a robot that looks and talks indistinguishably from humans and is designed to be ready for sex with her owner at any time. We find out that the protagonist's owner made her to look almost exactly like his ex-wife, without the ex-wife's knowledge or consent. The owner's friend visits the house for one night. The friend convinces the protagonist to have sex with him that night behind the owner's back. He tries to convince her to do so again the following morning and keeps verbally harassing her after she says no. The relationship between the protagonist and her owner gets increasingly verbally abusive throughout, and is at times physically abusive. The owner has the ability to control aspects of her body and behavior through vocal controls against her will. For example, to punish her for cheating on him, the owner sets her libido to its highest level and locks her in a closet, leaving her in extreme physical discomfort for hours until she powers down. He leaves her there for several weeks before letting her out.
A woman captures the group of women that are staying at the cabin. She forces two of the women to kiss and attempts to force them to perform further sexual acts on each other.
The main character unknowingly sleeps with his mother, resulting in the conception of a child.
Anora (Movie)
The main character is tied up and has her body pressed against the men she gets in a fight with. It is not for their pleasure but it is definitely physical assault. She even yells out "rape" in attempt to get help. Later in the movie she accuses one of them of contemplating raping her during the earlier fight. He denies what he did was assault and explains that he never intended to rape her.
Another Body (Movie)
A college student searches for justice after she discovers deepfake pornography of herself circulating online. This is discussed throughout. We are also shown the harassing comments she receives from strangers after the fact.
The author references fascist fearmongering that immigrants are rapists, Donald Trump's declaration that Mexicans are rapists, Milo Yiannopoulos's support for pedophilia, and rape culture as a concept. None of these references are graphic.
Antisocial 2 (Movie)
A woman aggressively forces her help upon a woman delivering a baby. She removes the woman's pants even though she is asking her to stop and steals the baby after it is born. Later, a man pins her down as she struggles to get out from under him but he stops before anything further happens.
A man is shown having sex with a dead deer. A man forcibly tries to remove a young girl's clothing.
A.P. Bio (TV Show)
S2E1: a cat-calling situation is briefly described (12:30).
A man slaps a female co-worker on the butt. Much of the movie's plot involves an upper level employee abusing his power to have trysts with multiple women who he employs. This is all portrayed negatively with his womanizing abuse of his power shown to have negative effects on male and female subordinates of his alike. SPOILERS: the man fires a woman whom he had an affair with after she mentions his womanizing to another woman he has an affair. After being told of his womanizing, this woman later attempts suicide upon finding out that she is seen by him as disposable and one of many women he has gone through in his life. He later threatens to fire a male co-worker whom he just promoted because he refuses to let him continue using his apartment for his sexual trysts as a result of the aforementioned suicide attempt.
A man forcefully gropes a woman's breast, but is interrupted. A man is implied to have been physically and mentally abusive to his ex-wife.
Three women entertain soldiers by dancing. The men storm on to the stage and attempt to grab the women. The women are rescued and taken away by other soldiers.
Apostle (Movie)
A male character ties up two girls and threatens them with rape, but is killed before he can go through with it.
Appare-Ranman! (TV Show)
S1E8: a man touches the belly of a woman. She kicks him away. S1E11: after kidnapping a woman, the male antagonist tells her that she is his property. S1E12: one of the antagonists says that the men have probably had their way with the kidnapped woman. This is not true and is said to annoy the protagonists.
In a flashback, a teenage boy shoves his hand down a teenage girls pants and then tells all his nearby friends that she is on her period. It is unclear whether the hands in the pants was consensual (they were fooling around prior) but the humiliation and sharing of intimate details definitely was not. It is mentioned that the main character ran away from home when she was 12 and stayed with an older man ; it is unclear whether anything sexual happened between them. A child is taken to a shady doctor and stays in a closed room with him, but it is not implied that anything ambiguous happened.
Some female friends do a magazine quiz together, and one of the answers to "how was your first time?" is "painful and degrading". Later, a man jokes that a couple is returning from having "nonviolent sex".
Apt Pupil (Movie)
At the end of the film, a teenager blackmails a teacher with a false sexual abuse accusation. There is no real abuse or relationship between the teenager and adult.
Apur Sansar (Movie)
The premise of the movie is that a man has to marry a 14 year old girl because her presumed husband is mentally ill. They eventually grow fond of each other and have a child together.
Aquaslash (Movie)
Two people are filmed having sex and the video is sent out. An adult employee of the park has sex with one of the high school students who are there celebrating graduation, with the implication that she does so every year.
Arachnoquake (Movie)
A male student takes a picture of a female student while she is bent over.
Arcane (TV Show)
S1E5: one character is in an implied brothel and is set up without her consent to pretend to be a worker in that environment. Nothing bad sexually happens to this character on or off screen. S1E8: a woman goes to a place ressembling a brothel, where a man presumably gives her sexual services (off-screen). At some point, she gets out of a pool naked to confront a man, who expresses some discomfort. S1E9: a man suddenly (but non sexually) licks another man's head, causing him great discomfort. Season 2 features several characters who do not tell people their true identities or motives before having sex with them. S2E1: a stranger attempts to french-kiss a woman. She punches him in self-defense.
Archive 81 (TV Show)
A protagonist non-consensually films two other characters having sex (nothing explicit shown). The video is later viewed by another protagonist in the future. Because the protagonist filming went on a date previously with one of the people having sex, her best friend confronts him and accuses him of cheating on her. The scene frames her as sympathetic, and the man apologizes. Both people in the video later turn out to be evil, and the protagonist who filmed them is not called out on doing so. Surveillance is a major plot point, and there are several other non-sexual instances of filming without consent that could be upsetting.
There are references throughout the book of women knowing that they are in unsafe situations because of men, and there are discussions of times when they were harassed in the present or past. All discussions are non-graphic. A female servant discusses how men in the household would harass her and some of them slept with her.
Area 51 (Movie)
There is a brief mention of “probing” in relationship to aliens. The protagonists sneak cameras into a strip club and film the dancers nude in the private dance room without their consent and it can be assumed that they are going to share the videos too.
The Ark (TV Show)
S1E3 mentions a biker "not taking no for an answer". S1E4 reveals that someone slept with someone just to recruit him. S1E9 contains attempted coercion and someone misleading someone to kiss them. S1E11 contains threats of sexual violence and a woman coercing a man to be with her. Season 2 tells the story of someone who is a victim of domestic abuse. S2E9: a character under control of naniyes kisses another character non consensually.
Sexual assault and rape is mentioned a few times.
A character is restrained, and it is stated that he is a serial rapist to the women he guards in quarantine. A man harasses a woman, asking if she wants his 'rectal thermometer'. He is later sacrified to the zombies for being a rapist.
A major theme and recurring joke is one character's crush on his cousin and cousins who do not know they are cousins flirting with one another. S2E11: a woman that the protagonist believed was blind when they slept together tells him she is pregnant. When he asks her why they did not use protection, she says “You thought I was blind, remember?” implying that he stealthed her / only pretended to use protection. It turns out she was faking the pregnancy so it is possible she was lying about this. S3E1: while in jail, one male character implies to a man that he has been sexually assaulted every night by inmates. S3E2: one character says that in prison, you just have to "shut up and take it" (referring to sex) but with a wife, you just have to "shut up and give it". S3E3: one character says that he is a mix between an analyst and a therapist: an "analrapist". This shocks several people when they see his business card. S3E3: one character renames a film titled "The Sexual Assault of Abigail F." as "Losing it". It is played for laughs. In season 4, the community becomes inhabited entirely by sex offenders. Also in season 4, a woman has sex with a teenage boy, thinking he's an adult, while pretending to be a teenager herself in an attempt to frame him for statutory rape.
Arrow (TV Show)
A lesbian character is forced to marry a man despite violent protests, though she and the main character joke about the marriage in later seasons.
A woman is taken by force in a cellar by a killer, but finally escapes. After that, she seems very distressed, but her husband does not take her seriously. Later, when she discovers bodies buried in that cellar, she tries to warn the police: her husband shuts her up by forcefully kissing her. Both scenes are played for laughs.
The adult/child relationship concerns a 14 year old with a 18 year old.
A woman mentions that she has been attacked by a man when she was undressing after her karate lesson and that she killed him. She explains that her misogynist master told her that it was her fault. At some point, all the karate students undress to stretch. The new recruit (main character) is led to a small room apart and told that he has to do something special to be part of the group. The master then opens the door and the only woman of the dojo is standing there waiting. They only stretch together but the undertone is quite heavy. More generally, the film sets an atmosphere recalling sects and it contains several shots hinting at the fact that the master exerts a sexual domination over the main character.
A man states that he would not be strong enough to prevent many prison rapes (41:10).
A "Comfortbot" or "Sexbot" is a peripheral character in this novella. They indicate to the main character that they do not like or want to serve their owner. Only through the robot's designation as a Comfortbot can one infer that nonconsentual sexual activity may have occurred.
The author references instances of rape and sexual harassment that went unaddressed at Uber, as well as rape during slavery in the United States. These mentions are in passing and do not go into detail.
The relationship in the film is between cousins (it is implied they have sex).
One of the main characters is the target of a harassment campaign where people make sexualizing, derogatory comments to and about her. She speaks about how upset she is by this treatment and how the protagonist has not challenged his friend for that friend's participation in harassing her.
The Ascent (Movie)
A Nazi soldier hits a woman's bottom. It is implied that a child was abused during an interogation.
Ash Vs Evil Dead (TV Show)
Throughout the show the main character makes unwanted sexual advances towards several woman. The main character refers to a underaged teen girl as "jailbait".
In the first half of the movie, the protagonist persistantly hits on a female bartender despite her apparent disinterest. She later falls in love with him.
A female love interest gropes a male protagonist's genitals whilst they are hiding, and whilst he clearly is upset by the occurrence at the time, it is never discussed again.
Assassin's Creed (Video Game)
Worthy of note: after the third assassination mission, a female character can be approached in the present day. If spoken to twice, she explains that in the past, three men broke into her apartment with guns. It is unclear what happened, but she does say that they planned to kill her.
Assholes (Movie)
The Assistant (Movie)
It is implied that sexual favors requested by an authoritative figure to young women are happening, although never seen on screen.
A small sub-plot in the film involves a tribal tradition of women being forced to "mate" with whoever wins in combat. The main female character is fleeing her village to avoid a man who is certain of winning the fight for her. At one point, another man who wishes to "win" her, tries to grab her, but is restrained.
A boy walks in on his older brother having sex with his girlfriend, and the older brother smiles at him and keeps going until the girl screams and jumps up. Worthy of note: before intercourse, a woman starts kissing down on a man's chest and he keeps telling her to stop and wait but she keeps going. She does ultimately stop before getting below his stomach because he told her to, but it was not a quick halt.
The main character, while walking his best friends fiancé home, pushes her against the wall and kisses her against her will (12:13): she bites his lip and he releases her.
Atlantic City (Movie)
The main male character first encounters the main female character by spying on her while naked when she appears naked through her window.
This book contains passing mentions of men liking to check out women other than their partners. It is not explicitly stated whether the women the men are checking out are aware they are being watched. Worthy of note: in chapter 10, the authors describe a relationship that is clearly emotionally and verbally abusive but do not name it as such.
A teenage boy attempts to flirt with an adult woman, commenting on her body and asking if she has a boyfriend. She is visibly annoyed with this line of questioning, but does not appear threatened by it. Prior to this interaction, she was fearful of this boy and his friends because they surrounded and mugged her early in the movie.
Three men harass the female employee at the donut shot. There is a mention of a man arrested for masturbating outside a sorority house.
A teenage boy gives an unrequested kiss on the cheek to a female piano player while she is playing. A young boy is forced to pull down his pants in front of a Gestapo officer to prove that he is not Jewish.
The series is a pastiche of 1960s French secret service and often depicts women as objects (e.g. some scenes take place in a strip club) or as victims of misogynist behaviors. S1E8: a young agent (male) is lead to think that his mission is to have sex with a female colleague. It is in fact a trap set up by his boss, who is secretly filming the action, to drive him away of his own daughter. The man also feels forced to stay in bed with a man and is visibly distressed by the situation.
Augustine (Movie)
Ausente (Movie)
The movie is about a relationship between a swim teacher and his underage student. The student slips his hand up his teacher's shorts while he is sleeping, then the teacher begins waking up so the student removes his hand and quickly leaves (31:00).
It is mentioned in a joking tone that the villain was raised by an adult man and his "15 year old love slave".
At one point, the protagonist is subjected to a gas by robots who resemble women (Fem-bots) in order to distract him. This gas causes him to become disoriented and susceptible. The following scene shows him being caressed by the fem-bots as he attempts to mentally overcome their advances.
An autopsy is performed, revealing evidence of violent sexual trauma (as well as the potential implication of sexual assault via the autopsy itself).
Autumn Sonata (Movie)
It is mentioned that a mother's boyfriend has sex with her daughter.
Ava (2017) (Movie)
A 13-year-old girl engages in a romantic relationship with a man over 18.
Avalanche (Movie)
A man kisses his ex-wife several times and makes it clear that he wants them to get back together. Though she does not seem particularly upset when he kisses her, the situation could be uncomfortable for some.
Avatar (Movie)
In the opening scene (within the first five minutes of the movie), a woman is struck across the face by a man she is talking to in a bar. She is then bodily forced to sit on a bar stool which her assailant has positioned between his legs. The male protagonist intervenes with force.
S1E15: a young man and woman are paralyzed and the woman falls on top of the man's uncle, who asks if his uncle was also paralyzed. He jokingly command him to be quiet. S2E12: one character kisses a female character without her consent in order to stop her from talking. This is presented as romantic. S3E10+17: there are two separate scenes of the main character kissing a woman without her consent. In the second, she is visibly angry/upset and leaves soon after. The show does not make a joke of it, but it is never fully addressed as a problem.
Near the end of the movie, an adult character calls a child character "buttercup": she calls him a "perve" in response. About halfway through the film, a brief scene shows people boarding submarines: a man (captain) slaps a woman's behind (she is a subordinate naval officer) during this process. This is not acknowledged or addressed.
A male character makes a comment saying that if he completes a certain feat, he will re-institute prima nocta, a tradition where members of aristocracy are permitted to rape women on their wedding night.
Towards the end of the movie, a man sexually harasses and climbs on top of a woman after shoving her down. The scene lasts about two minutes.
Avenue 5 (TV Show)
S2E3: this episode features a pedophile. It is played for laughs. S2E6: rape joke. S2E7: incest joke.
The Aviator (Movie)
A man is shown to be in a relationship with a 15 year old girl. He is shown asking her intimate questions whilst trying to determine if he will take her on as an actress.
Awaara (Movie)
One character mentions that he was falsely charged with rape. A woman is treated as having been "dishonored" by people who believe she was raped when she was not.
There are non-consensual acts constantly, emotionally, physically, and sexually.
Away We Go (Movie)
The opening sequence shows a man giving oral sex to his partner: she firstly asks him not to, but then agrees to it. The protagonists (a couple) visit a female friend who repeatedly speaks inappropriately in front of (and about) her children. Another female character the protagonist encounter explains that she breastfed another woman's baby without her consent. She later explains that she and her husband have sex together despite sleeping in the same bed as their children.
S2E4: one male character goes to get acupuncture and the female professional sexually harrasses him. The whole experience is used as joke fodder.
Awkward. (TV Show)
In multiple scenes throughout the series, jokes about pedophilia and relationships with younger women are shown.
A woman tells a story about how she was giving a statement to the police and one officer harassed her so she punched him.
A coworker propositions the protagonist.
Throughout the film, men are constantly verbally, and sometimes physically, harassing women.
Ayatsuri Sakon (TV Show)
S1E2: a college student comments how she wants the male protagonist to be her boyfriend. His age is unknown but he is referred to as 'kid' throughout the series. S1E4: an older man puts his arms around a 19 year old girl and asks her wether she is gonna go into the entertainment industry. He then winks at her while looking at chest. S1E5: the older man is seen in the room of the 19 year old girl. They are about to kiss when a sound stops them. They seem to have a romantic/sexual relationship. S1E7: a man makes a comment about comforting a girl in his bed. S1E10: two women flirt with the male protagonist. They touch his face and compliment him. He is very flustered.
Ayesha is hit on by a "veil chaser" (someone who fetishizes Muslim women) and reflects on other instances where this has happened to her in the past. Two female characters mention being married at the age of 17, including a character who was forced to get married by her parents. There are mentions of characters getting married to second cousins or more distant relations. Characters frequently discuss their feelings on the differences between arranged marriages and forced marriages. Several male characters comment on having lost their virginity at ages 16, 12, and even 9. We don't hear how old their partners were.
Aztec Rex (Movie)
A woman is told that she has to marry a man she does not love, so she runs away from the village. He runs after her and pins her down when he catches her, but does not attempt anything further. There is also a mention of conquistadors raping women.
Azumanga Daioh (TV Show)
There is a running joke throughout the show where a male teacher hits on underage protagonists.
B: the Beginning (TV Show)
Relevant scene occurs in episode 1.
Baba Yaga (Movie)
A woman is coerced into being chained up and whipped by another woman.
Baburu (Movie)
A teenage boy makes romantic advances on an adult woman despite her repeatedly telling him no. When the woman is kidnapped, the teenager states "They better not be doing anything pervy to her." Worthy of note: the main (nonsexual) romance occurs between a teenage boy and a girl made of bubbles. The girl's age is unspecified but in the beginning, she acts very childlike. She kisses the unconscious, drowning main character to give him air.
The titular character, a physically an adult man perceived as a baby, attempts to breastfeed on a babysitter. The babysitter resists at first, but then appears to be aroused. One of the protagonist's sisters comes into his room when he is sleeping and enters his crib naked. There is a cutaway. A man is pushy to a woman at a party. Someone drink is swapped/spiked for non-sexual reasons.
Two yakuza make plans to kidnap and sell a group of young women working at a maid cafe. It is implied that these women would be sold into sex slavery.
Babylon 5 (TV Show)
The show includes slavery and sexual harassment. S2E8 discusses rape and forced impregnation. S2E9 features men threatening to sexually assaulted a woman, and touching her without consent. S3E6: telepathic rape is mentioned.
In one scene, some teenagers are playing spin the bottle and one girl is dared to kiss everybody present. She has no problem doing so, but one boy in the group is visibly uncomfortable with the prospect of being involved. Although she comforts him and he seems placated, this may be uncomfortable for some.
Babyteeth (Movie)
A relationship between a 16-year old and a 23-year old takes place as a part of the 16-year old last wish, being permitted by the parents. At some point, they are shown having sex.
Baccano! (TV Show)
Different women are verbally harassed by men throughout the show. This includes one child, and workers at a club who are told to get undressed (it is not shown and no one complies).
Bachelorette (Movie)
One man tells another man that an obviously intoxicated woman is "good to go" and ready to "slip it in".
Back to 1942 (Movie)
Worthy of note: in an alternate timeline, the antagonist uses his financial and political power to force a woman into marrying him, as well as killing her husband and forcing her to get breast enlargement surgery. While no clear sexual advances are made, the same antagonist is shown to sexually harass the woman when they were teenagers in the first movie; it is implied he may have further sexually harassed/assaulted her in this alternate timeline.
Back to Life (TV Show)
S1E1+2: it is revealed that a police officer was having sex with a 17 year old. The police officer then tries to gaslight the victim and is threatening. He is also abusive to his wife. It is mentioned that he made the wife take valium.
The villain of the story intends to marry a 14-year-old girl to obtain her family's fortune. In discussing this, he makes some sexually charged remarks. One of his henchmen does the same.
The premise of this book is that a high-powered partner of an advertising firm and one of his employees begin a sexual relationship. The power dynamics between the two of them come up a lot, not only in the disparity between their positions but also because he is older than she is. The female romantic lead gets sexually harassed by a fellow employee repeatedly. This employee is eventually fired. There is a stalking/kidnapping subplot, but there is no sexual assault or rape involved in that.
Bad Candy (Movie)
A woman in the morgue lifts the sheet to look at the naked body of a dead man. She climbs on top of his body, kissing and touching him, and pretends to have sex with him. A man breaks into a woman's house to rob her, when she gets home he pins her down and threatens her but she is able to get away
There is mention of the oil industry's exacerbation of the issue of missing and murdered indigenous women, girls, and two spirits. There is also mention of family members surviving Indian boarding schools, which were notorious for child sexual abuse, though this specific type of abuse is not highlighted in the narrative.
Bad Grandpa (Movie)
Bad Samaritan (Movie)
A nude picture of a woman gets shared online against her will. Women are physically, but not sexually, assaulted on screen throughout the film.
Bad Santa 2 (Movie)
It is implied that one of the men playing Santa is a pedophile. There is also discussion of date-rape.
Bad Sisters (TV Show)
S1E3: one of the sisters is tricked into sending a nude pic to the antagonist. S1E8: one man grabs another man's groin in the men's bathroom to intimidate him. S1E11: it is revealed that one of the sisters was raped 10 years prior by a main character.
Bad Witch (Movie)
One of the two main male characters does magic on a girl to get her to like him but when he realizes that she has come over to have sex with him, he immediately realizes he did it wrong, sends her away, and undoes the spell. He later tells her about the whole thing and she asks him if he put a "rape spell" on her. After the two main characters kill a man, one says that he "was probably going to be a murderer or a rapist or something" to justify it: there is no evidence of it.
Bad Words (Movie)
The main character jokes to another (underaged) character that he will be raped if he speaks a certain way.
Badhaai Do (Movie)
Near the beginning of the film, a minor male character catfishes the female lead on a dating app, posing as a woman, and threatens to out her as a lesbian unless she has sex with him. She refuses and eventually gets the police involved after which he no longer bothers her. Spoiler: gay man and a lesbian (in a lavender marriage) eventually consider having sex with each other (something that repulses both of them) due to the pressure from their families to conceive a baby, however they do not end up going through with it.
The series follows excessively-tested high schoolers and features different kinds of harassment. One character is a stalker-voyeur who constantly tries to see sexualized parts of the body and often takes pictures. He regularly invades privacy to collect creep-shots of womens, which he sells to shy, unattractive, and single guys. At some point, he indexes every girl in the school in a database based on breast size. One woman and one man are obsessed with the two main characters and harass them. An effeminate male is often heavily sexualized and fetishized by other students, and forced into crossdressing. A female character is sexually and romantically interested in her younger brother, whom she often attempts to kiss. Another female character frequently abuses a man. A gay character often does creepy things that comes off as stalkerish.
A woman is in an abusive relationship where her boyfriend will beat her up and then they will make up later by having aggressive sex.
Baldur's Gate III (Video Game)
One of the romance options in the game discusses being sexually abused for 200 years. One of the main companions in the game reveals through his romance storyline with the protagonist that he was sexually assaulted and forced to have intercourse with strangers. Later on he talks about the feelings of violation and disgust that came from that experience. One of the main villains keeps a young woman prisoner in his home, and it is implied that he has sexually assaulted her in the past. When asked if she has been in his bedchamber before, she replies “Never by choice.”
Ball of Fire (Movie)
Balto (Movie)
While there is not any explicit sexuality, the antagonist tries on multiple occasions to get physically affectionate with the female lead, despite her making it clear she is not interested and is already taken to the protagonist. He later tries to manipulate her into getting into a relationship with him, falsely claiming that the protagonist died in an accident and made him promise to take care of her. However, she immediately calls his bluff and refuses to get involved with him.
Bamboozled (Movie)
This film uses deliberately racist caricatures and footage from racist films and cartoons. This includes sections of the film 'Birth of a Nation', with a significant clip being used of a man in black face attempting to sexually assault a white woman.
Bande a Part (Movie)
Towards the end of the movie, a woman is slapped, grabbed and tied and against her will.
A woman is sold by her father to a husband against her will.
Bank Robber (Movie)
At different points, it is implied and discussed that a local policeman molests his son: none of the abuse is depicted. The son (an adult) makes inappropriate comments to a woman on two occasions, but he does not appear threatening.
Barbie (Movie)
The protagonist is spanked by a stranger and breaks the man’s nose. When entering the real world, she gets catcalled, ogled and objectified by several male characters (including police officers): this scene contains the majority of the sexualized content. Objectification and sexualization of women as well as gender inequality is a big topic in the film. Though it is comedic, the subject is handled in a relatively sensitive way. Worthy of note: at some point, the protagonist is about to be zip tied into a life size doll box, with a bunch of men watching like hawks. She escapes at the last second but their motivations are unclear.
While he has a woman tied up, a man caresses her face and implies that he i's going to assault her.
Barry (TV Show)
S1E4: an agent propositions an actor who turns him down, and the agent then claims he was only joking. His intent was clearly to intimidate the actor. S2E4: a woman is manipulated into visiting an abusive ex alone in his hotel room. The man's demeanor becomes incresingly threatening as he tries to intimidate the woman into acting in his interests. S4E3: a female student is sexually harassed by her female acting teacher.
Barry Lyndon (Movie)
The title character starts off in a romantic relationship with his cousin.
S1E9: it is mentioned how a woman was sold off to a debt collector at the age of 19. A bartender tells the male protagonist that he made his friend drunk so he could take her to bed. He says it to upset the male protagonist as they were having a disagreement.
Basic Bitch (TV Show)
S3E4: implied sexual assault.
Basquiat (Movie)
The film features two sequences during which men are very pushy towards women. In the first one, a character even "steals a kiss" from one of them.
S1E1: a witch takes over the body of a 16 year old's grandma and then climbs on top of him and kisses him. S1E2: a witch transforms into another girl and shows everyone her body, so people will know what the other girl's body looks like. She then turns into her boyfriend and shames the size of his penis. Then she turns into her dad and talks about having sex with the girl. A girl's ex-boyfriend tries to put his hand up her skirt.
Bastarden (Movie)
The main antagonist has a history of sexually assaulting his servants. This is discussed by one of the victims in the movie.
A man stumbles on two people who are having sex in the cornfield and masturbates while watching them. A man makes comment about being afraid of being raped by the person they think is the killer. After chasing a woman, a man pins her down a kisses her.
The Bathhouse (Video Game)
A man touches another man's butt in the baths. A man covered in yakuza tattoos threatens our character and tells her that he could easily force her on his laps. [SPOILER] A pregnant woman was held captive in the basement by a man.
The Batman (Movie)
Many scenes are set in a club where young women work and are objectified, with it being somewhat unclear whether they are paid to have sex with clients or simply to flirt with them. There are frequent scenes of men menacing or hurting women in a very sexually-charged environment, including one scene where a man holds a woman down in a way that is meant to be reminiscent of a sexual position. Domestic violence and client-on-sex-worker violence clearly occur with some frequency, and some of the women are shown to have bruises and black eyes at work. At least one woman seems to be the victim of explicit human trafficking tactics, with powerful men who employ her stealing her passport and hiding it. She is heard being interrogeated and strangled. A man observes a woman dressing and undressing without her knowledge, but not for any sexual reasons on his part. On two occasions a woman kisses a man without his explicit consent, including on one occasion where the man is delirious. These scenes are framed as romantic. The main villain uses duct tape with his victims to cover their mouths and place them into torture contraptions.
S1E27: the whole episode revolves around the antagonist (a mad scientist) fantasizing about controlling his young female colleague, whom he secretly loves as part of his fantasies about Alice in Wonderland. Firstly, he "mind controls" other people with an electronic device to set her up during a date after she broke up with her boyfriend. After she reconciled with her boyfriend, he "mind controls" her, making her a kind of zombie and kidnapping her. He is eventually defeated by the titular character. S1E42: a woman is drugged (with a tranquilizer gun) and kidnapped by a mad scientist who holds her captive and restrained in order to turn her into a cat. On the villain's island, a half-man/half-cat creature threatingly hints that he wants the woman (turned into an humanoid cat) as his mate. He eventually understands and accepts her refusal and lets her leave the island. S1E45: the episode opens with the antagonist sneaking into a dojo where a woman is practising martial arts alone at night. He beats her and kidnaps her, in order to attract the titular character into a trap. [Under further review] Worthy of note: The character Harley Quinn is in an abusive relationship with the Joker, whom she is madly in love with even though he does not reciprocate at all.
Batman Begins (Movie)
A police officers states that a group of escaped prisoners include "serial killers and rapists" (01:48:18).
Non spoiler version: character A has sex offscreen with character B who, it is later revealed, was character C in disguise and was specifically seeking to blackmail character A. There is, unrelatedly, a political betrothal in which one party is extremely reluctant. Both of these occurrences are discussed toward the end of the book, with major plot implications. Spoiler version: in the first incident listed, character C has been spiritually possessing character B and deliberately conceived a child with character A. C then revealed themselves and coerced character A into acting on their behalf in order to protect character B and their unborn child. (The political betrothal is unrelated. The reluctant party is Dresden himself, the male perspective character. His relationship with his fiancee is very complicated and the timing is very bad.)
Baywatch (TV) (TV Show)
S1E8: a man repeatedly pressures a woman for sex. After picking her up and knocking over a lamp and her computer, she acquiesces and he says "did you really think I'd take no for an answer?" The implication is she has no choice. The man is controlling throughout the episode and hits the woman in the face later, giving her a black eye. It is revealed that he beats her again and potentially raped her. She tried to send things and he tells her "you can't stop it. It's not over." The domestic violence situation is realistic and disturbing.
Be Afraid (Movie)
The Beach Bum (Movie)
The main-character Moondog gives oral to his wife while her domestic worker is present. Moondog talks to his friend about the time the friend walked in on Moondog's daughter "accidentally" while she was changing and stayed watching. Moondog grabs his daughter's groom's crotch in front of everyone during the wedding (non-consensual touching). All of the instances are short and played for laughs.
The protagonist mentions in passing that she was sexually harassed constantly at her job when she worked at a car wash as a teenager.
The Bear (TV Show)
S1E5: while a repairman is bent over working on a toilet, an employee dry humps him from behind, continuing to do so even after the repairman tells him to stop. This functions as a portrayal of workplace sexual harassment in line with the characters' established personality traits.
Beastars (TV Show)
S1E2-3: a female character misinterprets a male character’s awkwardness as a desire for sex; she strips and begins stripping him, too, oblivious to his shock and fear. He panics and leaves, and nothing further happens. S1E8: a female character jumps and pins down a male character in a very suggestive way, but it is then revealed that her intent is not sexual. S1E9: a group of adult men kidnap a teenage girl. One of the men pins the girl down in a suggestive way and lifts up her skirt, but is stopped before he can do anything more. A different adult man later forces the same girl to strip naked and bathe in front of him; this is because he plans to eat her, but it is evocative of a sexual assault. S1E10: as her attacker prepares to eat said teenage girl, he grabs and pins her down in ways that resemble a rape scene. This is not what is occurring, but the visual similarities may be disturbing for some. S2E3: A group of teenage boys corner their classmate and ask him invasive questions about his sex life, including questions that violate another person's privacy. They then shame him for his lack of sexual experience. S2E4: an exotic dancer is attacked on stage by a patron who intends to kill and eat her. He is stopped before he can succeed, and the dancer is saved. S2E8: a man volunteers to have an organ harvested in exchange for money, but his money-lenders cut off his penis instead. Nothing is shown on-screen, but his screaming can be heard. S3E4: a female wolf is found drugged in her underwear. A man is planning on removing her skin and teeth.
Beastmaster (Movie)
The main character gropes a nude woman coming out of a lake and then tries to have sex with her by talking her into it with strong suggestions of rape. The woman though playfully shrugs it off.
The main character recalls a dare from childhood: kids in his neighborhood used to dare each other to knock on the door of a house of a known pedophile and then run away. He explains that he did mot really know what it meant to be a pedophile, and that in reality, no one lived in the house, but that he was scared. Nothing else is mentioned or described.
During the second sequence of the film, two teenage girls threaten to falsely accuse a vulnerable adult man of having sexually abused them in order to force him to smoke drugs. Near the end of the film, during a consensual sexual encounter, the main character starts frantically asking the other person to stop out of fear that he will die if he orgasms. She does not listen and keeps going. He is happy and relieved when the expected death does not come to pass.
The cousin of the protagonist has three scenes where she has sexual encounters with teenagers. In the first one, she hits on the male protagonist ; in the second one, she seduces his friend and makes out with him outside the cinema (01:07:18-01:07:50). The last one is a sex scene between her and the male protagonist friend (01:40:40-01:40:50).
In the beginning of the movie, a man asks (as he already did before) a woman to marry him. She refused and is visibly not interested. He insists and tries to kiss her, and is only stopped by her brother. The woman is later held captive and stalked by a beast in a castle: she grows fond of him and finally falls in love with him. At the end of the movie, the beast turned into a prince with the face of the man who tried to kiss her in the opening of the movie. She confesses that she loved him.
A male character is very persistent in his advances towards a woman. After the woman who he is targeting politely rejects him, he continues to invade her space and touch her. At one point, he corners her against a door and it is implied that he is going to kiss her, but the scene is disrupted before this can transpire.
Worthy of note: the antagonist follows the heroine home even when she attempts to politely turn him down and frequently invades her personal space, even grabbing at her skirt at one point. His behaviour throughout the movie toes the line of being considered stalking, especially when it becomes clear that she loves someone else.
A beast keeps a woman imprisoned in his home with the intention of convincing her to marry him. She refuses daily for three years. This is not acknowledged as sexual harassment in the story.
In one scene near the end of the movie, the female protagonist (the Devil) transforms into a cop and makes the male protagonist "spread 'em". She then proceeds to caress his face and says "I've always liked you".
During the first part of the movie, an ex-husband acts threateningly towards his (soon-to-be) ex-wife: he comes to his son's birthday unannounced (and uninvited), he enters her house while she is away and waits for her, etc., and becomes increasingly violent towards her current boyfriend.
Bee Movie (Movie)
There are a few jokes throughout the movie about relationships between bees being incestuous, as it is offhandedly mentioned that all bees are cousins. At the start of the movie, the tritagonist expresses attraction to a girl not knowing she is his cousin, and the protagonist also flirts with his cousins (when the tritagonist comments on this, the protagonist brushes him off by saying they are distant cousins). During a court scene, a lawyer makes snide comments to the protagonist, asking him if he is "[the deuteragonist's] little bed bug"; the joke may go over some children's heads, but the implication is that the lawyer is asking about the protagonist's sex life as a leverage against him.
Beef (TV Show)
Numerous prison rape jokes are made. S1E2: it is implied that a male character intends to sleep with two drunk girls, however, he is prevented. Multiple times a man is depicted attempting to masturbate/masturbating to a woman's photo without her knowledge or consent. S1E3: a male character kisses a female character without warning. S1E5: a female character tells a male character that "absolutely nothing physical can happen" between them, and then cuts to the two of them having sex, although it is shown to be consensual. S1E8: a female character is shown hooking up with an older man in a motel that she met on Yahoo; she remains hidden under a blanket so all he can see is her privates.
Beetlejuice (Movie)
The title character forcefully kisses one woman and repeatedly touches her. He also lifts her skirt It is implied that the title character consumes prostitution in between scenes, and the establishment and women are shown The title character lays on the ground to look under another character's skirt Worthy of note: an adult man attempts to force a teenage girl to marry him. The marriage is stopped and the girl is saved.
The titular character is obsessed with a woman (in her fifties) since she was 15 (they have a 600 year age gap): he constantly harasses her. He forcefully impregnates her in a magic vision and the baby is born immediately in a way that would kill her in a non magic world. One character marries and then has sex with a man just so she can kill him. She then stalks him in the afterlife.
At some point, a man tells his brother that he risks being imprisoned for life and getting raped in jail.
The possibility of being raped is mentioned in passing during an argument.
In the beginning of the movie, the 14 year-old protagonist goes to a brothel. He is shown receiving oral sex from an adult woman. The protagonist enters the car of a man who has proposed to drive him. Quickly, the driver puts his hand on his thigh: he rebuffs him and leaves the vehicle. However, the protagonist later returns to that man, who abruptly jumps on him again. This time, the protagonist consents and they engage in a relationship. At some point, the protagonist gets robbed on the beach by children. When he goes to the police, the children accuse him of trying to molest them (because he is gay). This false accusation is reffered to several times after that, and it leads the protagonist to prison, where he mentions being surrounded by real rapists.
Romantic relationship between an aunt an her nephew (both adults).
This book takes place during the Rafael Trujillo dictatorship in the Dominican Republic. In this book, Trujillo is described as having a penchant for "courting" and then raping young women. Adults warn the protagonist, her sister, and other young girls not to be too pretty in public. Still, the protagonist's older sister receives a bouquet of flowers from Trujillo, which prompts her family to organize to help her flee the country. There is a scene towards the end of the book where a shopkeeper frisks the protagonist to see if she stole anything and touches her breasts in the process.
Beforeigners (TV Show)
S1E1: the lead character tracks down the man who raped her as a girl in the distant past. He ends up acknowledging, in a very creepy way, that it happened, and she beats the crap out of him.
The main character is a survivor of domestic violence and often has vivid hallucinations of her abuser in which he sexually harasses, threatens, and grabs her.
Chapter 1: a high school girl is pregnant with a college boy. Chapter 2: a story is uncovered where a woman was raped by her Uncle then killed by her family. The assault is not discussed in detail. Chapter 7: this chapter mentions of a man posting sexual pictures of women online without their consent. Chapter 9: this chapter mentions of past instances of women and teenage girls being raped. The assaults are not discussed in detail.
A character reveals that she was conceived when a stranger raped her mother. The courts would not allow the mother to get an abortion, and the mother resents and abuses this character for looking like her rapist.
Being Human (TV Show)
S2E3: this episode contains statistic about how often there is a sexual assault. There is also unwanted sexual contact.
The first scene entails a piano accompanist forcing a kiss on an opera singer. We later find out that the accompanist declared his love to her in a rather obnoxious way multiple times, but the opera singer just tried to ignore him.
A male character verbally harasses a female character.
While recording, a man makes a joke to a few women about them being on a porn website later and films them from behind as they walk away, The man hides in his sister's closet while filming to scare her. He also films his mom while she is in a towel. Several people are uncomfortable/annoyed with his constant filming over the course of the movie.
There are mentions in the book about how the main character can use his powers over Lust to make people want to have sex with him/other people. There is a point in the book when he uses his power as a distraction but it is non-graphic.
The Bellboy (Movie)
Immediatley after a group of women enters a hotel, all the bellboys rushed to grope them. They are stopped by their boss. This is mentioned later on, when the chief of the employees complains for not having a woman to grope himself. Both scenes are played for laughs.
Belle (2013) (Movie)
A man grabs a woman's chin and mouth, then below frame, grabs her crotch area as she grimaces tearfully and gasps and then frees herself and walks away.
Mentions in the book of human trafficking and women being auctioned off as brides. Man talks about how his sister was gang raped and killed; there are brief descriptions of her injuries but not of the assault itself. Man swaps his wife's birth control pills for placebos.
Belly (Movie)
A drunk man tries to grope a woman before she stops him. Later, a husband watches his wife cheating on him through a keyhole. A man makes an ambiguous joke about having an incestuous relationship with his sister.
The first few interactions between the women are forceful, with the instigator pushing for kissing and touching when the other woman keeps saying no.
Below Zero (Movie)
Child sexual assault (the rape of a 13 year old girl by men) is heavily described (01:30:00-01:31-20).
Ben is Back (Movie)
About halfway through the movie, the protagonist (who is a drug addict) says to his mother that he 'had an arrangement' with his former history teacher, implying that he received drugs in exchange of sexual favours (when he was a teenager).
One man gropes one of his female slaves. Worthy of note: arranged marriage and polygamy are mentioned.
An adult takes advantage of a teenager's crush on him. He also takes her to a personal one-on-one outing and then later grabs her so hard that she fears he will rip off her shoulder. This is viewed as acceptable behavior because he is paying attention to her. It is never viewed outside of the lens of being romanticized.
A man is forced to aggressively kiss a woman by telepathic people who take control of him.
The main character is held captive by the antagonist following a date. Naked photographs of her are taken without her consent. She has sex with him while being held captive. He stares sexually at one of his underage students while they practice gymnastics.
A man sits on a woman's lap while hitting on her. She grabs his penis and squeezes to get him to leave her alone. Later (after a plane crash), he insinuates that he wants to have sex with her but she and another man fight him and they both leave.
Bet (TV Show)
S1E3+4: sexual harassment. S1E9: non-consensual kiss. S1E10: a man hits on a high school student.
The Beta Test (Movie)
A man is groped at a party.
A Better Man (Movie)
The protagonist is sexually harassed and hate-crimed while she is nude. No body parts are seen. A teenage boy has sex with an adult woman who he ends up dating.
A young boy hits on his teenage babysitter even going as far as trying to make out with her during a movie despite the fact the babysitter is clearly uncomfortable. Later on, during a game of truth or dare the boy is dared to touch the babysitter's breast without her consent. A different boy complains that the boy will not let him have any fun with her. The boy also asks the babysitter if she is still a virgin. Later on, the boy tells the babysitter and her boyfriend that he wants to see them fuck.
Betty (TV Show)
In the middle of the film, the main male character says to a female character "you've been raping since age 14", mistaking this word for the word "rapping". It is played for laughs.
An antagonist character threatens to rape the protagonist's wife.
Beulokeo (Movie)
During a conversation, a client asks child traffickers if the child's father is a rapist. It is asked once if a woman was raped. [SPOILER] We learn that one of the main characters was a prostitute and that one of her clients insisted for her to do things she did not consent to before she killed him. What clearly happened, if the character was raped or not, is never mentioned.
S3E12: a man sits by a woman and repeatedly verbally harassed her, including you hing her hair and leaning towards her in a menacing way. The interaction lasts roughly 20 seconds and is interrupted by another woman.
A man grabs a woman as she tries to walk away.
Beyond Paradise (TV Show)
S1E5: a teenage girl is pulled off-screen by a man in an attempted sexual assault: a button is torn from her clothing but she gets away.
A man on the crew comments to a woman that she could be raped by the pirates that are attacking the ship.
Big Daddy (Movie)
After a man passes out, another man pats his crotch area as a mode of trying to wake him up.
S1E4 allude to priests molesting children.
Big Eyes (Movie)
This film features an abusive relationship where one of the characters exploits the other's work: death threats and on-screen abuse are seen throughout most of the middle of the film.
In a dream, a man looks up women's skirts.
A 16 year old boy loses his virginity to a woman who is at least 20. The boy always seems flustered and confused during the experience but it is never called out as being statutory rape.
Worthy of note: the plot centres around attempts to rescue a woman who is kidnapped and forced into sexual slavery.
BigBug (Movie)
Worthy of note: A man pretends to like the things a woman likes in order to sleep with her through the entire movie and then gets mad at her and goes on a tirade when she finds out he was lying and as a result, will not have sex with him.
This documentary centres around the founder of Bikram Hot Yoga programmes, specifically his sexual exploitation and rape of women who attended his teacher training programme. The series contains no on-screen assault but some vivid descriptions of the relevant events by survivors, as well as details surrounding the subsequent court cases. The documentary also frequently shows videos from yoga classes led by the perpetrator himself, which some viewers might find uncomfortable.
The film contains many “see down the shirt” jokes and shots (mainly in the first 10 minutes). A joke throughout this movie and the sequel is that one of the protagonist's 'mom' is only 4 years older than him. He is a senior in high school when she marries his father. So she is maybe 21/22 and married to his father.
Billions (TV Show)
A lot of sexual harassment at work takes place. S5E1: sexual harassment at work is featured: S5E11: it is revealed that someone is dating a woman just because he wants to get back at her dad. Her dad calls him a 'walking special victims unit'.
Billy Madison (Movie)
A kid dares the titular character to go up and touch their teacher's breast. He replies with "that's assault brother!... you double dog dare me?". He proceeds to go up and fake bump into the teacher (who is the same age as him) so he can touch her breast. She doe so't seem very mad and later makes fun of him by saying he should sit down because she double dog dares him.
Binsenjo (TV Show)
S1E1: a woman defends herself in court, saying that she and other maids employed before her were sexually harassed by her boss.
Bir Baskadir (TV Show)
S1E7: a woman discusses her past and it is implied she was raped as a child. S1E8: a woman discusses her rape.
The movie is about a serial killer of women, who stalks them before killing them. One murder scene shows the killer ripping the underwears of a woman before killing her. A painting representing a man killing, and presumably sexually assaulting a young girl is shown throughout the film. In the final sequence of the movie, it is revealed that the killer (a woman) was assaulted as a child. The male protagonist is visibly uncomfortable when speaking to a presumably homosexual man, voluntarily getting too close to him.
The Birdcage (Movie)
Part of the plot involves a politician dying whilst having sex with an underage sex worker.
Birdeater (Movie)
Worthy of note: The film centres on a relationship where the woman has to take sleeping pills in order to cope with separation anxiety and guilt. The question is posed by other people in the movie whether the man is assaulting her in her sleep. This is never confirmed by the movie.
A rumour goes around that a brother and sister were having sex with each other.
Birdy (Movie)
Early in the film, two high school students (male and female) are kissing when the boy starts fondling the girl's breast: she quickly asks him to stop but he briefly continues before they are interrupted by another character.
Birth (Movie)
The film revolves around a 10 year old boy harassing an adult woman, trying to convince her that he is the reincarnation of her dead husband. There is no sexual relationship between the two but the film includes a scene where they take a bath together.
The premise of this comic series is that women who are not able or willing to comply with the extreme social pressures put on their gender get imprisoned on a separate planet. The world that the characters live in is deeply misogynist. When characters are in a group shower, a guard watches them through a hole in the wall.
The premise of this comic series is that women who are not able or willing to comply with the extreme social pressures put on their gender get imprisoned on a separate planet. The world that the characters live in is deeply misogynist. Sexual harassment on the job is a key plot point in the stories “Without and Within” and “The Invisible Woman.”
During the first act, the main female character mentions the sexual abuses she suffered from her previous husband.
The film contains several scenes suggestive of rape that turn out to refer to something else. For example, the male characters say things like "it's so much sweeter when you struggle," and there are tense scenes where a teen girl walks alone at night, is stalked, and ends up on a bed with a much older guy.
Black Bag (Movie)
A character admits he framed his child’s teacher as a pedophile to get them fired.
Black Books (TV Show)
S1E6: an adult male, who has run away from home, is picked up by a photographer and persuaded into performing increasingly provocative acts which it is clear he is uncomfortable with. A relevant scene also occurs in S2E8.
Characters make reference to a rape that occurred earlier. There is some insensitive dialog regarding the assault. An unknown caller sexually harasses women via sexually explicit phone calls.
Black Clover (TV Show)
S1E28: a man puts his hands on the shoulders of a 16 year old girl while telling her he can show her what a real man is. He is stopped by the male protagonist. S1E32: a female character locks the neck of a male character against his will while he is tied down. S1E42: an old man tires to touch a 15 year old girl's breasts against her will while saying she needs to play a game in exchange for a treasure. He does not succeed. S1E88: a man threatens a woman who is chained up with a knife, saying he can do anything he wants to her, while the camera focuses on her breasts. He is stopped. S2E74: multiple men try to sneak a peak into the female onsen. They are stopped by one of the women. S2E79: a man mentions to a young girl how she can be of use to them when they kidnap her. It is implied that he means it in a sexual way. He is stopped before he can do anything. S2E81: two men rip the shirt of a woman resulting in the exposure of her shoulders. They are stopped by another man who stands up for her. S3E110: a man makes a comments about the size of a woman’s breasts. S3E126: a man tries to convince a woman to hang out with her even though she refused multiple times. S4E158: a man rips the shirt of a woman which results in the exposure of her shoulders. He tells her she can finally be of use. It is implied he meant it in a sexual way. He is stopped by the male protagonist Worthy of note: - The 15 year old male protagonist repeatedly asks a 26 year old nun to marry him. He has been doing this since the age of 5. She does not reciprocate - A 24 year old woman makes an inappropriate joke to the 15 year old protagonist in order to embarrass him. - A 21 year old man tries to flirt with the 15 year old female protagonist. She does not reciprocate. - A 19 year old is weirdly obsessed with his little sister to the point of getting a bloody nose whenever he talks about her. He is called a siscon which means an older sibling who is extremely obsessed with their little sister. Nothing inappropriate happens and it is later revealed that he gets a bloody nose whenever he talks about someone he cares for. - A 19 year old girl develops a crush on a 15 year old after he saves her. He does not reciprocate and no relationship develops. - A 28 year old side character appears naked multiple times infront of the 15 year old protagonists. - A 26 year old man mentions how he got closer to the 15 year old male protagonist after they all bathed together. This is not meant in a sexual way. All the notes above are played for comedic purposes and do not seem to be serious.
A teen girl, her mom, and little brother are in a cafe. They begin to get harassed by adult men. One of them grabs the teen's arm and the mom stops him right away.
Black Doves (TV Show)
S1E2+E3: a woman who is being held against her will is shown laying drugged on a bed with cameras set up to record her, the possible implication being that her kidnappers intended to sexually abuse her.
Black Girl (Movie)
A woman is kissed without her permission whilst she is working. Her boss plays it down by saying that the man did it as a joke.
Mention of slave masters fathering children with their slaves. Mention of men forcing a woman to cook dinner for them and then raping her in front of her husband.
One of the women central to the mystery may have been pressured into an uncomfortable situation involving photos of her (consentually) having sex. One male side character grooms young women into letting him take compromising photos of them, and another is callously self-serving and controlling in his relationships with his girlfriends.
Early in the book, an adult man hits on the protagonist and her friends, all teenage girls. Towards the end of the book, there is passing mention of the real life gang rape of the nun Diana Mae Ortiz, shared among a list of other news events.
Huey Newton's history of sexual assaulting people is briefly discussed.
A teenage girl discusses how she had to go into sex work to pay for her drug addiction.
A young teenager socially isolates, psychologically abuses, and physically assaults another young teen. Most notably, she also carves a heart shape on his chest. Much of her harassment towards him seems to have romantic undertones, but no explicit sexual advances.
Black Roses (Movie)
A nude woman appears in a teenage boy’s room at night while he is trying to sleep. It is assumed that he is possessed or in a trance, but he willingly allows her to climb into his bed. It is implied that they have sex. Two high school girls go to their friend’s house to find she is not home but her father is. They flirt with him and play a card game. One of the girls leaves and the remaining girl plays a game involving alcohol and stripping. The girl loses and removes her top and initiates sex with the man. It is implied that they have sex. A young teenaged girl wearing lingerie approaches her step father in the living room while her mother is not home. She is possessed by a demon at this point and is doing it to catch him off guard to kill him. However, he willingly accepts and encourages her flirting and touching. A high school student attempts to seduce her male teacher by showing up at his home and showing him her breasts. He allows her to kiss him while saying “no”. She attempts to give him oral sex and then he hits her and scolds her.
Black Sabbath (Movie)
In the first story, a caller stalks a female character and threatens to touch her, but quickly states that it is to murder her, not sexually assault her. A series of sexually harassing calls are made towards a woman.
Black Swan (Movie)
In a brief scene, the main character, a ballerina, is sexually harassed by a man on the subway who makes 'kissing' sounds in her direction and mimes masturbation. The main character's director also forcibly kisses her in one scene. He later asks her inappropriate sexual questions and tells her to masturbate as part of her 'training' for her role. Worthy of note: another character later suggests performing sexual favors for the director, although it is unclear if she is joking or not. At one point the main character goes to a club with another woman, who sneaks ecstasy into the main character's drink without her consent, although the main character clearly knows the drink is drugged. Later, after she has had the drink, the main character abruptly comes to her senses while being kissed and groped by a man in the bathroom. While we do not see him forcibly assault her, she is obviously high by this point and unable to give consent. After leaving the club, the main character takes a taxi with the other woman, who puts her hand between the main character's (clothed) legs and attempts to grope her. The two later have a sex scene in which the other woman is very aggressive, pushing the main character down on the bed and performing oral sex on her without verbal consent. Although at the beginning of this scene the main character actively kisses and undresses the other woman, and does not resist the sex in any way, she is still heavily under the influence at this point. Although it is never stated that incest or child sexual abuse has occurred, the main character and her mother have an extremely unhealthy relationship, elements of which may be perceived as incestuous.
There is mention of a past incident where two people woke up next to each other only half dressed and neither remembers what happened. One of the women mentions that one of the men had his hands all over her while they were swimming which is why she came back to the house.
S1E4: a man sexually harasses a woman and two captured characters discuss how their captors have a reputation for raping prisoners, and how they both expect to be raped.
The romantic relationship portrayed in the film is between a 17 year old and a 21 year old.
Blackfish (Movie)
There is a written text on screen mentioning rape and rapists.
Throughout the movie, racist comments are made about Black men, depicting them as rapists. In one scene, a policeman takes advantage of a woman by touching her when she is pulled over. A white cop jokes that he would like to force a Black woman to perform oral sex on him before another member of the KKK kills her. He is joking to maintain his cover infiltrating them. In one scene around the climax of the film, a woman is tackled in the street by a policeman: to evade capture, she shouts repeatedly that the man is trying to rape her, although this is not the case.
There is a mention of kidnapped women being “violated” by their kidnapper but no further information on the nature of that violation.
A man threatens to bend a woman over while they are arguing.
Blade (Movie)
A mother makes uncomfortable advances to her son.
At one point, the main character mentions that when he was nine, he was in a relationship with a 35 year old woman: it is a joke and it is unclear if the character is lying. The main character tells a random woman that she just gave him an erection and admits that he is a sex addict. She scoffs at him and walks away. He does not follow her. A brother and sister have an incestuous relationship. They are seen kissing at the end of the movie. Worthy of note: the main character discusses his sex addiction multiple times throughout the film. He never hurts or touches anyone.
Blancanieves (Movie)
The main female protagonist is kissed against her will on two occasions: 1) in the middle of the film, by a man who is trying to strangle her; 2) at the end of the movie, by different men, who paid to try to wake her up from her sleep.
S1E1, S1E2: A female character jokingly makes a lot of innuendos and sexual comments to the protagonist, comparing some past encounters they had to rape. S1E5: A female character grabs a woman's breasts.
Rape is frequently used as a comedic punchline by antagonists.
Bleach (TV Show)
Throughout the series, there are inappropriate jokes made that fall under sexual harassment. One of the female protagonists tries to kiss the male protagonist when he is asleep and not able to consent. She ends up not doing it. Thousand-Year Blood War arc: E11-12: it is discussed how a teenage girl was taken in by a family so she could later on marry their son to keep the bloodline clean. He is older than her and she refers to him as her cousin to her friends. It is clear that he only agrees for the sake of the bloodline. This does not end up happening and he marries a woman that looks his age. The girl ends up dating an older man when she is in college.
The female protagonist forces a kiss between the male protagonist and a living soul that is stuck in a teddy bear.
Bleed With Me (Movie)
A woman kisses her boyfriend and he has to tell her several times to stop before she does.
Blend S (TV Show)
Blended (Movie)
A man tries to kiss a woman twice without her consent.
Two female main characters have/had (consensual) relationships with men who they later discover are controlling, possessive, and literally monstrous.
Blind Waters (Movie)
While he has a woman cornered, a man caresses her face and calls her beautiful several times.
Blockers (Movie)
Two of the main characters break into the house of a couple who are playing a blindfolded sex game (1:08:40). The main characters initiate and reenact sexual acts on the blindfolded couple as if it was the person's partner. This includes implied female ass slapping (audio) , shown grabbing/scratching of the male partner's chest and while it is entirely off screen the cut implies that one of the main characters touched the blindfolded male partner's testicles as the main characters are shown escaping without being found out. This is played for laughs.
Blood & Water (TV Show)
The show contains sex scenes between a 17-year-old student her her adult male swim coach. S2E5: an adult man asks a minor for oral sex in exchange for information: the victim sprays the offender with pepper spray and nothing further happens.
S1EP: a woman mentions how her colleague has been pestering a girl for her number even though she has refused him multiple times. She views him as a creep. S2E3: a man smacks a woman on her behind. Worthy of note: a 18-years old girl mentions in the last two episodes of the second season that she is gonna get married. Her fiancé looks much older than her. (35-40 years old).
One man watches a woman dance and grabs her butt: she shoves him off. Later, he sneaks into her room and kills her.
Blood Diamond (Movie)
Throughout the film, rape is discussed. A rebel leader threatens to rape a character's wife and children.
Blood Moon (Movie)
Blood Quantum (Movie)
A character describes having sex with a woman who wanted to get back at her boyfriend for cheating on her and was "drunk enough to pick anyone."
Blood Vessel (Movie)
A man implies that the woman with them in a group may be in danger of being raped when the are deciding if they should board the ship they found.
Bloodborne (Video Game)
A bit at the start of the game, the player encounter the “plain doll” in the Hunter’s Dream. This is the source of leveling up in this game, and as her name suggests, she is a doll. Specifically, she is the doll of the only other hunter residing in the dream and talking to him paints him as a mysterious old man who still wants the best for the world. But his exiting remark after confirming the player can use the Hunter’s Workshop (the only building in the dream) to their benefit, he makes a whispered, snarky remark: “Even the doll, should it please you.” The play can later find the workshop in the real world, and the doll is there along with its outfit. The description reveals its craftsmanship “borderlined on mania”. In the DLC for the game, “The Old Hunters”, the Hunter (player character) walks into the clock tower and sees an abused, bloodied corpse of a woman sitting in a chair (who bears a striking resemblance to the doll). It can be infered that it is the result of self-harm. The hunter approaches and touches her, and she soon revolts back saying “A corpse should be left well alone”. The player then proceed to kill her so he/she can genocide a fishing hamlet she was trying to protect. Upon returning to the dream, the doll states that she feels at peace, and is relieved. The doll shows a thematically inaccurate response to this situation as she is not the real person, but just an attempt to claim a woman’s body for the man's uses. Despite this, the man is repeatedly shown in a sympathetic light. His sexual crazes is not addressed and his other dialogue portrays him as scared, but stoic, old man who is hosting a way for hunters to combat the scourge of beasts.
Bloodhounds (TV Show)
A man is forced to stripe naked in front of a gang; his genitals are photographed to blackmail him later.
Bloodride (TV Show)
S1E6: someone tries to force two people to kiss and grabs women against their will.
Bloods (TV Show)
Sexual harassment is a common theme in this show. A boss is constantly hitting on her employee, and patients often sexually harass the EMTs.
Bloodshot (Movie)
About on third into the movie, a killer has the main protagonist's wife tied to a chair and holds a bolt stunner. He asks if she can "take the whole 6 inches" before killing her.
Bloodsport (Movie)
In the beginning graveyard sequence, a boy makes a joke about how a girl cannot say no to him after she sets a boundary. Children watch a teen undress through a peephole. There are a teenager and her adult, married tutor, who seem to be flirting with each other, but it is only mentioned and shown briefly.
Bloom Into You (TV Show)
One character begs for a kiss even though the other person does not want to: she forces it.
Blow-Up (Movie)
The concerned scene contains a situation of dubious consent. One of two women is willing to have sex with the main protagonist in exchange of photographs, but the other one is not. The protagonist proceeds to chase the first woman, aggressively pulling at her clothes: she looks quite scared. While running away from him, the other woman strips the other naked, both of them laughing. They proceed to have a threesome, but the man never take photographs of them afterwards. The women look betrayed.
Blue Exorcist (TV Show)
A young boy saves a teenage girl from drowning, while intentionally grabbing her by her breasts: she is aware of this and tells him to stop. When she is on the beach, he tries to give her mouth to mouth. The scene is portrayed in a perverted way. Worthy of note: a male character goes overboard with his blue flames and unintentionaly burns two women's clothes down and the camera zoom on their panties.
Worthy of note: the main actress was 14 at the time, with an older body double being used for nude scenes, and her male counterpart being much older.
Blue Miburo (TV Show)
S1E1: a child mentions how the world has turned hard due to people killing, raping and stealing and how children are always the first people to be sacrificed or become victims.
Worthy of note: the protagonist makes a joke about child sexual abuse that some may find in poor taste. On some occasions, a man tries to pressure his unwilling partner into sex with him.
There is a consensual relationship between a 15-year-old and a woman whose age is somewhere between 18 and 22. The film is French, and the age of consent in France is 15, but the age gap may be uncomfortable for some audiences.
BNA (TV Show)
S1E5: a man caresses the face of a young teenage girl. She does not say anything. However, later on in the season she tells him that she finds him creepy. She also mentions how she finds it creepy when he comes into her room without knocking. S1E12: the man grabs the arm of the teenage girl when she tries to run away. The man does not seem to be sexually or romantically interested in her. He does have an obsession of turning her into a god and worships her as one.
Burnham mentions paedophilia in the context of a joke about double standards (13:35-13:45). In a song, Burnham sings about 'rape-y vibes' in country music songs (roughly 22:20). Later in the same song, he sings about undressing a sleeping woman. A heckler in the audience tells Burnham to take off his trousers. At roughly 53:10 Burnham sings that he would rather perform oral sex on his father than eat a burrito with a fork. Worthy of note: a slur for gay people is used just after the 14:00 minute mark. This slur is repeated at various points up to the 14:45 mark.
Boar (Movie)
A man makes several suggestive comments about a woman who is much younger than him. A man smacks a woman on the ass while she is working.
A Holocaust survivor shows scars that she says were given to her by a Nazi soldier after every time she was raped (5:40).
The Boat (2011) (TV Show)
A man is wanted by the police because he beat up his girlfriend. He comes to the protagonist to ask for his help, but he gets rebuffed. The main female character implies that she lost her job because she did not respond to her boss' advances.
Bob Roberts (Movie)
A man running for political office is caught photographed alone with a teenager. He claims nothing happened but his opposition claims he had sexual relations with the girl.
Bodied (Movie)
Rape is frequently used as a punchline in rap battles. A character slaps women's bottom multiple times throughout the film.
Bodies (TV Show)
A side character is a serial rapist, and it is mentioned that one of his victim was 14. He is killed early on.
One character kisses another character without consent: the person is upset but they apologise and nothing else happens.
Body Double (Movie)
The Body Tree (Movie)
A man hears a couple having sex so he opens the door and watches them without them knowing. A male college professor is known to drug student's drinks and assault them.
Bodyguard (TV Show)
Bog (Movie)
There is a suggestion/speculation that the male creature may inject women as a means to take control of them and use them for breeding.
The movie starts with scenes of invaders running into a castle where they grab women and some have their clothes ripped off. This scene is shown again later where it is said that the women were afraid they were going to be raped, but were killed for a ritual instead. A man sneaks into a woman's tent and sniffs her underwear. Later he watches the women bathing.
The main protagonist gropes another character without his consent and is firmly rebuffed. At another moment, he is also groped.
Bokeh (Movie)
A woman talks about the plot of "To Kill a Mockingbird", which involves rape.
Bomb City (Movie)
About 40 minutes in, a party gets broken up by police, which handcuffs a girl. A cop proceeds to whisper something in her ear, and proceeds to tell her to get on her knees: he opens her mouth and holds her chin, putting a gun in her mouth and making a comment along the lines of “I bet your daddy’s proud”.
At 44 minutes in, a Nazi tries to kiss a nun. She rejects his advances and they fall to the ground when he continues trying to kiss her. He is interrupted soon after.
There are numerous talks of sexual harassment
Bonding (TV Show)
A woman is held captive by a man.
A man puts a woman's journal down the front of his pants and tells her to come get it.
Bones (2001) (Movie)
A female character is groped in bed by who she assumes is her lover, but is actually a ghost (43:00-45:00). She asks “him” to stop repeatedly, interspersed with flashbacks and gorey hallucinations. There is no nudity or implied penetration, bu tshe is left physically unharmed but mentally distraught. One of the main characters makes routine suggestive comments about the other female characters, which the other male leads reprimand him for. It does not escalate beyond “locker room talk.”
Bones and All (Movie)
An adult man crawls on top of a main character (a teenage girl) and holds her down, drooling on her; no explicit sexual violence or threats occur but the scene is highly suggestive. Worthy of note: A man kills another man during a consensual sexual encounter.
There is a very brief mention of a background character having raped someone. We never see this person again.
A woman forcibly plants a kiss on a guy who does not want it.
During a party, two frat boys are about to engage in relations with two 17-year-old girls but withdraw from the interaction when they learn the girls' ages. On the way into the party, some partygoers grab a female character's breasts without asking.
Book Club (Movie)
A man is given Viagra without his consent and then unwillingly touched on the groin by his wife.
Story 3: the creature continues to kiss the woman as she is killing her.
Booksmart (Movie)
A character tells of and describes in detail how the two main characters could have been abducted and raped. Worthy of note: a male high school student (who was held back several years and is stated to be 20 years old) is revealed to have had sex with a female teacher at a graduation party.
Boomerang (Movie)
A woman takes her underwear off and throws them in a man's face, who reacts in disgust. A woman advances on a man who is visibly uncomfortable by putting her hand on his legs. She then proceeds to flash him.
Borat (Movie)
Throughout the film, there are jokes about sexual assault, rape, sexual exploitation and men having sexual relationships with underage girls.
In several chapters, the author references sexual violence suffered by displaced, colonized, and migrant people around the world. These references are typically not graphic, but they are numerous.
Borderline (Movie)
A man breaks into a woman’s house believing that they are in love. There are a couple scenes throughout the movie with him being very touchy towards her (smelling her hair, hugging her, kissing her face) while she appears uncomfortable. There is another scene where someone agrees to kiss the captor to keep him from getting upset.
Bornless Ones (Movie)
As the demons are possessing the people in the house, it is revealed that a male teacher had sex with a female high school student that was in his class.
Boss Level (Movie)
Early in the movie, a man says that another man was "screaming like a date rape victim". Date rape is then referred to several times throughout the film.
Bottom (TV Show)
Bottoms (Movie)
The premise involves a club to teach girls self defense, so it talks a lot about being able to defend against stalkers, assault, etc. Everything is treated as comedy and there is some dark humor that can feel a bit tasteless. During a scene in which all of the girls talk about their feelings, one of the leaders asks if anyone has been raped. None of them raise their hands, but when that leader says "gray area stuff counts too", everyone does. It is stated that a girl was assaulted on her birthday. It is implied a girl is being sexually abused by her step dad. There are relationships between high schoolers and adults, but it seems all teens involved are 18.
Bound (1996) (Movie)
An ogre grabs a woman's ass that he has kidnapped: he then implies that he is going to assault her. An man accidentally walks in on a woman who is bathing.
The female protagonist often gets harassed by her male collegue. He follows her to the woman restroom and eavesdrops her there while he sits in the toilet next of her. She says multiple times to stop. Eventually he is waiting for her in her own house, which he did not have permission for.
The main male character has a habit of continually grabbing the main female character's bottom and lifting up her skirt without her permission. She smacks him every time he does so.
The Boy (Movie)
The main character’s backstory involves an abusive relationship with a violent boyfriend, who later shows up and threaten her. Later, a different character forcefully kisses her.
Boy Meets Boy (Movie)
A man jokes about being a paedophile. Worthy f note: the narrator recounts a time when a female friend kissed him unexpectedly when they were both kids. He told her he was not interested because he was gay,: she apologized, and they continued being good friends.
Boy Meets World (TV Show)
S4E15: a character disguises himself as a girl to write about sexual harassment experiences. S6E7: a teacher hits on a student.
There is a passing mention of an antagonist group being rapists.
One character kisses another without warning, causing discomfort. The kisser apologizes and later refers to this event as a sexual assault. However, no one takes it seriously as such in-universe.
Boyhood (Movie)
A club owner makes several insinuations towards a woman he is forcing to work for him to pay off a debt. She continues to reject him and at one point he forcibly kisses her but she pushes him off and he leaves.
The Bra (Movie)
The hosts occasionally discuss recent news, sometimes including allegations made against celebrities. They always condemn any sexual assault or abuse discussed.
S1E1: a movie producer tries to seduce a writer/director. She says no and he retaliates. A director attacks a woman and threatens her by choking her and violently pushing her down.
Brass Eye (TV Show)
This satirical news programme, which targets the way the media handle stories, contains an episode about paedophilia scaremongering.
A pregnant woman is kidnapped and forced to undergo a gynecological exam against her will (off-screen), and is threatened with a forced abortion. A prison inmate must undergo a cavity search outdoors for the purpose of humiliation (off-screen). A prison inmate threatens a man that he will let the other inmates rape him.
Brazil (Movie)
A woman is grabbed by the shoulders and is forcefully guided out of a building. She then yells at the man who grabbed her for the nonconsensual touch. There is no sexual charge to the action, the man is leading a woman away from danger.
In the opening scene, a man makes a comment towards an 11 year-old girl saying that she is old enough to marry.
A woman discusses the fact that she got married to a grown man when she was 14. On a number of occasions, a drunk man behaves in sexually aggressive and threatening ways towards her, and she tries to avoid him.
There is a scene in which a teenage boy hastily hides under a table, ending up between the legs of a teenaged girl. He moves his face further between her legs with clear sexual intent. It is suggested that she traps his head between her legs to stop him until he can come out of his hiding place. In another scene, the same is girl pressured into admitting she is a virgin by the group (composed of three teenage boys and one other teenage girl). Also worthy of note: in the same scene, the other girl tells the group how she had sex with her male therapist and several other men. She later says that that none of this is true, claiming she said it because she is a compulsive liar, though it is heavily implied that she simply wanted to make the others uncomfortable.
The author includes a trigger warning in the beginning, which includes lack of consent, both sexually and medically. The incident referenced by the author is a scene where the protagonist is making out with a boy who keeps touching her in ways that she is uncomfortable with. He makes ableist, objectifying comments about her body while he does so. The protagonist later sees this boy and is so uncomfortable that she has to leave.
The protagonist, a vampire, is all but forced into a marriage with a werewolf to improve political relations between their two species. However, it is not expected that they have sex, and the marriage is only intended to last 1 year. As their relationship does become sexual, both parties explicitly refuse to initiate anything without enthusiastic consent.
A mad scientist shows a set of miniature human figures he has made. One of the miniature humans he has made is a King, another is a Queen. The King expresses strong feelings for the Queen which she explicitly rejects. At one point the King escapes from the glass jar he is in to try and get with the Queen. He harasses her, coming up to the jar she is in, banging on the glass. The Queen does not like this and wants him to go away. Eventually the mad scientist picks up the King and puts him back in his jar.
One zombie character essentially "feels up" a woman (without her consent).
A ghost character is revealed to have been gang raped (40:00-41:30).
The protagonist comments on the inappropriate sexual comments and occasional grabbing she experiences from a family friend.
A male character slaps a female's behind while she bends over. She objects and they discuss whether he had any kind of permission.
After discussing the color of a woman's panties, a group of boys come up behind her and lift her dress to up to confirm the color.
This film contains a lot of child abuse. A teenage boy is tormented by his foster mum: there are many non-sexual but inappropriate things she does to him. A girl calls her older brother a “pedophile” as a joke. A wWoman tries to force her foster son to kiss his deceased father on the lips. When he refuses, she kisses the father’s lips instead.
Bring It On (Movie)
There is a lot of catcalling directed at the cheerleaders, who are in high school, by their fellow students and by adults. The male cheerleaders delight in being able to touch the female cheerleaders inappropriately during cheer routines. There is a scene where an adult choreographer assesses the cheerleaders' bodies in a very demeaning way. A male cheerleader sticks his thumb up a female cheerleader's skirt and she is clearly uncomfortable with it: her teammates victim blame her (34 minutes in).
A teenage boy sneaks a behind teenage girl, runs up and smacks her butt. He then slaps another girl’s butt and asks if she wants to have sex. She is repulsed by him. About halfway through the movie, he slaps her butt again and she grabs his genitals firmly and threatens him. Near the end of the movie, he does it to her a third time to try and make her angry.
A woman mentions that a woman was recently raped in a run-down tenement she is visiting.
Towards the beginning of the book, a group of men make harassing comments to a main female character.
Broad City (TV Show)
The sexual relation between a female adult and a male teenager takes place in only one episode (she finds out about his age only after).
About halfway through the movie (during the male anchor's first news story about date rape), a woman describes her rape in detail.
A female character enters a relationship with a millionaire because of her economic situation, and he beats her when she expresses reluctance to have sex with him.
A Bronx Tale (Movie)
Young men try to get the attention of two young women who are walking on the opposite side of the street. A male character describes a “test” that he uses on potential girlfriends, which involves physically forcing his date’s face down to his lap.
The Bronze (Movie)
It is revealed that the main antagonist got his student pregnant (1:34:29). The protagonist and the antagonist have sex, but the protagonist got drunk by influence of the antagonist (1:13:30).
The Brood (Movie)
Throughout the series, in a briefing room containing a wall with crime statistics, the word "rape" is visible in the background. It is not present in every episode. Throughout the show, a woman makes various (often sexualised) comments about the appearance of a man who she works with, who makes it clear that he is married and faithful to his wife. S1E5: a man makes an inappropriate sexual comment to a woman he works with, and spanks a man he works with without his consent. S1E6: it is mentioned that a man was arrested for groping multiple women without their consent. S1E13: a stripper is hired to give a lap dance to somebody who is clearly uncomfortable with the situation. S2E23: a woman touches a man's body, under the pretence of frisking him, in an excessively slow and drawn out fashion which may imply/evoke sexual undertones. S3E2: a man implies that he has been accused/guilty of workplace sexual harassment in the past. S3E10: a woman agrees to help a friend, on the condition that he secures for her a picture of one of their colleagues naked. S6E6: a woman defends herself against sexual assault and the protagonists work on her case. Lots of discussion of assault and harassment and the consequences of speaking up follow. S8E1: mention of a woman being assaulted (hanlded sensitively).
Near the end of the movie, rape of prisoners is mentioned.
A greasy man leans next to a woman, talking to her ears; the way of talking did come of with sexual undertone. A woman is held hostage by the greasy man, but nothing happens. A woman gets kissed while she is asleep; this is supposed to be a "true love kiss". A man is enchanted by a witch as she whispers in his ears in sexually manner.
The titular character uses his superpowers to blow wind in order to lift the skirt of a woman in the street.
In Bruges (Movie)
Bruiser (Movie)
A boss makes frequent sexual advances towards his female employees.
Bu Su (1987) (Movie)
Bubba Ho-Tep (Movie)
Bubble Bath (Movie)
The main male character acts a little aggressive towards a female character in proclaiming his love for her and she does npt want it, yet he continues to plea to her. Later, the same character shoves his head in her breasts by surprise. Another female character remarks at point about having been in a relationship with an adult man at 14.
Buccaneers (TV Show)
There is an ongoing relationship between an older woman who is a full grown adult, and a young man: it feels like he did not know what he was doing. He tries to tell his mom that she took advantage of him, and she knew. She tells him to stop wallowing. He is clearly stressed. S1E2 features a man telling a woman to take off her dress slowly while he watches but she does not seem to want to. He then goes away and calls her butler to tell her that he has gone to bed: the butler walks in on her naked. S1E6: the former abuse is mentioned again.
Buddy Daddies (TV Show)
The mother of a child says that she was 'taken advantage of' by the father (a customer) and that she detested her child. A photo is shown of a dead woman on a chair: there is no hint that the torture was of sexual nature.
Buffalo '66 (Movie)
A man's father inappropriately hugs his girlfriend without her consent while saying "daddy really loves you" (26:23). You can see that she is visibly uncomfortable with that experience. The male character's father inapproriately hugs her again without her consent while burying his head in her chest (48:17): she is again visibly uncomfortable. The same cahracter tells the woman to "give daddy a big kiss" while kissing her on her cheeks without her consent (50:48).
Buffaloed (Movie)
The main female character accuses a main male character of being a sketchy old guy who assaults little girls. The main female character is groped on the bottom by a male character: she flips him and yells at him. There is also an older man stalking the female teenage main character throughout the movie.
A Bug's Life (Movie)
Bugsy Malone (Movie)
Early in the film, the titular character is pushy towards the main female character. At some point, a female character hits on the titular character despite his clear disinterest: she ends up kissing him on the forehead.
Bullet Train (Movie)
One young woman pretending to be held hostage by an older man says that the said man threatened to do "horrible things" to her (which is not true).
There is a passing mention of sexual harassment in work settings.
There is a weird relationship between siblings, mostly in season 1. Worthy of note: a character is a pedophile and the caretaker of a young girl, and his affection towards her can therefore be unsettling.
Burden of Proof (TV Show)
Throughout the series, female characters are often put in tense situations, at the mercy of masculine enemies. In season 4, an episode features former women slaves of ISIS. There is a brief discussion of their sufferings (not explicit), especially of one woman who became mute after her traumatic experiences. In season 5, a man makes repeated inappropriate comments and sexually threatening remarks at a woman who is forced to work with him (first episodes). Near the end of the season, he takes advantage of a tense situation to grope her.
Both female protagonists are harassed by a group of men in a shop. They began threatening them with sexual assault before one of the women drives them off by running and acting crazy.
Burn Notice (TV Show)
A man stands over a teenage boy mastrubating. The sound wakes the boy up, who is disturbed. The man asks if he wants to give him a blowjob for money: the boy does not.
The authors reference catcalling, as well as statistics about rape and sexual assault.
A woman is forcibly stripped and pinned down as part of a ritual Another woman is stripped by a group of people who are searching her.
Bus Stop (Movie)
The movie involves a woman who is kidnapped and forced into marriage. She is subject to threats, physical violence, and stalking.
Worthy of note: one character awakens to another masturbating beside them in bed. The film takes place largely in a conversion therapy camp for lesbian and gay teenagers, which include some uncomfortable activities like acting out intercourse. A character is descreibed offhand as being molested as a child (around 51 minutes into the movie).
A main character pretends to rape his girlfriend.
A couple tries to use rape as roleplay but the scene is interrupted and it firstly looks like an attempted rape. The main protagonist's sister is in love with him and tries to kiss him without his consent.
A molester is briefly mentioned.
A character recalls punching someone in a bar who touched his friend in appropriately.
Bye, Bye Love (Movie)
Chapter 4: a female captor assists the two men they have tied up to go to the bathroom by opening their pants and taking out their penis. Mention of a drunk woman getting handsy at a bar Chapter 6: a man makes suggestive comments to women in their group message board .
A man discusses having sex with his cousin in somewhat graphic terms.
The characters believe what they are doing is consensual, but they are in fact being manipulated without their knowledge, which makes the consent dubious. A group of scientists watches a couple make out before their boss interrupts them and sends them away. The boss and a few other scientists then watches the couple make out and undress: it is implied they are about to have sex before the girl is killed. The couple are unaware of the cameras. In one of the rooms, there is a mirror behind a painting one can use to watch the person from the room next door changing.
A man enters the house of a sleeping woman with the intent of killing her: he stops at the last moment and decides to kidnap her. Pursued by a crowd, he eventually leaves her: she wakes up traumatized.
The Cable Guy (Movie)
Caddyshack (Movie)
One male character (Chuck Berry), gets arrested and imprisoned for transporting a 14-year old girl for prostitution, which is one of the many sexual abuses committed by the actual Chuck Berry (particularly with minors).
Calibre (Movie)
Characters discuss the fact that one of the main characters had ostensibly consensual sex with a woman, but did so having given her cocaine. This is a point of contention during the movie.
At the bar, a woman is grabbed from behind by her male friend. She asks him multiple times to let her go but he is drunk and does not do so. He whispers a sexual request into her ear before they are interrupted by the main protagonist. Later, the woman defends her friend's behaviour.
Californication (TV Show)
The main character sleeps with an underage girl without realizing she was underage.
In two scenes a man changes the appearance of two teen girls to look more like his dead sister: we see him tie a girl's hands to a chair and wash her hair while he hums and licks her face, and he then cuts her blouse off to reveal a bra and moderate cleavage and abdomen. For the rest of the film, the girl remains only in jeans and a bra. We see photos of a teen boy kissing his sister on the mouth as she receives chemotherapy.
Call Jane (Movie)
The main romantic relationship of this film is between a 17-year-old boy and a 24-year-old man, who is a student of the boy's father. Although the relationship is presented as healthy, with the younger boy being extremely persistent and the relationship itself being very brief, some viewers may find the age difference to be disturbing or upsetting. During a scene by a lake, there is non-consensual touching.
The central plot of this book revolves around a teenage boy who is involved in a romantic and sexual relationship with an adult man.
While not explicitly sexual, the relationship is between a 50-year-old and a 14-year-old and is framed in a very sensual way.
Cam (2018) (Movie)
A scene involves a man grabbing the main protagonist (a sex worker) from a women's restroom and putting a hand over her mouth with an obvious threat of sexual violence. Throughout the movie, she is frequently shown in a vulnerable or dangerous position due to her work. The film also contains strong visuals implying childhood abuse.
One male character says that a stranger he just met will probably rape him and a female character (30:00). After two characters have consensual sex, the man's friend enters the room, while the woman is naked. The friend does not leave, takes off his shirt and moves toward them. The woman wants to leave, but the men laugh and are ominou: she is eventually able to leave (1:09:00). Later there is an ambiguous implication that something bad happened to the character when she was left alone, but it could be the interaction we see in which she felt threatened but was not assaulted.
Camp Camp (TV Show)
The book revolves around a conservative Christian gay conversion camp with unusually awful methods. Spiritual, psychological, and emotional abuse are common in the community.
Camp Dread (Movie)
The backstories of some of the contestants are: - someone who filmed and posted a sex video online without knowledge or consent of the people being filmed; - a 19-year old man who had sex with 17 year old girls; - a female contestant who was raped by her brother multiple times.
Camp Wedding (Movie)
A group of masked men arrive at the camp and a woman thinks they're going to be raped and murdered. A man says that he saw a woman getting raped but she corrects him and says it was consensual.
Many of the main characters are sex workers, but they have entered the profession consensually, as far as what's presented in the book.
Opening story: while parked in a car, a woman gets frightened and wants to go home, but her boyfriend continues to try and have sex with her. After pushing him off her several times he stops and drives them to a restaurant. Story n° 2: a man secretly takes video of a young girl while she is playing outside, and pretends to be a girl online to chat with her. He sneaks into her house and lays under her bed, licking her hand as if he was her pet dog.
The Canal (Movie)
There are mentions of demonic rape A woman is attacked by an entity in a way that mirrors sexual assault.
The author discusses victim-blaming as a concept and mentions the idea that women "ask for" rape.
A teen boy is approached by an adult woman offering him sex work and only backing off due to his lack of money. Even after acknowledging he is too young, she still talks about it with him, mentions his “wet dreams” and touches his face/neck (15:00-15:50). A common reoccurring visual is a large white van which most people associate with predators. And the overall theme is adults abducting and unaliving young boys.
There is discussion of a young teen boy being sexually abused by his nanny. It is later revealed that he was obsessed with her and when she rejected him he lied and accused her of the abuse.
A man jokes that if his lover dies, he would still want to have sex with her corpse.
A cop makes sexual comments about a woman and refers to her as a "piece of ass".
A couple has sex in public.
Caníbal (Movie)
A woman is unconscious after drinking and the man (a cannibal), strips her (not shown) and lays her down on a table. He runs his hand over her body and gently rubs her cheek. She later wakes up naked in bed and thinks they had sex so she is happy.
A teenage girl is coerced into taking nude photos, which are shared amongst her peers at school without her consent.
One of the men in a group continuously hits on several of the women, even after they have asked him to stop multiple times.
A man records one of the women in the camping group while she is changing in the tent.
A male soldier sexually harasses a female protagonist, who responds with a knee to the groin. A female character backs the male protagonist into a corner and kisses him. He appears uncomfortable and nervous throughout the encounter. The female character does not appear in the film outside of this scene.
Captain Conan (Movie)
Worthy of note: nearly all the female characters in the film are prostituted.
Captain Fall (TV Show)
S1E5: a captain asks out two women on the street with kids to have sex with him. Later he watches a female employees butt and slaps it unconsentionally. At another moment he makes a sexual "joke" while looking at another female employees ass and imitates jerking off while holding a sparkling wine bottle. In this episode he is confronted about the sexual harassment from the team. He fakes the rumorse and does not change his behaviour. In a conversation with his brother he (drunk) claims that the MeToo movement is coming after him and he is innocent. He was fired from this job and doesnt get another one. So he demands his brother to give him a new job on his ship, threatens him and later apoligizes.
A child asks the father what rape means: he explains it briefly in a factual way. It is a short moment that is not brought up again.
Torture is a major theme of this film. Flashbacks are shown, including one of a man forced beaten with his pants and underwear down, and glimpses of a naked woman panting on the floor.
Captives (Movie)
The Capture (TV Show)
S1E2: about 20 minutes in, two police officers have a conversation about a historical case when hidden camera footage recorded a "semiconscious girl" being raped by a terrorist. Revealing that they had video proof of the rape would have compromised their hidden camera anti-terrorism operation. Because anti-terrorism cases are higher priority than rape cases, they kept the camera footage secret. It is implied that the rapist escaped without consequences. None of this is shown onscreen.
Caramel (Movie)
A man tries to rub his hand up his girlfriend's skirt, however she berates him because they are dining with her father-in-laws. A child witnesses the incident and innocently plays with the woman's skirt under the table. A woman gets an hymenoplasty because she had sex before her marriage.
Flashbacks from and discussions about the torture in Abu Ghraib, including sexual torture and sexual humiliation, are featured throughout.
S1E1: the sister of the male protagonist dresses him up like a girl (against his will). He runs away after and a man tries to hit on him, thinking he is a woman. He grabs him when the male protagonist tries to escape the situation.
Cargo (Movie)
A woman is kidnapped and held captive by a man.
A man pressues a woman into drinking and then makes repeated advances on her despite her clearly being uncomfortable.
Mention of an adult woman's relationship with a 17 year old boy.
Carrie (1976) (Movie)
A girl is laughed at by bullies while she is in the gym shower and experiences her first period. A woman mentions that a man “took her” and is emotional at first, but then says that she liked it. A boy keeps trying to kiss his girlfriend despite her refusals.
Carrie (2013) (Movie)
A woman says that she was "taken" via marital rape and became pregnant. She later describes the rape to her own daughter. A girl makes comments about another girl's sex life in order to make her uncomfortable. A boy makes a date rape joke.
Carrie Pilby (Movie)
The main character (a student) has a relationship with her teacher. There are several scenes where he uses predatory manipulation techniques and the relationship is quite clearly abusive.
S1E3: a woman comments how perfect a baby’s penis is (without sexual intent). A woman asks the female protagonist whether she can give milk and opens her kimono (no nudity is shown): she gets hit. S1E5: women are kidnapped and it is implied that they are to be sold. They are saved by the female protagonist. S1E6: a young girl peeks into a woman taking a bath to see whether she has the same mole as a wanted felon (no sexual intent), S1E13: a geisha is bought out and is forced to marry a man. However, she is saved by the female protagonist and escapes.
It is heavily implied that a police chief coerces women into sleeping with him in order to get exit visas. There is a threat of this to a woman who has stated to be under legal drinking age, even if it never happens because she obtains it another way.
Case 347 (Movie)
A woman has a miscarriage and is stated to have bruises on her arms and legs. It is implied that it is a result of her alien abduction.
The main protagonist is in love with an underage girl. There is also a man who is presumably gay who sexually harasses/assaults other characters.
The story revolves around vampire and the activity of blood sucking oftentimes have sexual overtones. Scenes with vampires sucking blood without consent may be uncomfortable. S1E3: a young woman is kissed by a young man without her consent and out of nowhere. The scene is portrayed romantically. S2E1: a teenage boy said that he killed a group of men because they mistook him for a girl and were sexually harassing him. S2E2: a woman who looks like a young girl sucks a naked young man’s blood without his consent. He struggled to resist but eventually, the woman was quickly stopped by another young man.
Casino Royale (Movie)
A scene features James Bond being tortured, and it is heavily implied (although not shown on screen) that his genitals are being whipped with a knotted rope. Shouts of pain can be heard, and the main antagonist threatens to cut off his genitals but is interrupted by another assassin.
Cassandro (Movie)
The movie contains stated offscreen sex between a teenage girl and a man in his thirties. There are also scenes of strong transphobia played as jokes.
As this is a documentary on an unsolved murder of a 6-year-old girl, there is a lot of speculation. Yet, the topics of child sexual abuse, incest and rape are discussed.
Castle (TV Show)
S2E3: a suspect is accused of coercing women into having sex with him in exchange for better job opportunities and interfere with it when they reject him. S6E20: throughout the episode, a man who believes is living in the 70's, makes sexists comments and sexualy harrasses (cat-calling, touching) all women around him, including the ones in authority positions.
Chapter 14: brief non-graphic mention of past rape.
A man watches two women change clothes.
Cat People (Movie)
A man kisses a woman who previously warned him that she would not like that. She turns into a panther and kills him.
A man tries to have sex with his sister and keeps trying to have sex with her even after rejected. He also mentions that their parents are siblings.
Catacombs (Movie)
There is a mention of incest as part of a ritual.
In the opening scene, a character asks two people for directions and he is found to be masturbating. In the closing scene, one of the characters is grabbed while walking down the street.
Worthy of note: the main character hires a prostitute and pays her with counterfeit cash. He is 16-17 years old and has sex with adult women who do not know that he is a teenager/minor.
The main character, a teenager, stays at a former teacher’s house overnight. He wakes up in the middle of the night to the teacher petting him. He is uncomfortable with the interaction and interprets it as sexual but leaves before anything else happens.
In the first few chapters, the protagonist's childhood friend kisses her unexpectedly. She is uncomfortable and confused as a result. Later on, an adult character forces a kiss on the teenage protagonist. Another adult flirts with her, and another gets naked in front of her. There is mention that one character, who is an adult in the narrative of this book, was groomed into starting affairs with rich adult women when he was a 16 years old. As with the first book, a key part of the plot is the presumably primarily adult audience of the Hunger Games being deeply invested in the protagonist's performed romantic relationship with another character. The protagonist feels a lot of pressure to kiss him and perform romantic devotion to him even though she does not feel those feelings.
Catfight (Movie)
A marriage is arranged between an adult man and a fourteen year old girl. A teenage girl has a crush on her uncle and becomes jealous when he is interested in someone else.
Catskill Park (Movie)
A man gleefully talks about drugging and raping girls and that he has been arrested in the past but is apparently still doing it. It is played for laughs.
Ceddo (Movie)
A man mentions in kidnapping a woman that he does not intend to rape her. One man hopes to marry a woman who is his cousin.
Celia (Movie)
An adult man grabs an adult woman by the arms twice throughout the film and motions for a kiss but she removes herself from him before anything more happens.
The protagonist and his older sister have an incestuous relationship; they are 16 and 17 years old respectively, and their relationship is consensual. A 6 year old boy begins cross-dressing. A 33 year old man tries to develop a relationship with a 17 year old girl but becomes repulsed by her when he catches her and her brother being intimate. There are several scenes of full child nudity and masturbation.
One character has a poorly drawn tattoo of a topless lady, and another of a man masturbating to her. It is briefly seen and is more comedic than crude. There are several rape jokes.
Third story: a man rubs and spanks a woman who he has tied up in the garage.
In the opening scene, a group of boys grab a boy who is showering and throw him infront of the school while he is naked. Students and teachers laugh at him. As an adult later in the film he gets flashbacks. In another scene, a man assumes a CIA officer is a 'strippergram' and shouts at her 'show us your tits' (but she gets revenge by tasering him).
Centurion (Movie)
S1E2: a female character buys drugs with the purpose of using them to take advantage of her roommate. Throughout the series, one female character repeatedly plays sexual jokes on other girls.
The main female character is kissed several times by male characters without being asked for her consent. She does not seem distressed. Worthy of note: two main characters repeatedly threaten and strangle teenage girls to oblige them to go to a party. This is played for laughs.
A young man is helpful to a woman who is mid-abortion. She showers, leaving this relative stranger alone in her disabled teen daughter's bedroom. Later she touches him without asking if he wants to be intimate.
A 20 year old man and a 14 year old girl are in a romantic relationship. This is shown throughout the series. Sexualization of underage girls is present.
This book contains mentions of rape as a general crime, suggestions of a man putting women in porn against their will, a mention of human trafficking as a general crime, and brief non-graphic mentions of a past rape/murder.
Chapter 12: an adult woman seductively bites a teenage boy's finger and places his hand on her chest. Chapters 21-22: an adult woman offers to kiss a minor while he is drunk, but instead throws up in his mouth. Later, while still drunk, she offers to have sex with him and begins to undress him before the scene cuts away. When the reader later returns to the scene, she appears to be asleep. Chapter 98: a girl says that she has been having sex with her teacher. Chapter 119: a demon possessing a girl's body makes her kiss a boy she is on a date with despite him telling her not to kiss him. Chapter 136: a girl grabs a high schooler's groin without his consent. This girl is later revealed to be an adult woman posing as a teenager. Chapter 167: a demon possessing a girl's body forces her to stick her hand down a boy's pants and grab his genitals without his consent, then kisses him. The girl is later shown to be furious at the demon for making her do such a thing.
The Chair (TV Show)
A child character demonstrates a lot of curiosity about penises and vaginas, but in a purely medical sense. She walks into the bathroom while her babysitter is on the toilet, and asks her questions about the babysitter's vagina. The babysitter then leaves because she is uncomfortable, saying that the child triggered her.
Chambers (TV Show)
It is falsely thought that a character has been raped, but she has not been sexually violated in any way. Worth mentioning; while the main character is having consensual sex, she hallucinates another person instead of her partner and is mildly upset.
Chandramukhi (Movie)
A woman accused a man of rape. They are found together outside in a bush, and she accuses him of rape. Also, a much older man has a relationship with a younger woman. We are not told how old she is, but the age gap is concerning.
Changed (Video Game)
The main character can get "transformed" by enemies against his will. Enemies will often sneak up from behind him or chase him and grab him, then put him in overtly sexual positions by force which results in losing the game. No on-screen sex scenes are present in the game.
The Changed (Movie)
A man tries to kiss his employee without consent. We later learn that kissing is the means by which the changed transmit to others.
Changeling (Movie)
A woman is being hosed down in the mental hospital and a female doctor tells her to spread her legs so she can check her for venereal diseases. Nothing is shown, but the scene is intended to convey the distress this puts the woman in. Worthy of note: although not shown, the movie is based of real life serial murder case where a serial killer abducted, raped, and murdered young boys.
There is a scene where the villain slaps a woman (who does not seem distressed) and closes the door of her room, presumably forcing her to have sex with him.
Charlie Says (Movie)
A woman is told to take off her clothes and looks visibly uncomfortable in doing so. A woman flashes a man. A man stands up in a bath and display his naked body to a woman who looks shoked at it. A man attacks a woman and wrestles her to the floor, which eventually turns into kissing.
The rapes committed by soldiers against women, including young girls, are mentioned several times throughout the movie. Worthy of note: the titular protagonist is a 'womanizer' employing exclusively young attractive women.
A man touches a woman on her buttocks twice. The second time he does this, she throws him into a jukebox. There is a fight scene between the ex-boyfriend of one of the protagonists and her, in which there is an undertone of sexual violence in his manner, language, and the positions he puts her in, but nothing happens.
Charmed (2018) (TV Show)
A possessed ex-boyfriend attempts to force a kiss on the youngest sister (30:00). The first episodes of the series discuss a teacher who was brought to court for the rape of a student. Certain side characters refer to the professor being tried/accused as a "witch hunt". It is also lightly implied that the protagonists' mother was the woman to go to if you were raped and needed help of some kind.
After being abandoned in an unfamiliar place and being forced to sleep on the street, the protagonist worries he will be raped. Some tertiary characters discuss homosexuality as though it were the same as pedophilia/pederasty.
The Chaser (Movie)
Che: Part Two (Movie)
A man tells soldiers to stay away from a woman who temporarily joined a group of guerilla fighters. Later, another man mentions the fact that guerilla fighters have a reputation of raping women.
Cheer (TV Show)
S1E5: one cheerleader was molested as a child and talks about his experience.
A character continually sexually harasses one of the protagonists--cornering her, touching her, and asking her out---despite her obvious visual discomfort and repeated verbal refusals. The protagonist feels fearful of rejecting him firmly, but her friends help her stand up to him. The harassing character tries to force the protagonist to dance with him at the homecoming dance, saying, "Don't be shy. You've always wanted this. Stop making a scene!": she fights him off.
Cheers (TV Show)
A strange man strokes the protagonist's arm without her consent while she is alone in a public place. He backs off when she threatens him with pepper spray.
Chemical Peel (Movie)
A drunk man dry humps one woman at a party.
Chi-Raq (Movie)
The premise of this movie is that the women in a particular community in the South Side of Chicago decide to stop having sex with all men in the community to protest gang violence. This sex strike ends up spreading to the rest of the city, nation, and world. When the protagonist first enlists other women to join this strike, part of the oath that she tells them to repeat has the line, "If he should force me to lay on that conjugal couch, I will refuse his stroke and not give up that nappy pouch," implying that saying no is sufficient to stop rape. There is also a point where the protagonist's boyfriend cheats on her with someone else. The sounds of her moaning during sex are heard before the scene switches over, and, in context, it sounds like she might be being raped, even though the encounter is later revealed to be consensual.
Chicago Med (TV Show)
S3E10: a teenage girl is revealed to be married to a grown man. It is stated that he had impregnated her before.
Chapter. 27: the male protagonist says zjsz his brother used to be a bad child, because he would flip skirts of girls. Chapter. 57: a male character is dating a woman who looks young due to her height. His coworkers make a comment about this but he reiterates that she is a grown adult.
Chick Fight (Movie)
The male romantic lead follows, touches, and flirts with the female romantic lead in spite of her protestations: it is framed as romantic. There are several instances where the female romatic lead is catcalled. Worthy of note: it is implied that the main female protagonist is forced to prostitute herself in the first part of the movie to survive financially. Throughout the movie, she engages in relationships with sugar daddies to pursue her career.
Cat-calling and inappropriate comments/questions from men to women are frequent throughout.
Chihayafuru (TV Show)
Some inappropriate jokes are made about female students by male students.
In the beginning of the movie, a maid is sexually assaulted by a man trying to convine her to have sex with him despite her protests. He grabs her but is eventually interrupted when another person walks into the room.
A young boy touches his tutor's breast. A man gropes his wife and intimates that he wants a second child and would rape her to have one.
A young man (17y, then 18y) stalks the (female) judge who trialed his case, but from a "I need guidance, a mentor/mother"—point of view, not a sexual one. A woman leans in to kiss a young man goodbye on the cheek and he turns and kisses her on the lips instead, but she seems more confused than disturbed about it.
A cult kidnaps an 18 year old and plans to use her to "birth the new generation".
A woman gropes a man while he is making a phone call.
A male teenager makes sexual comments as an insult to a younger boy.
A woman and her male boss are about to have sex but the woman changes her mind and tells no to the man. He gets angry but does leave. Later, after a complaint at the job, she is fired and she believes it is because she did not have sex with him.
S1E1: a coworker sends fake nudes of another co worker to him, and around the office. It is played for jokes.
A man is seen spying on a woman with hidden cameras in a bathroom (it is implied that he is going to masturbate while watching her taking a shower).
A woman has sex with her boyfriend not knowing that he is possessed at the time.
A man acts controlling towards a woman and constantly obsesses about her. A man's boss asks him for help regarding his son's lack of a sex life.
Chiruran 1-2 (TV Show)
S1E8: a man kisses another man against his consent while being drunk.
Choose Or Die (Movie)
A man in position of power solicits sex from a younger woman, asking “how much [she’s] worth”. She denies and although he persists, he does not get physical.
In the last couple chapters of the book, the female main character is kidnapped as part of a plan to use her for breeding. There is also discussion of others having been kidnapped for this as well. There is no actual assault: she is rescued before anything can happen.
The protagonist learns that there is a fan website about her. She finds that some of the contributors to the website have made posts that sexualize her. Other contributors chastise this behavior, since the protagonist is 17. The protagonist and other characters explicitly label this behavior as pedophilic.
Chowder (TV Show)
Throughout the series, one character repeatedly tries to make romantic advances towards the main character (such as trying to kiss him and insisting she is his girlfriend) despite him reacting negatively and saying he's not interested in her every time. Yet, in the final episode, it is shown that they have grown up and had children.
A boy violently grabs another boy’s privates.
Chapter 25: discussion of when a man was a teenager he was suspended for making, and distributing to friends, home videos and photos of himself with various girls of the same age. Some of whom were sleeping when the photos were taken. Chapter 42: confirmation that the above mentioned photographs and videos continued to be taken with women as the man got older. Chapters 48 and 54: these photographs are discussed with the survivors in brief conversations.
The movie presents sexual harassment and a man not taking 'no' for an answer as romantic. The male romantic lead isolates the female romantic lead in an elevator and forces a kiss on her under mistletoe. He then aggressively pursues her, even making himself her boss to increase the amount of time the spend together.
Chronicle (Movie)
Churn Vector (Video Game)
The player can sneak up on NPCs and "eliminate" them by absorbing them into the character's genitals. Non-consensual content in this game is presented lightheartedly and humorously, and is not excessively violent.
Two women are made to strip to their underclothes so they can be inspected as potential brides. A woman is forcibly kissed at a party, and after the other guests rip off her dress as they are beating her.
Circumstance (Movie)
This film contains many depictions of sexual harassment ranging from inferences to depictions of assault. There are no overt rape scenes but many threats of sexual violence and abuse of the female characters.
Citizen Ruth (Movie)
A man spies on a woman while she is getting dressed. A woman mentions being forced to perform oral sex on her mother's boyfriend, implying the event happened when she was a child or teenager.
City Hunter (TV Show)
S1E2: a woman is stripped and thrown into a river. Rape of Protestants is discussed.
Claire's Knee (Movie)
The film is about the brief romantic interest of a man for a young girl (a teenager) and his obsession for her older sister (also a teenager). He ends up kissing the first one but she rebuffes him. Finally, he achieves his goal by touching the knee of the second girl (through deception). He later brags about it like a sexual predator.
A man has a woman abducted and brought to his lair. During a menacing conversation, with the woman obviously in fear, he places his hand on her shoulder and then very slowly caresses the length of her bare arm. Worthy of note: towards the end of the film, the woman is chained to a rock by a group of male soldiers, with her hands and feet both bound, although this is for the purpose of a sacrifice rather than sexual in nature.
It is revelead that a character has been raped in her past.
Class of '07 (TV Show)
A schoolgirl/teacher relationship is shown in flashbacks but only through conversations: nothing sexual is shown onscreen. It is clear that the girl, when she i an adult, has been traumatised by the experience.
Class of 09 (TV Show)
S1E1: a woman is felt up while being swept for weapons.
A punk gang sexually harasses and assaults multiple people.
Clay Pigeons (Movie)
Clean Slate (TV Show)
The father of the main character mentions he is scared when she goes partying, because it might be unsafe for her. It is unclear whether he refers to sexual violence, transphobic violence, or both.
Clearcut (Movie)
A character threatens to rape another’s daughter.
The titular character makes a mention of how the Romans love to rape, pillage and plunder.
Clerks II (Movie)
Worthy of note: a man has sex with a donkey off-screen (played for laughs). There are also some pome passing jokes made about rape.
Clerks III (Movie)
Clickbait (TV Show)
S1E3: a couple has sex after a fight. It is not clear either it is with consent or not. The sex itself is not shown but it is implied. A male character has had a sexual relationship with a underaged girl: he spreads nude pictures of her without her consent.
A character is kidnapped and sexually assaulted by a demon. This is described in graphic detail from the victim's point of view.
S1E7: an adult woman flirts with a teenage boy, though he is repulsed and rejects her (17:14-17:19). S1E10: a teenage boy is mistakenly sent to prison. The inmates warn him about showering with them. Later, when he showers, the inmates surround him for "initiation" (11:09-11:19). Up until this point, it is implied that the boy thinks he will be raped. "Initiation" is actually just a friendly welcome (15:13-16:02). Though, one of the inmates does joke about the boy's assumption.
A photographer inappropriately touches young women during a photoshoot in his studio (including his niece). It is played for laughs.
Closer (2004) (Movie)
A woman is forced to have sex with her estranged husband in order to get him to sign their divorce papers.
Cloud Atlas (Movie)
Cloudburst (Movie)
Clownado (Movie)
Club Zero (Movie)
There is a rumour about a teacher having an affair with one of her teenage students. No sex is shown between the two characters but it is implied that their relationship is intimate.
Clue (Movie)
One of the male characters frequently gropes the female characters; this is played for laughs. Worthy of note: also played for laughs is a scene where characters pretend to kiss corpses in an attempt to make the deceased appear alive.
A teenage girl, after accepting a ride home from a teenage boy, is forcefully kissed and touched by him after explicitly telling him that she has no interest in him beforehand. She shoves him away and tells him off but he continued to force his advances on her until she gets out of his car. Also noteworthy: the movie results in an intimate relationship between step-siblings. It is pointed out often and explicitly though that their parents were only married for a short while and they never saw each other as siblings.
In the beginning of the movie, an animated sequence narrated by the main protagonist tells how he planned to have sex with a mentally challenged girl as a teenager. He finally renounces and the girl tells him that she already did it several times with her cousins. Near the end of the movie, the lyrics of the song 'rape me' are shown on screen. Aditionnally, in the scrapbook of the main protagonist, we can read the sentence 'rape is good'.
Cobalt Blue (Movie)
A female character is questioned whether or not she was raped by a man and she denies such allegation.
Cobra Kai (TV Show)
A man sexually harasses a teenage girl and tries to coerce her into sexual favors. S1E4: a main female character's boyfriend makes advances at her without her consent and does not stop when she tells him to, and fends him off.
Cobra Verde (Movie)
The rape of female slaves (and of male soldiers) by their owners is mentioned several times throughout the film.
In the content warning at the start of the book, the author assures the reader that sexual violence does not exist in the worlds she writes. Even so, there is a fair amount of sexual harassment throughout the book. The protagonist's boss is nicknamed "Creepy Carter" because he leers at female coworkers, touches them in appropriately, and just generally crosses the line. Also, the protagonist's mother is a retired porn star. When men find out about the connection between her and her mother, they sexualize and objectify her intensely.
The relationship between the protagonists, who are both siblings, is depicted as being codependent and abusive; the sister's feelings for her brother are heavily implied to be incestuous, especially as she has gone out of her way to murder other women so she can monopolize her brother.
Coffy (Movie)
S1E3: investigators describe in detail a case of sexual assault involving rape.
A distant cousin to the female protagonist washes up outside and winks up at the protagonist standing at the window (20:40 ) She rolls her eyes and walks away. The same man tips her chin and flirts with her (22:45) The protagonist is unimpressed. A teenage girl looks out the window to see one of her male relatives up in the tree at her window, leering at her - and she tells the protagonist that this is something he does regularly (26:22). It is mentioned later on that she is arranged to be married to him when she turns 18. Throughout the movie, one of the male characters flirts with the protagonist aggressively, but it does not go farther than that.
A secondary adult character is mentioned to have had multiple relationships with minors. One of the protagonists follows another protagonist home without her knowing, before they have even formally met. He clearly knows this is wrong. He lets it slip in conversation with her, and she does not react very negatively.
Cold War (Movie)
Early in the film, a female character mentions having served a sentence for stabbing her father "because he confused her with his mother".
A man is very pushy towards a young woman throughout the film. At some point, he kisses her while she is asleep on a beach. When she wakes up, she rebuffs him, and she briefly has to struggle to escape him.
A woman in a bathtub says: "I thought it was rape or a robbery". A man watches a couple have sex while licking his lips. A man has a teenage girl tied up and strokes her cheek.
A protagonist is wearing a revealing school uniform. Her teacher, whilst lecturing, glances at her bosom. The protagonist looks uncomfortable and adjusts her uniform (24:00). A protagonist is kidnapped and briefly shown tied up standing, wearing only her shirt and underwear, in great distress (47:00). Nothing further is pictured or suggested.
Near the end, the brother and sister have sex.
Colorful (Movie)
One of the plots in the movie is about a middle schooler selling her body to middle aged men in a love hotel. The main character pushes himself against one of his classmates, a nerdy girl without many friends who had brought him the homework of that day. His intentions are not clear, but it could be considered attempted rape. A boy unzips and pulls down another boys pants while being held down. Bullying is a main plot of the movie.
A female lead experiences unwelcome advances from some male characters. This provokes an escalation of violence. Worthy of note: a man is violent towards a woman throughout the movie, motivated by unrequited love and jealousy.
Come Home (Video Game)
This game cntains optional dating paths that allow you to have sex with your mom or sister.
Come True (Movie)
There are some instances of stalking early on in the film.
A white character assumes that the main Black character raped or otherwise harmed a white woman, but it is well established in the narrative that this assumption is untrue.
The protagonist, a prince, has women in his employ who bathe him by hand. They are all completely naked while washing him. The protagonist's father, the king, admits to having sex with his bathers. Since the bathers are employees, and especially since they serve the royal family, it is implied that they must do whatever the royal family says no matter what. Later on, a woman tries to touch the protagonist inappropriately, and she continues doing so despite the fact that he looks and sounds uncomfortable. Worthy of note : The film constantly highlights the submissive status of women and their role as sexual objects for men.
Coming Soon (Movie)
Sexual harassment is discussed, but never depicted.
Commando (Movie)
A woman is cat-called by two guys in a van, mistakenly taking her for a prostitute. The main protagonist rips few top buttons of a woman's blouse, to hint her that she must act as if she had sex with someone. First shocked, she agrees to help him to set the act.
An adult man and teenage girl have a brief flirtation, including sharing a kiss, but the film emphasizes the sexual desire between them.
There are several instances of sexual harassment through the book, experienced by the author, her mother, and other women. These take the form of threats, comments, non-consensual touching, and insinuations that the women in question are sex workers. The author and one of her friends have sexual relationships with men in their twenties while they are still teenagers in high school. A woman that the author's family knew was raped in prison before being executed.
An antagonist character recorded and shared a video of his stepsister showering before the events of the book. This incident is brought up a few times. The inciting incident of the book is that the protagonist gets beaten up, suffers serious injuries, and wakes up in the hospital. He wonders aloud whether his attackers raped him because he does not remember. A nurse offers him a rape kit, but he declines. The protagonist's mother makes a comment that rape kits are invasive. It is left ambiguous whether he experienced sexual violence, but this aspect is not dwelled upon in the rest of the book.
The titular character rips a woman's dress up to gag her.
The protagonist's lackey attempts to inappropriately touch another character under the guise of covering an open wound on ther thigh with healing ointment. He stops after she threatens his life.
Conclave (Movie)
There is brief discussion of a past relationship between a couple with an extremely large age gap and potential power imbalance. There is one mention of rape and a mention of child sex abuse.
There is a passing mention of a person who is 24 and hangs out around the local high school to date underage girls there.
Condemned (Movie)
Two men corner and intimidate a woman. One of them gets close into her, holds her face and presses their faces together. One kisses her and then they both leave.
Coneheads (Movie)
A male character ignores a very explicit 'no' from a female character. The offender is punished for it and he does show growth and maturity later on in the film when she again says she needs to take it slow.
The Congress (Movie)
The plot of this movie revolves around an actress who is pressured/forced to sell her public image: it is mentioned several times that she could thus appear in porn movies without her consent. Worthy of note: at some point, one character breifly explains that, as he was incarnating a Greek god in an alternative reality, he impregnated his own daughters.
In a conversation discussing female members of a humanoid race (The Culture), it is mentioned that they are often genetically modified to gain enhanced sexual gratification, and a characters says "You know, they say you can't rape a Culture woman?" No further context for the comment is given, and, apart from that instance, there are no further sexual assault or rape references in the book.
Constantine (Movie)
A man is reading through news papers: one article i about a woman being raped. A man, who needs to touch someone to get a vision, sneeks into a mortuary and touches the corpse of a woman. From the workers perspective it looks like that he gropes the female corpse.
The book contains a passing mention of sexual harassment and abuse aimed at garment workers.
Continuum (TV Show)
S2E16: when the police are investigating a serial killer, they discuss whether the killer may be committing sexual violence. A witness is asked if she had previously been the victim of sexual abuse.
The protagonist works with a man who stalks female customers and tries to get information about where they live. He makes inappropriate comments about the protagonist's body. He likens others teasing him for being a virgin to rape. In general, he has very regressive and misogynist opinions, and the author portrays him as insufferable. The protagonist invites him to live in her home so she can pretend to date him and others will stop commenting that she should be married at her age. He continues to disrespect her the entire time until they separate by the end of the book.
Rape and incest are mentioned in passing as plot points in Butler's books.
The Convincer (Movie)
Cool As Ice (Movie)
After a fight between a female protagonist and her boyfriend, the boyfriend pushes himself on her, but she immediately pushes him off (34:00). The female protagonist wakes up to find the male protagonist in her bed (40:15). He puts an ice cube in her mouth. Nothing further occurs, and she does not react negatively.
Copycat (Movie)
Rape is mentioned and shown in police reports.
Cordelia (Movie)
In the first scene, a man's pants are forcibly brought down and his testicles are shoved into a drawer.
Corsage (Movie)
Two cousins flirt and kiss.
Cougar Town (TV Show)
S4E6: the main female character takes a sleeping pill and she spends the whole night sleepwalking and doing weird things. She has no memory of it, so her husband tells her what she did. She asks him "You didn't have sex with me, did you?" in a tone that shows she is disturbed by the idea. He says no, but when she is not looking, he nods yes grinning at his two male friends who grin and give him the thumbs-up (13:20).
Relationship between a teacher and a student.
The film contains several scenes of non-consensual grabbing and kissing as well as a rape joke, all played for laughs.
A male main character is physically, psychologically, and emotionally abusive to his relationship partners including a female main character and a female side character. SPOILERS: The character makes multiple direct or indirect attempts to murder his wife, one of the two main female characters, when she exerts any independence. In one particularly disturbing scene, he fantisizes about killing her during their wedding ceremony and the sex afterward. In another, years later when she has sought divorce, he throws her an extravagantly romantic dinner, says some creepy stalkerish things, and tries to force an anniversary ring onto her finger while she is clearly resisting. In a third, he is physically fighting with a mistress while they argue and accidentally injures and kills her.
One character briefly mentions a previous memory of being sexually assaulted. There is another scene in the bog where a supernatural creature sexually harasses her, with hinted intentions to do more. One of the groups in the world is also known for treating women poorly. The book focuses heavily on her traumas.
The Covenant (Movie)
A man uses his powers to blow a girl's skirt up so that the boys can look at her naked bottom.
Cowboy Bebop (TV Show)
S1E3 : men can be seen touching women in a non-consensual way. S1E8: a group of men grab a waitress with intent to molest her. S1E12 : several male characters ambush a woman, and it is implied they intend to rape her. However, the woman defeats them very quickly, and says afterwards they were not a threat for her.
This book contains several mentions of rape or trafficking (mostly at the beginning and end). There is no actual, attempted, or threat of assault, but it is brought up as something that could have happened or that people are involved in trafficking and is in theme with the stories of the book.
Coyote Ugly (Movie)
Crash (2004) (Movie)
A police officer pulls a couple over for preforming oral sex while driving. The woman is harassed and groped by the officer. The camera takes extra long pauses to show and focus on the hands of the officer grouping her vulva. The woman goes home and argues with her husband about how it could have been prevented. The cop later saves the woman's life, and this supposedly redeems him.
Crawler (Movie)
A female foreman mentions that the men in the crew make sexual comments about her and later we actually hear them being spoken. A man pretends to trip so that he will fall into her and he puckers up as if going to kiss her. There is mention of a woman who was raped and murdered in the past.
In one episode, a character discusses how she had a sexual relationship with her teacher when she was in high school. It was apparently consensual and the character claims it was no big deal, but another character is highly disturbed by this, pointing out that it was statutory rape and asking if the teacher was ever fired. In a parody of traditional musicals, one of the songs features a lyric about a husband engaging with his wife sexually while she sleeps. The nature is satirical and the character is unaffected. A female character stalks a male character, which is played lightheartedly. She watches him have sex twice without his consent. A male character blackmails a female character into a relationship with him. The two engage in consensual sex.
In the previous book, the female romantic lead of this book worked together with friends to expose a prominent man’s perpetration of serial sexual assault against herself and several other women. Because this man was well liked, the protagonist and her associates receive hate mail, as well as in-person comments, from individuals who think that the women just accused him to get money or attention. The female romantic lead uses the cafe she owns as a refuge for women who have been harassed, abused, or sexually assaulted.
A teenage boy persistently pursues a much older teenage girl, even after she rejects him multiple times. A teenage girl takes nude photos with the intention of giving them to an adult man. Her parents find them instead and the man is attacked by her father for the implication of their relationship. At the end of the film, one of these photos is given to a 13 year old boy as a present.
Creep (2014) (Movie)
A character confesses that he broke into his own house wearing a wolf mask and subsequently raped his wife. The latter is leater revealed to be his sister. The episode is, however, later implied to be a fabrication which did not actually occur. A male character touches himself sexually in front of another male character, much to the discomfort of the latter, and acts in ways which could be interpreted as sexual to scare the man he is stalking. Zoophilia is implied and discussed.
A man takes pictures of his girlfriend while they are beginning to have sex. She covers herself and turns away and he stops.
Creepshow 2 (Movie)
A man lifts up a woman's shirt, kisses her, and touches her breasts while she's asleep.
Creepshow (TV) (TV Show)
S1E5: in the second story in the episode, it is mentioned a few times that an adult man has raped a young girl.
Creepy (Movie)
There is passing mention of a serial killer who abducted and raped sex workers, and then proceeded to hunt them for sport. The main serial killer verbally and physically harasses and intimidates the protagonist's wife.
The Cremator (Movie)
A man unconsentually touches a woman by her neck, implying sexual intent (the camera shot is focused on his hand). He is interrupted and the woman runs away, screaming.
Cria Cuervos (Movie)
In the beginning of the movie, a woman (a family's maid) explains to the protagonist that her father (her boss) tried to sexually assault her multiple times, but that she always managed to escape. Immediately after, a flashback shows her apparently responding to his advances (she smiles when he tries to grasp her breast through a window).
Worthy of note: about one hour into the movie, a woman self-harms her genitals with a piece of broken glass to repel her husband. Blood is shown between her legs. Shortly after, this woman is told by her sister that she regrets not having deep conversation and physical contact with her. When she forces her to get intimate (touching, hugging and kissing), her sister seems visibly distressed and she recoils when she tries to kiss her on the mouth.
The series surrounds an investigation around the disappearance of a young woman, which subsequently becomes a murder investigation. Although no evidence arises to suggest that this is the case, there is some discussion of the possibility that her disappearance/death was the result of foul play, and the possibility of sexual assault having been a factor in this is mentioned/implied. Aside from this, there is some general discussion of the various other crimes - including sexual crimes - which have occurred in and around the hotel where this happened throughout its history.
Criminal: UK (TV Show)
Every episode of this series takes place within the confines of an interrogation room: none of the events discuseed are actually depicted. As an anthology series, there is very little storyling continued between episodes, so some episodes can easily be skipped. S1E1: this episode centres around the interrogation of a man suspected of sexually assaulting and murdering his stepdaughter. Within the first minute of the episode an interrogator describes the teenage girl being found dead without any underwear on. The sexual nature of this crime is alluded to again throughout the episode. It is mentioned that, during trips away with his stepdaughter (the murdered girl), the man being interrogated had always opted to book a double rather than a twin hotel room, and that a post-mortem had shown the victim not to have been a virgin when she died. The accused stepfather later alleges that his stepdaughter had been engaged in a sexual relationship with her (adult) sports coach, and that he (the stepfather) had become violent when she confessed to this. The stepfather alleges that it was this coach who assaulted and killed the girl. Nothing is shown on-screen and the entire episode takes place within the confines of the interrogation room. S2E2: this episode involves the interrogation of a man accused of raping a work colleague. The events are discussed in detail but none of them are shown on screen. S2E3: this episode features a woman who acts as a vigilante paedophile hunter. She described posing as a 14 years old girl online and exchanging explicit messages with an older man.
Crimson Peak (Movie)
A brother and a sister have a sexual relationship - they are seen kissing and engaging in sexual contact with one another, although the scene is not graphic. The incest started when they were under the age of consent (she was 14 and he was 12) but they are not shown engaging in incest as children on screen.
This is a historical novel centring around the life of a Victorian-era sex worker. She and her colleagues begin their careers at a very young age, usually out of financial need and often exploited by adults, and are often subject to violence or harassment from men.
Critical Role (TV Show)
A male character frequently harasses female characters and makes generally inappropriate remarks about women. At one point he flashes his penis at a female character. S1E1: a character remarks that he "was almost raped by trolls" (01:46:41). S1E42: a character reveals that in order to save a sibling, they offered up "a child rapist" as an exchange for the siblings life (02:26:29). S1E45: a rape joke occurs There appears to be no mention of rape in Campaign 2 or Campaign 3.
A man pins a woman down by her throat then tries to kiss her, but she pushes him off and runs away.
The titular character gropes a couple women and it is played for laughs. One of the women he gropes is trans and is publicly groped and humiliated by him.
Sexual harassment (12:37-12:58).
S1E12: three male student harass a woman and grab her hand. She is immediately saved by the male protagonist.
Worthy of note: a male character explains to a woman who unconsciously slept at his place that he has no intention to abuse her.
Crowsnest (Movie)
A man records his girlfriend as they are beginning to have sex and while she is changing without her consent. She asks several times for him to stop and has to turn the camera off herself in order to not be recorded.
A (teenage) character is controlled by her bullies through magic. At one point they make her strip down to her underwear in public for their own amusement. Also, after the character is out through the spell, she experiences PTSD-like symptoms and thoughts which are very reminiscent of the behavior of sexual abuse victims.
The Crush (Movie)
The movie centers on a fourteen year old girl's obsession with an adult man during which she verbally harasses him and eventually falsely accuses him of rape. The man expresses his attraction to her and reciprocates one of her kisses . At some point, he also watches her undress through her closet door.
The protagonist has a dating app interaction with someone who sends her an unsolicited nude picture. She later sees the person who harassed her in a public place, but the two do not interact.
Cry-Baby (Movie)
A high school boy pinches a high school girl’s butt while they are standing in line. A high school girl is pregnant with her third child. Her current children look to be around 5 years old. Her boyfriend’s age is never stated though he seems to be in high school as well.
A man grabs a waitress and pulls her into his lap, but she struggles and is able to pull away.
Cry Wolf (Movie)
A high school girl is dating one of her teachers. She states at one point "he tried to do more" than just kiss her, but this turned out to be a lie.
One character is handsy and responsible for unknown amount of sexual assaults or possibly rape, but it is not detailed. Prostitution is also mentioned.
Culpa Mia (Movie)
Cunk On Earth (TV Show)
S1E1: Roman Polanski is mentioned.
Curiosa (Movie)
The plot is about a male photographer and a woman (her nude model) having a toxic relationship. An incest occurs during the last 15 minutes of the film: two sisters talks sexually, take pictures together and kiss to please the man they both love.
The Curse (TV Show)
There is a fairly graphic rape threat. S1E1: a father in law makes his son in law look at his penis. His daughter told her dad that her husband has a small penis.
During an argument, a man mentions that a woman is alone on her farm. It is debatable if this is a veiled threat of harm.
Cursed (2020) (TV Show)
S1E1: the protagonist has a flashback in which several boys pin her down and attempt to take her clothes off (we only see her back before the scene cuts). The scene does not have sexual connotations. S1E2: the previous scene is shown in full. Two boys and one girl restrain the heroine and tear away a portion of the back of her dress. They only do this to look at the scars on her back. They tease her, the heroine overpowers them and escapes: nothing more happens. An older knight tries to scam the protagonist with loaded dice: if he wins, he gets a kiss. She uses her magic to win and says if she wins again, she should receive 20 silvers. He says that if he wins, he expects 20 worth of services as well.
Cursed Films (TV Show)
S1E1: this episode is about “The Exorcist”, a movie wherein a demon possessing a young girl forces her to sexually assault herself with a crucifix. Shots of this scene are shown briefly. S1E4: this episode is about “The Crow”, a movie wherein the protagonist’s fiancé is raped and murdered. A storyboard panel depicting one of her rapists on top of her is shown, though it is not graphic. A minute or so later, we see a very brief flash of the rapists tearing off her blouse.
A bully character tries to make the protagonist touch him by pulling her hand to his body.
Cursor (Movie)
A neighbor makes unwanted verbal sexual advances on protagonist (asking her "how much?"), but nothing is attempted.
In the Cut (Movie)
A woman watched a man receive oral sex without his knowledge. A man mentions that he had sex with an adult woman when he was 15. A man yells at various women in the street, asking if they would like to have sex with him. A man pins a woman to the bed after she rejects his advances.
Cutie Honey (Movie)
A man takes photos of a woman in her lingerie while she is unconscious. it is later revealed that he has his wall plastered in her candid photos. During a fighting scene, a male villain sits on a character in a sexual manner to overpower the female protagonist. The main antagonist has trafficked and spellbound 1000 women for his pleasure. they are later released and run around almost naked, frantically.
One character makes moves to touch a woman’s breast, but is shocked with electricity and pulls back. There are many allusions and gestures to sexual things throughout the series, but no assault.
Da Wang Rao Ming (TV Show)
A young girl is in love with an older guy who she grew up with in an orphanage. He sees her as his little sister, but later on they get in a romantic relationship.
Dag & Nat (TV Show)
S1E4: someone describes how they were sexually assaulted as a teenager. It happens after another character asks if they hate men.
S1E6: a man grabs the female protagonist by her hand and tries to get her to hang out with him. She refuses multiple times and saves herself. Nothing else happens.
The Daily Show (TV Show)
Daisies (Movie)
The age of the two protagonists involved in the relationship is unspecified.
Daliland (Movie)
The premise of this book is that the female main character has escaped her abusive husband to a remote beach town with the help of her father-in-law. At one point, she has a detailed trauma nightmare that serves as a flashback detailing the abuse. She describes sex with her husband as him "forcing himself between her legs" while "bruising her hips and wrists." At the start of the book, she considers herself to be "damaged" and "ruined" as a result of this experience.
Damsel (Movie)
Several discussions mention the fact that a woman was forced by her boyfriend to have anal sex.
S1E2: there are mentions of cult leader sexually assaulting multiple women in the congregatio. It is one of the main topics of the episode and it goes into some detail with one woman being assaulted for 10 years. The leader also victim blames women he assaulted.
Daredevil (Movie)
The film contains a courtroom scene where a man is on trial for beating and raping a female bartender (20:00-23:00).
Daredevil (TV) (TV Show)
S1E1: a man saves four women from what appears to be sex trafficking. S1E2: a woman mentions that she heard another woman recalling how she was almost dragged into an alleyway by a man who was waiting outside her work. Nothing further happened as she was saved by "a man in a mask". S1E4: a man mentions 'pedophilia' (when someone in power tries to defame another man). S1E8: violent domestic abuse. S1E10: a man recalls the first time he beat up a criminal, noting that it was because he repeatedly overheard a child being sexually assaulted and knew that the father was was covering it up so that the problem could not be dealt with through legal means. S2E2: a man tries to sell child pornography (21:00-22:00 S2E3: rape is mentioned by the antagonist who claims it justifies his violence. S2E7: 'rapists' are mentioned. S3E2: a man mentions how he does not want criminals on the streets to 'rape again'. S3E5: mention of child pornography.
Daria (TV Show)
A recurring character named "Upchuck" makes unwanted advances towards the female characters throughout the series and its two movies. S5E6 "Lucky Strike": a substitute teacher makes creepy comments towards a teenage girl but is reported and fired before it can escalate into assault.
A male teacher confronts a colleague about his "relationship" with a woman teacher (who in fact makes unwanted advances to him) and makes a reference to "Take Back the Night", a real world event and organization that protests sexual assault.
An adult woman gives alcohol to an underage main character before trying to coerce her into sex. A woman teacher makes physical advances on a male teacher who is visibly uncomfortable in most of these scenes, which are often played for laughs at his expense.
The protagonist is continually bullied throughout the book often in homophobic and/or sexual ways. The protagonist has his first boyfriend at the start of this book. The boyfriend continually pressures the protagonist to have sex, even though the latter is not ready. They never end up having sex
An evil humanoid alien pushes a woman to the ground and rips open her blouse to insert a needle into her chest (38:00). Nothing sexual occurs.
A male character visits a female character at her work. After a brief chat, he leaps over the counter and pushes her against a wall. She protests, but he ignores her, and though we only see both actors from the shoulders up, from the way he moves and the way she reacts, it appears that he is touching her genitals (01:02:55-01:04:00). Soon, the female character’s behaviour seems to indicate that she actually finds this pleasurable, until she grabs the male character's head and begins kissing him.
S1E2: there is a brief mention of how someone attempted to rape a woman years ago.
The villain eyes up a woman who stands up to him and shouts 'well hello beautiful'. He circles around her, making her flinch and look very uncomfortable. He then grabs her head with a knife in his hands. He does not sexually assault her, but it is very reminiscent of one (he also says the phrase 'a little fight in you, I like that'). There is a mention of the main character using surveillance equipment to view a romantic interest's activities.
Worthy of note: a person makes a comment about how she suspects one of the antagonists to be a pedophile and interested in a very young main character. He later attempts to speak to the girl in private and the scene feels uncomfortable (since he is overly friendly to her), but he does not make any attempt to assault her.
A Dark Path (Movie)
A woman makes a joke about the possibility of them getting raped while walking in the woods. A woman discusses a past event where a group of men attempted to rape her and a friend: she describes being groped and pinned down before being able to get away.
Dark Shadows (Movie)
The whole premise of the film is that the antagonist tries to pressure the protagonist to love her and make love to her: she punishes him and destroys everything he cares about when he does not. All sex portrayed in the film is consensual, but there is heavy pressure involved At one point, the protagonist is chained up and locked in a coffin with the antagonist used panties thrown on his face.
Dark Skies (Movie)
Two teenage boys watch a pornographic video (shown on screen, it contains no nudity and no apparent consent issues), where a woman is called a "bad girl" and her breast is fondled (03:20-04:00). Later, one of the teenage boys is alone with a teenage girl, and he attempts to reenact the scene from the video by calling her a "bad girl" and grabbing her breast (34:40-35:40). She does not consent and reacts accordingly (later in that scene, she gives him a light kiss).
A Dark Song (Movie)
The protagonist is forced to participate in a ritual in which a man masturbates as she takes her clothes off. She is clearly uncomfortable. Throughout the film, she endures a man's abuse to reach her goal.
Dark Tales (Movie)
Story "Dr. Leo": a man who has been kidnapped sees the notes on how to make a male zombie stay erect and grow their penis larger. The implication is that it will happen to him. Story 'Keeper': a man has a woman tied up and forces her to tell him about previous times that she had se. He starts to force her to give him oral sex, but they are interrupted and it is revealed that they were a couple roleplaying.
A woman's boyfriend records them having sex without her knowledge and posts it online.
Dark Tourist (TV Show)
S1E1: rape is mentioned in passing at two separate points.
Dark Water (Movie)
A man mentions that a girl who disappeared years before was probably kidnapped by "a pervert".
Incest and sexual assault are briefly implied: nothing graphic. One secondary character feels deeply ashamed after believing she has become pregnant. Her feelings toward her male partner become complicated and tired up in that shame. The main character's father was controlling and physically abusive, but not sexually abusive. He is dead at the start of the book.
Dark Windows (Movie)
A male character kisses a female character after she helps him to bed. She does not want the kiss and he apologizes at the time and also the next day. A female character gets into bed with another female character, the friend says if she had gotten into bed with the male friend "he would have had a field day."
There are multiple instances of sexual harassment disguised as jokes. An adult man is in love with a teenage girl. His friends make a sexual comment about this. Worthy of note: there is a lot of sexualization of (young) women present throughout the series.
Chapter 3 + 8: general mention of rape as a crime. Chapter 8: rumor that a gang rape happened earlier in the day. Chapter 14: a group of men are overheard discussing how they tortured and raped a woman. Chapter 15: mentions of corpses with mutilated genitals, discussion of and attempt to use women for trades.
Darling (Movie)
A woman has flashbacks of a man attacking her and it is originally implied to have resulted in rape. Later in the movie, it becomes unclear what actually happened as the woman descends into insanity.
In one scene, a man grabs the breasts of a passing woman. In another, a character sprays water onto the crotch of a woman.
The main character says a lot of things that may be triggering to some. There is a scene where she films herself lifting up the skirt of an ill woman.
Date a Live (TV Show)
Dating Amber (Movie)
Students mime various sexual acts to taunt the protagonists A teenage boy (high school student) is at a gay club and a man walks up to him (age is unspecified, but presumably in his 20s),. When the man asks the boy if he is a student, he lies and says no: they proceed to kiss.
A suitor and his cousin try to take advantage of the protagonist's naiveté by getting her to go swimming with them. Chaperones foil their plans at first. The suitor and the protagonist do eventually have consensual sexual encounters. Later, when the suitor finds out a secret about the protagonist, he changes his mind about marrying her and tries to coerce her into being his mistress instead. When the protagonist declines, he becomes possessive of her, literally saying that she belongs to him. He forces her to sleep in the same bed with him non-sexually during the climax. The tone of this scene is tense and uncomfortable. She eventually kills him to keep him from shooting a loved one.
Chapters 1–6: a group of girls is kidnapped by a group of men. No assault or harassment happens, but the possibility of a sexual assault is discussed multiple times in different occasions.
Discussion around a main characters pregnancy and whether it is the result of a sexual assault as well as a mention the forced "mating" that was inflicted upon enslaved people in the U.S.
Dave (TV Show)
S1E10 "Jail": the protagonist is in prison. Within this prison, rape is frequently discussed and the main character offers to perform sexual acts in order to avoid being assaulted.
Halfway through the film, a man says to the main female protagonist to shut her mouth, and another man says "someone needs to teach her how to use it". The latter gets punished. A man tells two other men about a sexual encounter he had despite their discomfort.
A woman has several inappropriate comments made about her sex life, with the intent of embarrassing her.
At one point, a woman invites a man to her apartment. He is clearly trying to seduce her but she makes it clear that she has only invited him as a friend. He tries putting his arm around her, which she pushes off. He then twice grabs her lightly by the shoulders and attempts to kiss her. On both occasions she pushes him back gently and he stops. The mood is light and there is no suggestion of an intent to force or seriously pressure her, but he also does not stop as soon as she first tells him to.
A group of men break into the house, and force the women there to dance for them. Several of the men are seen laying on or kissing women. One drags a woman out of the room but she pushes him down the stairs and gets away from him.
A man forcibly kisses a woman. Later, he threatens her at knifepoint with the intention of raping her, but another woman saves her.
A man grabs the skirt of a woman he had sex with the night before: she does not approve of it. The two are also in an unhealthy relationship that is abusive, physically and emotionally.
It is unclear if one woman is coerced or paid to have sex with a man off-screen in the latter part of the movie.
A stripper pretending to be a cop begins to arrest the male lead and then touches him. He is not upset, but it is done without his permission. Later, he assumes that a female nurse is a stripper as well and makes her touch him without her consent, which she is angry about. There are also sexual relations between a doctor and a patient.
S1E1: a very brief scene shows a character being groped and harassed by another man at the bar. He is visibly distressed but the action is quickly interrupted by a main character.
One of the topics of this film is machism: several harassment (cat-calling, non-consensual grabbing, etc.) are thus depicted on-screen.
During two different scenes in a saloon, the same character is groped.
Demonic possession is used as an inexplicit allegory for sexual assault a few times throughout the series but is never delved into. A supernatural character implies that one of the main characters can have sex with him in order to pay off a debt. He flirts with the main character and gets quite close to him, which the character is clearly uncomfortable about: this is more because of his repressed sexuality rather than consent issues. S2E5: this episode mentions the date rape drug. It also mentions a boy sending nude pics of his girlfriend to his best friend and threatening to send them to the whole school. It features stocking and peeping tom behavior. When a woman is rejected she becomes violent towards the other woman.
Story 1: a man is knocked unconscious by a woman, and when he wakes up he has been bound and gagged but he is not assaulted. Story 4: a woman mentions that her boss groped her while at work. Story 5: a man flashes two others after the wrestling match.
Dead Man (Movie)
Two men play with another man's hair in a suggestive way before arguing over which will rape him. A man is rumored to have committed necrophilia against his parents.
Dead to Me (TV Show)
The show in general deals with people cheating, one of them possibly with a teenager who is of age but younger than the man. The cheating is not revealed to their partners, so people are being exposed to STIs without their consent. In general, the entire theme of the show is about people manipulating other people and it is presented in a dark comedy type of way, but in real life could feel extremely triggering to victims of non consentual activities S1E7: a joke is made about someone having sex with their grandma. S1E8: a woman is cornered by a man but she escapes. S2E9: the woman encounters the same man in a public setting. He attempts to blame her for the incident but she stands up to him and publicly shames him. Both scenes are handled sensitively, and the woman's ability to stand up to her attacker is depicted as empowering. In season 3, one character sleeps with the brother of a person she killed. He does not know she killed his brother and he probably would not have consented to sex if he knew. The ethics of this sexual relationship are never discussed. S3E3: an old man gropes a person's bottom.
A boy grabs a teenage girl whilst trying to get her to go on a date with him. A boy in the club becomes infatuated with a girl he barely knows. At a party, he finds this girl passed-out drunk on a couch; he strokes her hair and kisses her gently on the forehead, but nothing further happens. Later, this boy publicly recites a romantic poem to this girl and asks her out on a date, seeming indifferent to the fact that he is very plainly making her embarrassed and uncomfortable. While he is never hostile or aggressive, he is not respectful of her repeated requests to be left alone.
Dead Sea (Movie)
A man chases down a woman he is planning to sacrifice. When he catches her, he pushes a gun in and out of her mouth while talking about how they had sex when they were teenagers.
The female protagonist is the leader of a small crew of people. One of her male crew-mates deliberately and maliciously makes an inappropriate, crude innuendo about her and a different male crew-mate, which makes both parties very uncomfortable and embarrassed.
Dead Souls (Movie)
A woman kisses a man and tries to go further, but it turns out she is possessed by the man's sister. He pushes her away and it does not go farther than that.
Dead Sound (Movie)
While drunk the men in her group make suggestive comments and encourage her to flash the boat driver as means of thanking them for the ride. She is reluctant but does it. Shortly after he propositions her and blocks her from trying to leave the room but eventually moves aside. Then he tells the group that she would have to have sex with him in order for him to take them to the island but she does not. A woman sits on the lap of a man she is tying up and attempts to kiss him.
Dead Stop (Movie)
A woman threatens to blackmail a man if he does not have sex with her.
Dead Sushi (Movie)
A woman's posterior is grabbed without her consent. Later, a man sexually assaults a woman while she's being eaten alive by an evil sushi. A man hides in a bath-house to spy on a naked girl.
While holding a woman hostage, a man presses the barrel of the gun down her shirt and against her breast. Later, another man has the same woman tied to a bed. He pins her down and threatens to "break" her, then promises his men that they can have their turn after he is done.
Deadloch (TV Show)
S1E1: a dead body is found, and the police chief asks the detective who found it if "she was sexually assaulted". S1E3: a man watches women naked and masturbates without their consent.
Rape threats are made by a character but not carried out.
The film is full of dark humour and jokes/scenes of sexual harassment towards men and sexualisation of their bodies. The protagonist is slapped multiple times on his butt by the suit-maker. but he admits to liking it. The titular character is presented as a highly sexual person who uses humour to cover his mental health issues and trauma. At some point, he says that a tailor is "definitely a predator". Later, he also jokes about a boy scout leader.
Deadstream (Movie)
A female character bites the clothed crotch of a man, but it is not implied to be sexual
Dealer (Movie)
A man and a woman are doing coke in a bathroom: the man says he wants to have sex and start touching the woman, who says 'no' and pushes him away and goes away. A grown man demands (agressively) a kid to take of his clothes off while another kid films it: the kid keeps his underwear on (the scene is not sexual in nature). Prostitution is present throughout.
Dear David (Movie)
The male protagonist is filmed masturbating without his consent: this is then broadcasted via live stream due to supernatural forces. This scene is brief (less than 3 minutes) and is not very clear on the actions presented.
The film consists of three chapters. In the first, the main protagonist mentions a movie about a serial killer and rapist.
Chapter "1:40pm" has references to past sexual harassment that a female flight attendant has experienced.
Dear Ex (Movie)
A homophobic woman implies that a gay man will try to have sex with her son if he is left alone with him.
A Lao woman is (briefly) verbally accosted by a group of male Australian tourists trying to take advantage of her.
A female character is kissed unwillingly.
The protagonist is a disabled woman who becomes a famous author over the course of the book. There is a scene about 2/3 of the way through where she is in a public place and men approach her because of her fame and because they notice her mobility aid. One asks her if she is married and then declares that she probably can not have children after she rejects him. The protagonist regularly dissociates during sex, and the reason for this is never stated directly. There is passing reference to an incident at her prom which may have been rape.
The film revolved around the death of a male character, who is revealed early in the film to have been "raped to death". Rape is thus mentioned frequently throughout. About halfway through the movie, it is revealed that the victim was raped by a horse, with whom his two friends had been having sex for years. The tone of the film is rather ambiguous, and those themes are treated somewhat lightheartedly, presumably for comedic purposes.
A woman discusses previous sexual assault, though not in detail. There is a brief discussion of underage sex work.
S1E4: this episode contains leaked nudes.
Death Proof (Movie)
Rape is briefly discussed in the context of self-defense. Worthy of note: A character is set up by her friends to be left alone with a man she does not know (thoroughly presented as threatening and shady), and these friends suggest to the man that the character will do sexual favours to him. This all happens with the character being none-the-wiser and without consenting, and we never return to that character, so what happens afterwards is left to the imagination.
Death Race (Movie)
A man claims that another man rapes children as a means to intimidate him and turn the other prisoners against him Male prisoners grope and make obscene gestures at the female prisoners.
The main character gropes a female secretary.
A man accuses a reporter of grabbing him inappropriately. Worthy of note; a man makes penis shaped cookies with the purpose of handing them out to children, to make another man seem like a pervert.
A woman mentions getting rape threats in the comments on her videos.
Death Watch (Movie)
One of the main characters consistently gets harassed by men. There is mention of her throwing a man overboard a boat when he would not leave her alone. The other main character becomes a bounty hunter, and one of her targets had a bounty on his head for "taking advantage of someone's daughter."
S1E2: a male character reminisces on his performance during an invasion of bandits, stating that if he had not acted. a rape could have occurred, quickly clarifying that he was worried about himself being raped. It is typical of this character to be a big odd, and these lines serve to portray his self-absorption. The word “rape” is used twice. A noblewoman asks her handmaiden why her carriage is stopping, then tells her maid that if it is bandits “trying to have their way” with them, will her maid “have them” and “let them take her” to make it easier. S1E4: at 47:20, a woman is threatened with rape and is saved by a female friend within 20 seconds. The scene is disturbing because it is stated that this is meant to be punishment for the proposed victim. S1E5: a character yells “stop! Intruder! Rapist!” In fear when he hears a door creak open. It is typical to his skittish character.
Accidental incest: two men see three teenage girls dancing and find them attractive. They are shocked and disgusted when the girls turn around and are revealed to be their daughters.
One of the songs performed by the Band, X, is about rape and described as such by the male co-lead singer of it. It is also mentioned that the female co-lead singer of this same band had an experience where and audience member jumped on stage and sexually assaulted her, trying to rip off her clothes before being pinned down.
Throughout the book, there is discussion of anti-rape activism, the #MeToo Movement, rape at the hands of police, rape threats against activists and politicians, sexual harassment experienced by domestic workers, the racist perception that Muslims and other immigrants to Europe are rapists, the false rape allegations against the Scottsboro boys, and sexual violence against enslaved women. The author does not describe these instances graphically, but the sheer number of mentions can be triggering.
The protagonist often mentions his use of prostituted women.
Chappelle jokes that a man who threw a banana peel at him during a show is going to be raped in jail (around the 03:40 mark). Chappelle jokes about asking a woman to give him oral sex as repayment for her son’s hate crime (around the 10:00-10:10 mark). Chappelle mentions the alleged rapes committed by Bill Cosby between 18:30-18:40. He mentions this in passing again between 21:10 and 21:15. Chappelle jokes about an attempt that was made to extort him by threatening to release his sex tapes from an earlier relationship. Chappelle jokes about masturbating using his sleeping wife's feet from the 1:02:45 mark, saying 'you can't rape feet.' Worthy of note: Chappelle mentions the video which emerged of NFL athlete Ray Rice violently assaulting his girlfriend in an elevator from the 24:10 mark. At another point, he uses a slur to refer to a transgender woman and jokes about having publicly misgendered her while she was inebriated at a party, also making derogatory comments about her genitals.
Deep Red (Movie)
Two men hear a women scream at night (we later find out she was being murdered) and one of the men jokingly says: "Maybe someone is being raped." The men talk for a bit and the same man raises his beer and says "To the raped virgin!" Worthy of note: throughout the film, women are killed while they are alone and helpless.
Deep Rising (Movie)
A man makes several suggestive comments and later hits on a woman after he has taken her and the rest of the crew captive.
Defending Jacob (TV Show)
A website containing extreme and disturbing porn is mentioned a few times. The site's content is not really expanded upon. A brief discussion occurs regarding a girl who was drugged and kidnapped at a party. The event is maybe mentioned for 30 seconds and is not at all detailed.
The author discusses and describes the following: slaveholders' sexual violence against enslaved Africans, false rape accusations used as justification for lynching, sexual violence that took place during various riots, sexual violence at the hands of the police.
Déjà Vu (Movie)
A landlord implies to a child that he could excuse the child’s mother’s late rent if she slept with him. There is passing mention that an overseer coerces women workers into having sex with him.
Deliria (Movie)
The film follows the production of a play which includes fictional rape scenes. These scenes are fantastical and not very realistic. The producer of the play attempts quid-pro-quo sexual harassment but is rebuffed.
Delirium (Movie)
A brief scene from a movie shows a man entering an elevator and pinning a lone woman to the wall to strangle her. She quickly beats him up. Worthy of note: an archival footage shows a woman getting an abortion.
Deltarune (Video Game)
The optional "Snowgrave" route of chapter 2 has the player emotionally manipulate the character Noelle in a dynamic strongly implied to be romantic or romance-adjacent, but regardless it is certainly a toxic and dubiously consenting dynamic. If the player did the aforementioned "Snowgrave" route, there will be a scene in chapter 4 where Noelle talks to them about what happened in the 2nd chapter. Noelle believes the events of the chapter 2 and the emotional abuse she experienced were a dream, and the player is given the option to psychologically torment her by saying they can hear her thoughts and it wasn't a dream. If the player choose to do so, the scene ends with them forcibly putting a ring on Noelle's finger. The ring in question is called the "thorn ring," and it damages Noelle during battle.
As a convict's extensive criminal record is being displayed on screen, the word "rape" is selected and very clearly highlighted in the list of convictions.
Demon Lord 2099 (TV Show)
S1E9: a poster shows that sexually harassing maids in a maid cafe is not allowed. One of the characters says her friend was banned from the maid cafe because he kept harassing a maid. They request a maid with the biggest boobs and a highschool student shows up. This episode contains a lot of sexualization of a high school student. S1E10: the male protagonist is seen naked in the same onsen as a student.
One of the main characters is sometimes shown begging random girls to marry him, date him, etc. He is never violent or hostile, though he sometimes clings to or "chases" them. These scenes are always played for laughs, and are usually brief. S1E16: a man and a woman are shown to have an extremely physically abusive relationship, and she is terrified of him; it is unclear whether sexual violence also occurs. In a flashback, the man is shown seriously beating her as she cries and begs him to stop. Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba Entertainment District Arc S1E1: a man tries to kidnap two young girls so they can work as undercover agents in the entertainment district. When asked why he is doing it, a young girl witnessing the scene replies in a panicked voice "Hentai! Hentai!". This does not end up happening as three 15 year old boys volunteer to take on the job. At the end, the man smacks the behind of one of the girls. S1E2: it is discussed how young girls are sold in the entertainment district. The young boys dress up as girls and get sold to entertainment houses. There are multiple young girls seen working in these houses. However, they work as maids and are not shown in the presence of men. The boys also work as maids. S1E3: a man compliments one of the boys on his looks and asks what the ‘young girl’ is up to. He gets hit. S1E11: on a flashback from a 100 years ago, it is explained how a 13 year old girl stabbed a customer in the eye. She gets reprimanded and the head of the house tells the customer that she will send him another pretty girl. The scenes suggest that the man was about to do something to her, but she retaliated by stabbing him. They also suggest that during that time, girls as young as 13 years old would have to entertain men. However, none of it is explicitly shown on screen. Season 3: it is revealed that the master of the demon slayer corps was 13 and his wife to be was 17. They had their first child when he was 15 and she was 19. It was an arranged marriage. Worthy of note: In S1E7+8, a 14 year old girl is sexualized a lot. This might be upsetting to viewers.
The author discusses the common experience among disabled people of being touched without asking or of abled people asking them how or if they have sex.
Dennou Coil (TV Show)
S1E5: a girl mentions how a boy kept flipping her skirt when they were in third grade. She got revenge by pulling his pants down. This is not shown on screen. Later a sister pulls down the pants of her little brother, revealing his behind and gives him a spanking for being disobedient (there is no sexual intent). S1E6: mention of a stalker following children around. S1E7: a girl grabs another girl's leg and tells her to stand a certain way to get the right signal. She is uncomfortable and tells her to stop (no sexual intent). S1E11: an 11 year old boy is kissed by a young girl against his will. There is also a scene where he is shown naked from behind. Worthy of note: There are several scenes where the butts of underage boys is shown. However, they are portrayed in a comedic way.
Deo Eiteu Syo (TV Show)
S1E7: a tied up woman is forcefully kissed for a brief moment. She later castrates the man as an act of revenge (S1E8). Worthy of note: S1E4: the characters, who are playing a game where someone can order two people to do something, are ordered to kiss each other. One of them states that they have to mentally prepare first (17 minutes in). In the same game, someone is ordered to touch someone else's breasts. The guy rather chooses a punishment then touching the women (27 minutes in).
The Departed (Movie)
One of the lead characters spends time in prison. Later on, when talking to a therapist, it is implied that he may have been sexually assaulted in the showers of said prison (54:20-54:50). A character threatens to rape another character's girlfriend. Worthy of note: in a tense scene where a character is collecting protection money from a shopkeeper, he asks a young girl if she has gotten her period yet.
The main character’s middle-aged mother kisses his crush who is a teenaged boy, right after that teenaged boy had been talking about his maternal trauma. This is treated as weird and disturbing but not as assault.
There is very graphic dialogue relating to rapes and murders taking place.
Dept Q (TV Show)
S1E1: rape is briefly mentioned. S1E6: a man threatens a 17 teen year old, saying he will sexually traffic him and film him being abused. A man squeezes the leg of a minor. A man caresses and kisses an unconscious woman.
During a business dinner at a restaurant, one man (a client) makes an inappropriate proposal to the protagonist (a female advisor). Later on, another man exposes himself to the protagonist in the men's toilet of an business. Throughout the film, the sister of the protagonist (who is schizophrenic paranoid) claims that she is being abused (not sexually) by the staff of a psychiatric clinic.
Der Todesking (Movie)
Worthy of note: there is a depiction of genital mutilation in this film.
Derek (TV Show)
A character sometimes says sexually charged things to women and behaves in a dirty way. No physical harassment or cat-calling.
Derry Girls (TV Show)
S1E1: a sexual harassment case (a student-teacher assaulted by two female students) is mentioned (13:20). S1E4: a girls grabs a boy's face and begins very aggressively to kiss him without his consent. Throughout, he looks somewhat alarmed and uncomfortable and other characters do not intervene to get her off of him.
Des (TV Show)
The protagonist tells that he never raped any of the gay men he killed.
A girl gives a cookie with a love spell to a boy, so he could fall in love with her.
A cow is lasso'd and then kissed unconsentingly by a minion, for comedic intent.
Destroyer (Movie)
There is one mention that an inmate is killed for the rape and murder of 24 people. A woman complains that several male costars are being grabby during their scenes together. A man ties a woman up then caresses her legs and licks her face.
The protagonist molests a woman multiple times throughout the movie.
S1E1: the main protagonist tells a girl he would be able to see her panties if she stands from a particular angle. S1E5: the main protagonist mentions how he saw the panties of the female protagonist when she fell over. S1E8: the main protagonist comments that he saw pink and purple rabbits (referring to the underwear the girls are wearing). S1E9: a kid hugs a girl and then comments about her breasts being bigger than he thought. The main protagonist also makes a comment. S1E11: the main protagonist walks behind a girl and comments on the pattern of her underwear. It is not seen on screen. S1E24: the main protagonist makes a comment about a girls breasts. The girl hits him. He later on walks into a room while a girl is dressing. However, there was no sexual intent. S1E25: in the after credits, the main protagonist asks a girl to show him her panties if he wins next time. S1E29: bullies tell the female protagonist and another male character not to be in an explicit sexual relationship together. He later on says that they would get a lot of maniacs accessing the internet if they put her online. This is referring to murder videos going around. S1E32: this episode is about a groper on the train. It is not explicitly shown on screen.
Detroit (Movie)
As several people are forced to face a wall by abusive policemen who beat them to obtain a confession, one officer fondles a woman wearing a dress and puts his rifle between her thighs: she is shown to be very distressed. She and another woman are then threateningly taken to another room by a policeman who accidentally rips off the clothes of one of them. Men stares at her as she is trying to cover herself and fears that the policeman will abuse her. Another man eventually intervenes, helps her to cover herself and put both women in security. It is said several times that they are treated badly because they (white women) were in an hotel room with Black men.
The book references female auto workers being coerced into relationships with male foremen and the rapes of enslaved women.
A teenage male is pursued by and has sex with an adult middle aged woman.
Devil (Movie)
There is a scene where a woman’s butt is grabbed and another male character is accused.
This series is about a woman who escaped a cult. S1E6: it is implied that women in the cult stay unmarried in order to provide for "the [sexual] needs of the community".
A male character kisses the female protagonist on the cheek while she has a boyfriend and is being unreceptive to his advances. She plays this off to her friend like this is fine, but the interaction can be uncomfortable for some viewers. The same man takes her out on a date and afterwards kisses her. She gives multiple excuses for why she should not kiss/go home with him as he persists such as “I’ve had too much wine and my hearing, vision, judgement’s impaired.” “No, I barely know you. I’m in a strange city.” before saying “I’m out of excuses.” The scene then changes to his hotel room the morning after.
There is body horror of female genitals and breasts throughout the film: it is of note that the body horror is always of non-human characters. There are also two short scenes involving a minor being flirted with and touched by adult women. 29:31-30:12: body horror of female genitals. 40:00-40:09: woman flirts and pulls teenage boy away with her to dance, which he struggles to get away from. 41:33-41:40: teenage boy is pushed into woman's breasts. When he tries to get up, the woman pushes him back into her chest. 42:14-42:20: body horror of breasts.
This film contains nudity of minors throughout, particularly the accentuation of a teenage girl's body. There is also some sexual harassment between two teenagers. In a dream sequence, a girl slaps a boy's behind and asks if he is mad (19:47-19:59). In a dream sequence, a teenage boy rips a girl's blazer and the shot pans over her chest to show her breasts (21:10-21:15). A boy flips a girl's nightgown up and her underwear is shown: he does this to check if she is injured, but never tells her this, asks permission or lets her do this herself (21:49-21:54). A boy comments on a girl's breasts and underwear: she leaves his room angry (23:00-22:08). A sequence shows a girl taking a bath and a non-human character watching her. It becomes a part of the water she is bathing in (24:41-26:57). She becomes engulfed in the water and it takes her hostage (29:29-29:48).
It is implied that a man was forced to have sex with the director of an orphanage (woman) since his arrival 15 years earlier (as a child or at least as a teenager).
One musical number contains implications of the sexual abuse of a child by a parent.
Girls are raped and murdered by a serial killer. The main character is almost raped at the end of the book. Its implied another character is assaulted so often she begs to be killed.
Devil's Pass (Movie)
There is one discussion of how one of the men hooks up with women while hiking and films them: it is not made clear if that was always consensual or not. The next morning, that man films himself waking up his partner, who tells him to stop filming but she does not press it and they are interrupted before they can have sex again.
A camera is hidden in a tent and two people are unknowingly recorded having sex. Later while secretly following someone and filming, they come across the couple having sex again and continue filming.
During an interview, a cop mentions seeing a naked girl with blood on her surrounded by violent cultists (12:20-13:46) . No more details are given but it is worth mentioning because she was naked and the cop implies that whatever was done to the girl was something she did not want.
S1E1-3: someone holds a woman captive and watches her. S1E1: a woman who appears to be a teen has sex with a drunk billionaire who is an adult. We do not know how old she is but she asks the main character not to tell her dad, which probably means she is a teen. S1E3: a group of high-school boys pretend to be a teenage girl and send nudes to another boy. S1E6: a main character talks about someone trying to molest him. S1E7: one character talks about his dad beating up women while he had sex with them and he watched.
Dheepan (Movie)
One main character watches another while she is nude without her consent and, later, kisses her multiple times while she expressly tells him to stop.
Diabolik Lovers (TV Show)
This show contains forced biting and non-consensual licking as well as kissing.
At the beginning of the film, a boy watches a girl in the shower without her consent.
Dickinson (TV Show)
S1E5: a man touches a female character’s face and she is visibly uncomfortable. Sexual assault is implied as a man enters a woman's room (the nanny to his children) and locks the door. Nothing is explicitly shown as the shot pans to her panicked face then fades to another scene.
The force-feeding of suffragettes on hunger strike in prison is likened to rape.
The protagonist uses binoculars to look at a woman in a bikini. This happens on a public beach and she keeps walking around in bikini in full view of people, so obviously does not mind being seen that way, but he did not know that at the time. The protagonist and a female spy make out in order to seem unsuspicious to security guards, with her obviously not enjoying it and only doing it out of necessity. When the security guards are gone, he does not tell her about this and pretends they are still being watched just so he has an excuse to keep kissing her.
An underage character uses magic to disguise herself as an adult in order to kiss/flirt with adults. They are unaware that she is actually a teenager, and nothing more than kissing occurs. The same character also repeatedly flirts with her vice principal, who does not reciprocate. Both of these things are played for comedy. There are also references to an adult man (likely early-mid 20s) having relationships with high school girls.
One character tries to cheat on her husband, and when she gets caught, she says that she has been taken advantage of. The main character gets catcalled and harassed by fellow students multiple times. Male characters briefly look at playboy magazines. The main character is told to lift up her shirt and act provocatively as a distraction, by her love interest. Prison rape is joked about. A young naive girl asks her crush to “violate” her. They proceed to have consensual sex.
The Diplomat (TV Show)
S1E6: it is mentioned that forces are "raping their way through Libya".
S1E6: a man gropes a woman in a club (21:00). S2E6: characters are put under a 'magically intoxicating' love spell and when they wake up, it is implied that there was an orgy. Worthy of note: in S1E1, a woman is tied to a bed. While it is not sexual, she is seen struggling and the imagery may still be upsetting.
The Dirt (Movie)
Dirty 30 (Movie)
This movie is a romance between a 17-year-old girl and a 25-year-old man. Part of the plot involves a woman getting an abortion in bad conditions (not shown on-screen): we see her afterwards, injured by the botched abortion and needing medical care. The man who got her pregnant refuses to help her: he also makes a pass at one character, who gets away from him.
Dirty God (Movie)
A woman touches a man on his buttocks as she walks passed him. A woman is the victim of revenge porn at work.
Dirty Grandpa (Movie)
Dirty Harry (Movie)
The main character mentions shooting an attempted rapist.
Dirty Money (TV Show)
S1E2: a crude description of rape is used as a metaphor for unfair treatment by a loan company.
An actress has to perform a sex scene with an actor who insists they both be completely naked, but the actress is clearly uncomfortable with this.
There is a scene where one of the main protagonists does things that make it seem like he might be a paedophile, which alarms the other protagonists, but the joke is that he is not actually a paedophile, he just has an intimidating demeanor. There is a recurring character who frequently violates women's consent, which is always played for laughs. While the character is arguably presented as somewhat sympathetic, other characters frequently voice their disapproval of his actions. There is a reacurring plot point in which one of the female main characters (a teenage girl) has an older brother who tries to force his romantic affection onto her. She is frequently shown to be uncomfortable with this, sometimes actively rebuffing him. While the protagonist disapproves and sometimes tries to undermine the brother's efforts, no other action is taken to resolve the situation. There is a character who is a teacher that gets into situations which make it seem like he might be a paedophile, which the teenage characters are concerned by, but the comedic subversion is that he is not actually a paedophile. Worthy of mention: the (teenage) main character's grandfather is a 'tsundere' with his affection towards his grandson, and is shown getting very excited by his visits. While he does not say or do anything inherently paedohpilic, his actions are parodying a romantic trope, which can lead to some scenes that may be uncomfortable to watch.
Disparu a Jamais (TV Show)
S1E2: dialogue with talk of prostitution and drugging someone to take advantage of them (around 34-38 minutes).
District 9 (Movie)
The film contains multiple references to inter-species prostitution.
Disturbia (Movie)
There's several scenes in this film involving voyeurism, and peeping at other people through binoculars without their consent.
A scene in the book in which the protagonist is kidnapped, it is debated on weather or not the aim was to kill the character or rape/assault them before killing. The main character (16, female) and their Instructor (18, male) engage in a relationship, however they do not have sex and the relationship is very healthy. Worthy of note: the love interest (18, male) experiences physical abuse from his father which is vividly discussed. Though no sexual abuse occurs this may be triggering for some viewers.
This film is set in the era of American slavery: Black characters are treated as chattel, with the specific implication that black women can be treated as sexual objects for the pleasure of men up to and including rape.
Rape or sexual assault is not mentioned explicitly, but the alter ego of the main character talks about women and "his sexual encounters" in a demeaning way.
Do Revenge (Movie)
The whole story of this film is based on revenge porn A girl makes up that another girl tried to hold her down and kiss her. Worthy of note: people dose an entire party with mushrooms.
A character tells a man to stay away from his sister because he thinks that he is a threat to her. After a woman declines having sex with her boyfriend, he physically makes sexual advances and manipulates her into performing a different sexual act despite her verbally declining multiple times.
Doctor Foster (TV Show)
S2E3: the protagonist's son assaults a classmate.
Doctor Sleep (Movie)
The whole film contains subtext, imagery and sometimes references to pedophilia. One character has been molested as a child and takes revenge by setting up men seeking young girls. "Turning" of one character (bringing him to evil side) bears visual resemblance to gang rape. A man talking with a 13 year old girl says they cannot talk long in public because "adult man with a teenage girl doesn't not go over well nowadays". Later in the film, the girl's dad confronts the man thinking that there relationship is inappropriate. An adult man goes on a date with a 15 year old girl.
S2E1: forced marriage. S2E4: a man seduced a woman under false pretenses. The last two episodes of season 2 contains an offspring conceived without either parties knowledge or consent. They just suddenly have a child due to wobbly timey wimey stuff.
Someone asks suggestively if female hostages are being abused.
Dog Eat Dog (Movie)
Rape is mentioned at the beginning of the movie. Midway through the movie, a man forcibly kisses a woman at gunpoint.
Dogma (Movie)
A female character is frightened that she is going to be raped when a man breaks into her home. It is played for laughs as the character is an angel and physically incapable of sexual contact. His lack of genitals is shown onscreen. There are several other rape jokes throughout the film.
Dogtooth (Movie)
A woman gives another woman a present in return for sexual favours: yet, the woman does not realise the act she is performing is sexual. A brother and a sister, who clearly lack a comprehensive sexual education and are unaware of a healthy sexual relationship and consent, have sex. The elder sister is clearly uncomfortable during the scene. There is no power dynamic aside from their parents orchestrating it. Multiple incestuous sexual scenes are shown in the film.
In “Act 2” of the game, one of the main characters unconsensually brings the player’s hand to her chest, before saying that she “just wants to look at you.” She then stares at the player for a short amount of time, looking him up and down before another character interrupts. The player has no dialogue during this scene, therefore no consent was given. Later on (during the same act), one of the main characters states to the player that she stole his pen without his knowledge, and masturbates using it while thinking about him. The scene continues, with various dialogue strongly hinting at the character’s obsession with the player.
Rape is used several times as a punchline by the main character.
Dolls (1987) (Movie)
A man is mistaken to be a pedophile, a rapist, and a murderer.
Dolls (2019) (Movie)
A seventeen year old and an adult flirt and make out.
Overall the film has practically no sexual themes, but it is stressed that the mother was “only 15” and that the father took her away. Yet, it is not specified how old he was. This can feel kind of uncomfortable or seems to imply an age gap. A young Dolly mention that she has no clothes on under her coat: a group of bigger kids crowd her, rip her coat off, lift her off of her feet and lock her in a closet.
Domain (2016) (Movie)
Rape is briefly mentioned in a prison context.
Don Jon (Movie)
A man kisses a woman very aggressively; she has to push him off multiple times and tell him to stop. He then proceeds to try to track her down online without her consent.
Don Juan (Movie)
A man tries to publicly shame a woman by throwing her into a pool against her will. Later, he orders another woman to undress and slaps her several times after she refuses.
Don't Blink (Movie)
At 01:11:30, one of the characters, on the brink of madness, mentions rape during a crazed monologue. Nothing further occurs.
A man mixes a woman's drink a lot stronger than his own, seemingly with the intent of getting her more drunk than he is and taking advantage of her. However, he doesn't make any actual advances.
One character says "I have raped".
Don't Click (Movie)
The plot of this movie revolves around pornographic website featuring videos of women being tortured and murdered.
Though there is no actual assault or harassment in the book, there are several references to past events or potential events. - Several mentions of hidden cameras that a male school employee put in the girl's locker room and bathrooms (known from events in the previous book); - Mention of how the same man previously worked at a funeral home and took naked photos of dead women; - Concerns that a male doctor would grope a patient while treating them so another woman stays nearby just in case; - Brief reference to past incestual sexual assault (known from the previous book); - Reference to sexual abuse at residential schools; - Video of people who flash British Royal Guards as a means to get them to lose focus; - Mention of when an older teen put his hand on a younger teen girl's thigh before the girl's mother drew him away; - Mentions of rumors of a male high school teacher and female student being in a relationship. It's later discovered that he tried to get sexual favors from her in exchange for information.
The main character becomes a target for increasingly severe death threats throughout the course of the book for having won an award related to her role in a video game. This hostility spills over into the offline world when certain individuals who also play the video game doxx her friend in one instance, and chase and attempt to brutalize her in other instances. A person who works for the company who gave her the award and to whom the main character attempts to report this harassment is dismissive of her experience and even threatens to rescind the award.
S1E3: mention of rape. Worthy of note: sexual assault is not discussed in the documentary, but one of the crimes (if you were to look it up for further detail), involved the sexual assault of the victim's corpse.
A man tries to sneak into a couple's tent so he could watch them have sex. A man takes photos of a woman swimming, then he watches her and masturbates.
Don't Hang Up (Movie)
One of the protagonists makes vaguely sexual comments to people over the phone. A man films a sexual encounter with a woman without her knowledge and it is implied that he does this routinely.
An abusive boyfriend stands over his girlfriend’s sleeping friend and thinks/fantasizes about sexually assaulting her. The spectators hears his thoughts, about what he wants to do and why he feels he has a right to do it. He pulls her blanket down and it is unclear whether he stops or not because it cuts away (54:40-55:30).
Don't Look Up (Movie)
A trump-esq news scandal is mentioned whereby a politician has exposed himself to someone and became aroused. Another moment occurs where one character attempts to kiss another and it is rejected however this is a lighthearted moment.
Don't Move (Movie)
The female lead is approached in the woods by a stranger out on a hike. She is weary of him at first but gradually warms up to him, as he appears harmless. In the parking lot, it is revealed that the man has intentionally parked his car close to hers, so she cannot get in. He then corners her under the guise of wanting to help but she sees his intentions and is clearly becoming concerned. He corners her and uses a taser to knock her unconscious, zip-ties her hands and feet, and kidnaps her. She comes too in his car and he reveals that he intends to hold her hostage in his cabin. His exact intentions aren't revealed but it's implied he planned on torturing her in some way for 2 entire days before killing her. It is also implied several times throughout the movie that he has done this with other women in the past. When she attempts to make a getaway, he reveals she has been poisoned and in a matter of minutes, her body will shut down - this becomes the central point of the movie and she spends the majority of the runtime hereonout almost completely paralyzed. She is found by a good samaritan, who takes her in and offers to call the police. The main villain catches up and tells an elaborate lie about the female lead being his wife, giving false reasons for her paralyzed state. He does this multiple times throughout the story. The main villain ends up finding the female lead in the good samaritan's house (still paralyzed) and kidnaps her for a second time. Later on, she tries asking another bystander for help, but she is once again unsuccessful.
It is mentioned that a woman is given a date rape drug. Nothing is described in detail.
This is a coming of age comedy about a teen girl pretending to be an adult so that she can work in a corporate job. In a side plot, she experiences unwanted sexual advances (verbal, and gifts) from a sleezy colleague who does not know she is a minor and who does not seem to be in touch with reality (she is not interested but he does not seem to grasp this). She stands up to him throughout the film and (spoiler) he is exposed for being the creep that he is.
Doom (Movie)
There is a male character who is a general creep: he verbally harasses a male teammate and later a several women.
Doom 3 (Video Game)
In a PDA audio-log, a lab staff begrudgingly admits that many co-workers make sexually harassing comments toward her, and that when she took this complaint to upper management; she is told to "Not worry" her "pretty little head about it". The scene is handled seriously as it is a recounting from the victim and is not played for laughs.
Doomsday (Movie)
There is a brief general mention of a past rape. A man forcibly kisses a woman who he has tied up.
Dorian Gray (Movie)
There is a sex scene involving large age gaps between a male character and his two partners, who are mother and (possibly underage) daughter. The mother and daughter are not in the scene at the same time, but it is implied that the male character has sex with one of them immediately after the other.
Dormitabis (Video Game)
The villain talks about how he raped a 15 year old girl.
Dos (Movie)
Doukyuusei (Movie)
It is implied that an adult male teacher has been developing an interest in one of the male students he is teaching. He begins to sensually caress his face and tries to kiss him, until one of his classmates intervenes (21:40-23:20). Although the boy does not seem irritated. There are instances where the protagonist kisses the love interest at a time when the interest is clearly hesitant/unwilling to accept his advances. At times the protagonist also oversteps the love interest's boundaries and behaves in a fashion which might be perceived as sexually intimidating and aggressive. A teacher tries to kiss one of the students but it is broken up by another student walking in and stopping the teacher. Another scene later on features the same teacher talking explicitly about sex with one of these two students yet again. These students are maybe 17-18,. The rest of the manga also features heavy topics about student/teacher relationships.
The protagonist is a Chinese American young woman living in Atlanta, Georgia in 1890. Throughout the book, many characters, strangers and acquaintances alike, sexualize and fetishize her. There is passing mention of Chinese men paying for mail order brides that are younger than the protagonist (i.e. younger than 17). While the protagonist and a male character are walking together, a stranger addresses the latter, saying, "enjoy that fine piece of arse." An antagonist character attempts to intimidate the protagonist by having her meet him in a brothel while he is taking a bath. Towards the beginning of the book, there is discussion of a news story about the "rabid eyes rapist," a Chinese man who was accused of raping a white woman. We later find out that this was a false accusation.
The narrator is a vampire who hunts people that she believes are bad. There are some brief and non-graphic mentions of rape and abuse as she mentions why she is hunted/killed someone to feed from them.
Dr. No (Movie)
A woman is forcefully kissed despite her open reluctance. She then has consensual sex with the same person. In another scene, another woman describes being raped. She is then berated for her revenge on her aggressor.
In one of the scenes between the stories, while a man is tied to a chair, a woman rubs his legs while trying to goad him into having sex with her. In another scene he is forcibly kissed by a different woman.
Dr. Stone (TV Show)
S3E1: a man dressed like a woman is cornered by another man who him that he is gonna teach him first before he is allowed to see the master. The first character, scared, says that he is male but the other man does npt believe him. Before anything happens, the man hears commotion and leaves. S3E8: zhere is mention of girls that are 18 years old being forced to marry a village master. S3E9: a girl is picked up roughly. Her husband begs for her not to be taken away. There are other girls that are chosen to be taken to the palace. They look afraid. Later on, the antagonist nearly touches the breasts of one of the girls. She stops him as he is reaching. Worthy of note: a character fantasizes about two sisters being romantically involved. A female character is tackled by a a male character. As he holds her stomach side down the the ground, she tells him to "Watch where you put your hands."
S1E1: a human wants to rape an elf who he thinks is a runaway slave. She is rescued by her human friend.
Dragon Ball (TV Show)
Multiple male characters repeatedly sexually harass female characters (some of whom are teenagers) by peeping, leering, asking to see their panties, or attempting to grope them. The general tone of these incidents is comedic, and the male characters are often called out for being perverted or are hit.
Dragon Ball GT (TV Show)
The show's intro has a scene involving a naked child. A child protagonist is captured by a villain and turned into a doll. The villain lifts her shirt up to change it and is surprised to see she does not have developed breasts and quickly pulls her shirt back down. A baby deer attempts to breastfeed from a child.
Dragon Ball Z (TV Show)
S3E7: a major male antagonist physically corners, mockingly caresses the face of and taunts an opposing female character before killing her. The scene has clear undertones of sexual harassment. S6E6: Ii a flashback, a man corners his wife holds her down to collect her tears against her will. It is tested as a heinous act.
DragonHeart (Movie)
A woman is kept prisoner by a man. He forcibly kisses her, and many interactions might be upsetting. She does escape, though the villain makes a point of chasing after her.
Chapter 2: rape is referred to twice. Chapter 4: a young adult woman is asked to strip in front of a pseudo-parental/authority figure.
The main characters are formerly enslaved women and because of their race, there are several implications of rape and sexual abuse. The main character is trapped by men on several occasions. She is a teenager while they are adult men.
A significant background character fled an unhappy arranged marriage that is implied to have been abusive in ways unspecified. She was pregnant at the time.
In the sixth story (Stained Affection), a man breaks into a woman's house and runs his hand up the her body, over her clothes.
Rape is mentioned once. One dream starts as potentially sexually threatening.
Dream SMP (TV Show)
During earlier parts of the series, there are a lot of uncomfortable and unwanted sexual comments towards some of the characters.
Dreamgirls (Movie)
A male stage manager casually touches a female performers' behind towards the beginning of the film. Two male characters initiate relationships with underage female performers.
DreamKiller (Movie)
An inmate mentions being able to hear the noises of other inmates being raped.
Dreamland (Movie)
Worthy of note : a teenager tries to spy on a woman who is changing clothes.
Dredd (Movie)
A crime boss is mentioned to have once been a prostitute, who bit off her pimp's genitals after he scarred her face. The same crime boss instructs her men to kill a law enforcement officer quickly and simply, instructing: "No skinning, no raping." One character has telepathic abilities; a man intentionally imagines the two of them having violent sex in an effort to make her uncomfortable. In his imagined scene, it's deliberately unclear whether it's simply rough sex, or him raping her. The image of them is hazy and unclear.
The Drifters (Movie)
A woman talks about how her stepdad started looking at her inappropriately when she was younger.
Drive Angry (Movie)
The male owner of a diner presses up against the back of a waitress and reaches down between her legs implying that she ill need to have sex with him to cover the cost of some food. It is stated that it is not the first time he has done that to her, but she fights him off and leaves. After getting home and finding her boyfriend cheating on her, a woman drags the other woman outside while she is still naked. After punching her and knocking her on the ground, a man comes up and takes pictures of her. While in a fight a man forcibly kisses a woman.
First story: a woman tells a story about how the night before a man drugged and raped her.
Drive My Car (Movie)
During an audition for a play, a man kisses a woman (as part of the action) despite it being their first encounter and without warning her beforehand. It is later revealed through a news broadcast that the above-mentioned male character had a relation with a minor. In one of the final scenes of the film, a character tells a story in which a man breaks into a house and attempts to rape a woman, but the woman in the story fights back and kills him.
The movie is mostly light-hearted and comedic. There is one moment at a fancy event where the main character (who is an imaginary friend) slides around on the floor and looks up a woman's dress. She is unaware, meaning that this is non-consensual, but it's clear that the character doesn't actually exist and thus that this event never really happened.
Druck (TV Show)
S2E7-10: sexual assault is a major theme in season 2, with the main narrator (just turned 18) getting drunk and harassed by an older man. She later reports it to the police and interacts with her harasser to confront him.
In the beginning of the movie, a junkie asks a woman how much he should pay to have sex with her. She rebuffs him. Later, a policeman looking for a drug dealer is mistaken for a peeper.
Drunk History (TV Show)
S5E11 (The Middle Ages): rape joke.
About 12 minutes into the movie, the protagonist forces his ex-lover to undress and beats her (off-screen) because she cheated on him while he was in prison.
Duck Butter (Movie)
A woman mentions how she recorded her ex-boyfriend and her having sex and then threatened to release the tape if he did not pay for something she wanted.
Duck Soup (Movie)
On of the characters touches a woman inappropriately and she asks him to stop. The same man also charges into a woman's house while she is alone, but we do not see anything happen.
A blind boy touches the breasts of a woman under the guise of touching her face to "see" her. There is use of homophobic and anti-transgender language. A secondary character is a transwoman and is referred to as a "dude".
Duel (Movie)
A wife tells her husband that a man 'almost raped her in front of the whole party' and that her husband should have done something. He does not seem to take her seriously.
A woman looks through a keyhole at another woman undressing. We learn that this is part of sex game the women like to play. Worthy of note: a woman says her safe word and another woman continues on with the scene, ignoring her. This is not in a sexual situation but it is still a violation that is repeated throughout the film.
Dune (2021) (Movie)
Antagonists plan on raping a woman before killing her: they are stopped before they touch her (01:27:50-01:28:30).
An antagonist makes a menacing, suggestive comment about the protagonist's love interest during a duel. It is implied that an older character is attracted to his grandson and even kisses him. [To be confirmed]: It could be argued that a woman uses mind control to force a man to have sex with her.
Dungeon People (TV Show)
S1E10: it is mentioned that goblins reproduce by capturing women from other races and reproducing with them. The female protagonist seems upset by this. It is later on revealed that this way or reproducing is not used anymore S1E11: a man mentions creating an opening to attack by ripping a woman's clothes off. This does not end up happening.
A male prisoner is put into a cell with another man and a woman. He speaks suggestively towards the woman but she quickly knocks him out.
Dynasty (2017) (TV Show)
S2E1: a woman's uncle offers to settle a deal if she agrees to sleep with him. S2E21: discussion of non-consensual touching. In season four, a male character is harassed by a business partner and later poses as bait for him to say something incriminating. This includes groping and touching. SPOILER: two characters have sex and later get engaged, not knowing that they are half cousins.
A man grabs a woman by the face and kisses her: it is implied that the woman is ok with the kiss, but there is no obvious consent given before it. Later, the same woman is slapped twice across the face and pushed over by an abusive boyfriend.
The main female character holds a nurse up at gun point and forces her to undress: her aim is to steal her uniform, but she assumes she is going to be sexually assaulted. There is also a patient in the room who is in a full body cast, and who refuses to press the help button because he wants to watch what happens.
Earth Mama (Movie)
Earthfall (Movie)
Two men hold two women hostage at gunpoint and imply that they are going to rape them. One of the men rubs one of the woman's legs but they are rescued shortly after.
Earwig (Movie)
A man asks a doctor to perform a gynecological exam on a woman whilst she is unconscious for surgery, to check if she has any STIs.
The opening dialogue is a man, working as children's photographer, telling a 5 year old to get in contact when she is 20 (00:50). It is played as a joke and in a light hearted tone. At 56 minutes into the movie there is a scene where it is implied that a man in a park is trying to abduct/interfere with a small child. It is played for laughs and is dealt with in a light-hearted tone.
Eat Pray Love (Movie)
A random man slaps a woman’s butt as he walks past her (40:15-40:20): the woman’s friend just laughs it off and the situation is not mentioned again.
Echo (TV Show)
S1E 1: a security guard gropes the main character during a pat down. She beats him up.
A man and woman are flirting and the man tries to feel her up, but she stops him. He playfully tries a couple more times and then finally stops.
Ed Wood (Movie)
A woman walks into a crowded movie theatre, where she is verbally harassed and groped.
Eden of the East (TV Show)
Eden Lake (Movie)
A teen boy harasses the main woman by showing her his flaccid penis.
A main plot point of the films is that a woman trades her body/sex for food and safety.
In the first part of the movie (30 first minutes), a old man visits a prostitute. He later "hires" her to live and have sex with him. She accepts because she has been threatened by two Muslims for the work she does. One day, the old man gets drunk and tries to have sex with her. When she refuses, he gets angry and kills her.
A boy pressures a girl to have sex in a car, but she pushes him off and leaves.
An antagonist is strongly implied to be a serial killer who rapes his victims. At one point, he drugs the main character and attempts to mutilate his genitals, getting as far as unbuttoning his pants, but is interrupted. In a flashback, a psychologist suggests the main character (a child at the time) has a sleep disorder as a result of PTSD from sexual abuse. The theory is unfounded and the main character was not sexually abused.
Chapter 25: during a tournament, a prize offers a night with a captive human.
A woman expresses sexual attraction towards the titular character. She leads him to the back of her shop, and he is unaware of what she is doing. She then sits on top of him and begins to strip: he panicks and leaves the scene. This is played for laughs. Later, he mentions it to his "family", who is rather schocked and does not make a comment about it. While two women are on the phone talking about how the main family is still having a Christmas party, one of them says: "He practically raped us, you know?".
The movie is mainly about a woman who had sex with a man while drunk (without remembering it) and who tries to escape his revenge-porn blackmail. In one of the final scenes of the movie, the spectator is led to think that the same scene happened again, but it eventually turns out that it is not the case. Another main character's storyline is him fantasizing about an 'exotic girl' trying to sell him something on the phone. He masturbates while talking to her without her knowledge. In the final part of the film, he even tries to meet her against her will, but it eventually turns out that she is only a computer.
The adult protagonist makes a bet to seduce a significantly younger woman (age is unclear but around 18, so possibly still a child) despite her being happily engaged. The protagonist arranges for the woman to accompany him and others to a secluded place in the countryside to seduce her. The protagonist repeatedly watches the woman bathe without her consent and paints the scene in secret. It is framed positively. After losing the bet, the protagonist is forced to have sex with the woman he made the bet with.
A college professor smacks a college student on the ass. A man casually mentions having committed rape before and thinking of doing it again. There are also rape jokes.
There are multiple instances of grabbing and verbal harassment done to several women by a hijacker in quick succession, one of which is especially intense. A Woman is called a “whore” by multiple passengers. An harasser is lead to a trap and is then shot and killed.
The protagonist, an eighth grader, learns that the boy she has a crush on recently broke up with his last girlfriend because she refused to send him nude pictures of herself. The main character proceeds to tell the boy she has a folder of nude photos intended for her future boyfriend on her phone and he is interested. He asks her if she gives blow jobs and she responds that she does and she is good at them. Later, the girl is seen watching YouTube videos about how to give oral sex. They are not graphic. Minutes later, the girl goes into the kitchen and takes a banana. She brings the banana up to her mouth, obviously intending to practice giving oral sex, but her father enters the kitchen and asks why she is holding a banana when she hates to eat them. The girl proceeds to try and eat the banana, clearly disgusted, but spits it back out and leaves. The scene is played for comedy. Later on, the main character is given a ride home by a male high school senior (age unknown, but he could be a legal adult). Shortly after the only other high schooler gets out of the car, the driver pulls over and gets into the backseat with the main character. He pressures her into playing a game of truth or dare, taking his shirt off and trying to get her to do the same. The main character grows increasingly uncomfortable and when the high schooler touches her, she shouts no. She apologizes several times and the high schooler gets back into the driver's seat. He is upset and guilts the main character, telling her she is going to feel ashamed when a boy her age finds out she is inexperienced, and that he was 'only trying to do her a favour'. The main character is dropped off at home, where she goes to her room and starts to sob; her father attempts to console her. The scenes are played very seriously. Bo Burnham, the writer and director, stated (regarding the car scene) during a Q and A after the early screening that scenes dealing with anything sexual were on closed, tightly controlled sets. Even if the banana scene plays 'funny' it was not funny on set, but handled respectfully. Burnham claimed he wanted to portray a sort of 'intelligence' in teenage males, rather than the 'brutish jock type' typically seen taking advantage of younger girls. He recognizes that even if nothing physically violent took place, the car scene depicts something terribly violating.
Ejecta (Movie)
A woman implies through metaphor that a man will be raped in jail.
About halfway through the movie, it is mentioned that indigenous women were raped by colonizers.
Near the end of the movie, the protagonist (the boss of a company) uses the (extra-martial) relationship between two of his employees to fire a man, by pretending that he was sexually harassing her (which is false, but she has to comply to it). The protagonist (a mans in his fifties) entertains relationships with female trainees (in their twenties) from his own business: he is seen stalking them and looking inappropriately at them. The movie shows one consensual sexual encounter between him and a female trainee.
A group of men hires strippers. Nothing more is shown, but when the women leave, the men ask them to stay and to take their clothes off. They refuse and leave.
El Caso Asunta (TV Show)
Elden Ring (Video Game)
Miquella and Mohg's subplot: a character kidnaps and develops an obsession over another; seeking to become their "consort". The victim in question has the body of a child and is the half-brother of the kidnapper, it is unclear whether or not the dynamic is sexually abusive, but predatory, obsessive and possessive language is used, the victim is entirely unresponsive.
The game has little exploration of sexual themes, but there might be a few offhand comments from NPCS as well as a quest in Anvil. An NPC mentions necrophilia and asks the player player how much the fine is for it, implying to have practiced it in a different place. There is a quest (The Siren's Deception) in Anvil where women are posing as prostitutes but are in actuality luring men to an abandoned house to rob them. They trick the men into stripping before robbing them and boast about how they're never caught because the men are always too ashamed to report them. The women are caught and killed if the player does not do the quest.
SPOILERS: A main character finds unwanted sexual comments written on her school books; it turns out that this character’s stepdad was the one who wrote these comments. The stepdad threatens to sexually assault this character and she has to escape from the situation.
It is implied that a female character was raped by her ex-boyfriend. It is also implied that she is the product of rape.
The movie depicts a relationship between an adult and a student in a way that might be triggering: In flashbacks at the beginning of the movie, we see an adult teacher seduce one of his students. He describes how "her pussy gets so wet" to his (male, adult) friend. A different teacher is uncomfortable with the student because of this in a way that is sexually charged. Later in the movie, the teacher fantasizes about the student while having sex with his wife.
Electric Dreams (TV Show)
S1E10/11/12: a teacher says that he is falsely accused of sexually assaulting his female students in his previous school. Blurred flashbacks are shown but with no sexual assault scene. It is not fully clear if he actually did commit the crime (biased flashback) or if that the girls wanted to hurt the reputation of their teacher.
Elena of Avalor (TV Show)
S1E6: a man constantly hits on the titular character even though she shows no interest.
A couple of sex workers forcibly plant kisses on the titular character.
The female lead is forced to marry a man or she may be killed, while the man does not rape her, she expresses discomfort with how close he gets and the way he touches her.
Elizabeth (Movie)
A man kisses a woman out of the blue and says something sexual: she seems flustered (~1:00:30).
Elling (Movie)
Rape is mentioned but not part of the storyline.
The author discusses Bill Clinton's sexual assault of Monica Lewinsky, rape allegations against Bill Cosby, rape allegations against Donald Trump, Donald Trump's blaming the Exonerated Five for the rape of the Central Park Jogger, false rape allegations by white women against Black men, rape by slaveholders against slaves, and Eldritch Cleaver's admission of intentionally raping women in his book Soul on Ice.
Elsbeth (TV Show)
The season involves a college professor sleeping with his students in return for giving them the best parts in a play. When he is threatened with exposing, he murders one of them. S2E13: sexual harassment. S2E18: there are unwanted sexual advances that end in the victim being murdered. The murder is off screen, but almost everything is shown including her dead bloody body. S2E20: sexual harassment happens on-screen and people talk about it.
Throughout the film, the female protagonist is approached by different men hitting on her despite her visible disinterest (following her, speaking to her even if she does not answer, dancing with her, etc.).
A government agent captures a woman and later kisses her forehead while stroking and smelling her hair and saying that she should be his wife; she resists his attention. A man is told to go kill a woman and her child. He goes to where they are being kept. He tells the woman to come to him or he'll kill her child and tells her he'll "be gentle", implying he plans to rape her.
About halfway through the movie, the main characters encounter the leader of a religious cult married to an apparently teenage girl. Worthy of note: just before this sequence, a scene set in the same location features children abuses (a priest whip them for their 'bad behaviour').
Emelie (Movie)
The film contains many uncomfortable scenes: the main antagonist replacing a tampon in front of a child; watching porn of their father infront of said children and implied genital mutilation.
Emergency (Movie)
There is mention of slaves being raped. The author discusses a desire to create a world where rape does not happen.
Emilia Pérez (Movie)
Rape is mentioned once at 01:23:21.
Emily in Paris (TV Show)
In earlier seasons an adult woman sleeps with a 17 year old. It is legal in his country. S3E8 : there is a very brief mention of a female main character admitting that she was sexually harassed by a superior years ago and confronting her abuser. She emphasizes later that she regrets having had a relationship with said man when she was younger. Season 4 includes a boss serially assaulting his employees.
Emma (1996) (Movie)
Whilst riding in a carriage alone with a man, the protagonist is unpleasantly surprised when the man moves to sit next to her and takes her hand, confessing his love for her. She rejects him and tells him to let go of her hand, and changes seats in the carriage, but he moves to sit next to her again as he persists in expressing his feelings. After some back-and-forth rejection, the man goes back to his seat and they sit in silence for the rest of the ride (39:07-41:57). Worthy of note: a group of gypsies attack one of the female protagonists, but not sexually, and she is quickly saved (1:23:57-1:24:37).
During a carriage ride, a man passionately confesses his love for the protagonist and tries to get close to her persistently: she rejects him and moves away from him more than once (25:40-28:00).
After kissing, a woman tries to leave but a man grabs her and forces her to stay. She continues to struggle and tell him to stop but he does not let her go until she knees him in the groin.
The female protagonist (struggling with bipolar disorder) engages in multiple sex acts with her boss during the first 30 minutes of the movie. The scenes start abruptly and it is very dubious that she consiously consents, being clearly uncomfortable. In the first scene, he asks her to perform oral sex on him and she refuses; in the second one, she rebuffs him twice when he tries to engage sex. The fact that he is her boss and that he serves as a monitor of her mental health for social services means that the power dynamic is extremely skewed. She eventually exposes him in front of his wife and his employees.
The Empress (TV Show)
S1E2: the titular character is forced to be checked over by a male doctor to make sure her hymen is still intact (28:00-30:52). She is surrounded by another man and a group of ladies watching over her. Shot only shows her from the waist up: she shows visible discomfort and begins to breathe very deeply and starts to tear up quietly. She kicks the doctor away but she has no choice but to lay down again. She cries as she endures the procedure and holds firmly onto another woman’s hand. Lather, there is a conversation about the abovementioned procedure between the victim and a spectactor (33:40). The victim disagrees that the procedure was part of duty and is encouraged to change her beliefs.
One of the main characters is forced into a political marriage, and then essentially placed under house arrest to keep her out of the way once she has given the emperor a child. Nothing physical is shown, but she is clearly upset about her situation.
En Roue Libre (Movie)
This comedy is about a woman (in a state of psychological distress) who finds herself trapped in her car with a younger, unstable man. His behaviour is erratic and he becomes violent towards her several times throughout the movie (slapping her, holding her by the throat, threatening her with a gun, taking her wallet/smartphone in her jacket after having tied her hands up, etc.). At one point the male protagonist, while forcing the female protagonist to speak with a psychiatrist at gunpoint, suggests that she might have been sexually assaulted by an uncle when she was a child (which is not the case). This is played for laughs.
Encanto (Movie)
There is a very brief mention of a telenovela involving a romantic relationship between an aunt and a nephew (57:22-57:35). Later on, a woman who was planned to marry a man explains that she was only doing it to please her family: this ends up not happening.
The Endgame (TV Show)
S1E1: a character discusses someone liberating a village where a warlord was raping women..
The Endless (Movie)
A character asks that another character perform a sexual act in exchange for something he needs, however it is quickly redacted. There is a discussion of a previous relationship between a young boy and an adult woman.
S1E3: a young girl asks why wear men condoms (she does not know the name, and describes them). It is an ambiguous scene; she could have heard of them from somewhere and is just curious, or it could be a hint that she has been sexually abused in the past.
The older sister of the main character constantly goes on questionable tangents about her and her fiancée's younger sister. It leans into harassment towards the latter, and is played for laughs as the older sister is worshipped at school for being seemingly perfect despite her constant behavior towards the younger two. Her inappropriate behavior is frowned upon by nearly everyone around her that knows of it, but lasts throughout the entire show.
The main characters have an incestuous relationship.
The camera rolls as two girls sleep. One of the girls wakes up suddenly, screaming and crying, and says she had a nightmare that an entity/spirit had raped her. The next morning the girls discuss what happened, and one of the girls mentions the word 'rape' (1:05:55-1:10:00).
Entourage (TV Show)
This series contains constant verbal and emotional abuse from the main character towards his wife, as well as homophobic verbal abuse towards his gay assistant. The protagonist uses his success and position of power to manipulate women and use them for sex.
During later parts of the story, the main character’s wife is shown to be pursued by many men (while he is away at war). They all move in with her, begging her to marry them and slowly getting angry when she refuses. They later plan to rape her, some audio in the background of the song “Hold Them Down” including her screams, and multiple lines depicting sexual assault. They do not end of succeeding or advancing further on her.
A character recounts how she was tortured with beatings and poison in prison to try to get her to divulge secret information. When the torture failed, her captor instructed the guards to "use her body as they saw fit." She was able to evade rape by using magic, though.
Eraser (Movie)
At about 01:29:00, a woman is kidnapped and tied to the chair. Her kidnapper caresses her face while threatening her with rape. When she says "Don't even think about it" she is slapped and threatened with rape again.
Eraserhead (Movie)
An older woman interrogates a young man about his sexual relationship with her daughter, then kisses his neck in a way that makes him visibly uncomfortable. It's not a very intense scene and is very short, but it might make some viewers uncomfortable. It can be skipped without losing major plot information. The scene occurs between the 28:11-29:12 minute mark. Some scenes are surrealist in nature, but may be interpreted to reference sexual violence/harassment.
Eromanga-Sensei (TV Show)
The implied romantic feelings between an older teenage boy and his 12-year-old stepsister are the topic of an ongoing subplot. The stepsister also at times asks other girls to flash their underwear, blackmails them into wearing suggestive outfits, or removes their underwear without consent as inspiration for her artwork.
An inmate threatens the main character to take him as his sexual object, but before anything happens, he punches him and knocks him out. The main character gets attacked by the bully several times during the rest of the movie because of this.
At 41.16, a man runs high hands up the body of a bound woman, including grabbing her breasts and holding them for several seconds, whilst commenting on them. At 01.11.46, a man, without consent, runs his hand up a woman's inner thigh and up to her crotch to search for a concealed gun. Worthy of note: One of the main female characters is manipulated into being the partner of a the male antagonist. While never sexually assaulted, he has her dressed in skimpy clothing, and treats her roughly throughout their scenes.
Escape the Night (TV Show)
S3E9: a woman puts her hands down a man's crotch.
A person shows criminals and state that they are “terrorists, murderer, serial rapists” (29:00-33:00).
A man who has kidnapped a woman tells him he will let her go if he kisses her, when she refuses he kills her.
A male guard affixes a name badge on a female character’s chest without asking to touch her first. She says something along the lines of “most people would buy me a drink first”
A drunk character climbs on top of the protagonist while the protagonist is in bed and tries to remove her clothing. The protagonist starts worrying that she is about to be assaulted, but it is actually that the drunk character wants to give her a scarification tattoo. It is still written in a way that could be triggering, especially with the inclusion of phrases such as, "You want this."
Sexual abuse is a theme throughout. Three episode are about a cult.
The book takes place in a severely patriarchal and misogynistic fictional society. The protagonist and many others like her are considered impure based on the in-world religion, and people use that impure status as a justification to harass and assault them. These so-called impure people are all teen girls and the people targeting them are mostly adult men.
The premise of a show is someone being teased for being a virgin S1E1: a 25-year-old makes up a story about his teacher's sister sexually assaulting him at the age of 13 or 14. Beastiality is mentioned.
Eteros Ego (Movie)
A group of girls rip off a classmate's clothing (down to undergarments) while shouting "Striptease" to bully her (35 minutes into the movie).
Ever After (Movie)
The book contains a very brief mention of an attempted rape that happened in the previous book.
An older boy pressures a younger boy to take drugs and after he says no, forces the drugs into his mouth by kissing him. When he tries to get away and spit it out, the older boy kisses him again. Later on, the same boy tries to pressure him into sex while he is still under the influence of the drug.
There is a non-consensual kiss between two teenage boys.
Everything Now (TV Show)
S1E5: two teenagers consensually have sex but the intercourse is misunderstood as a rape by the girl's siblings, who consider that she was vulnerable at the moment. The girl (autistic) was indeed drunk and crying but clearly enjoyed the act and asked her partner to have sex. S1E6: the issue of the previous episode (and the definition of rape) is discussed. Later, a rape scene in a fictional movie (not shown) is discussed between two siblings.
Evil (TV Show)
Sexual assault is mentioned sporadically throughout the series, and at one point a ghost undresses a woman in her sleep. S1E1: within the first few minutes of the episode, a man is being questioned. It is said that he raped his victims. Midway through the episode, the main character is visited by a demon in the night. She is paralysed and he demon proceeds to get underneath her covers and make remakes about her underwear and caesarean scar. She screams, visibly terrified and disturbed. It is later revealed that the demon removed her underwear and kissed her scar. Child sexual abuse is mentioned (37:54), when a new character meeting a priest remarks "Well what do we have here? The priest in training. Don't you have altar boys to rape?" S1E3 mentions priests sexually assaulting people, and the threat of a child getting raped in prison. S1E12: the rape of Tutsis by Hutus is mentioned. S2E2: it is mentioned a few times that a little girl has been molested by her uncle. S2E10: a woman is drugged via drink and two men inject her with a serum that paralyzed but does not knock her unconscious. The men do not do anything sexual in nature but the situation could be triggering. S2E12: child rape in the church is mentioned. S2E13: an adult man is revealed to have been visiting an underage girl at her school, specifically to communicate with her without the mother's knowledge. It is not of a sexual nature, but these scenes could be triggering due to the grooming nature of the episode.
S1E2: mention of rape, some description of the crime (37:50-38:10). Two other mentions of rape, one with reference to a man's crimes, and one metaphorical (41:20-41:50). S1E3: mention of rape in on-screen text (27:50-28:00). S1E4: a man says that he's a 'convicted child abuser' - nature of abuse is unclear (7:40-8:00). Mention of rape (27:10-27:25).
Evil Things (Movie)
A group of friends walk in on one of their male friends taking a bath and film him while teasing him about it. Later while a guy is filming, he zooms in on one of the female friend's breasts.
A man flirts with the protagonist while she happens to be sitting by herself. She doesn't answer him when he speaks to her, and he starts touching her face until one of her friends enters the scene and defends her. A secondary character is the victim of a slut-shaming smear campaign.
A man is briefly seen forcing himself on a woman before being shot: both parties are fully clothed.
Two female characters (one an adult and one in middle school) discuss their experiences of being told to dress modestly so as not to attract male attention, and how what they wore did not make a difference as to whether they got harassed or not. No explicit details are given. A high school student flirts with a new student on her first day, and refuses to back off when she declines his advances, physically intimidating her in the cafeteria. Two other students intervene so the girl can slip away. A main character's mother is slut-shamed and disparaged, both by teens and other adults, for dressing in revealing clothing and working as a bartender in a strip club, and her son's classmates sometimes mock him about it.
Exils (Movie)
A woman is pulled away by other angry women and forced to cover herself/to dress more modestly.
Exists (Movie)
A man films his friends having sex without their knowledge.
Exodus (1960) (Movie)
Halfway through the movie, a character confesses how women and himself were used as sexual slaves in Auschwitz.
When the teenage girls are found after missing for days, they get physicals at the hospital including a pelvic exam to check for sexual assault. It is concluded that neither girls were sexually assaulted. A demon makes one of the girls touch herself while possessed. Worthy of note: abortion is mentioned regarding an older female character’s past. The demon uses names like “baby killer, child killer” when talking to her. This can be extremely upsetting to some viewers.
The Expanse (TV Show)
S1E1: prostituted women are seen in a brothel. S2E3: one of the main characters compares interrogating a prisoner to interrogating a paedophile (30:23-30:50). An analogy to paedophilia is mentioned and discussed in relation to the prisoner. S2E10: forced child prostitution. Forced childbirth is discussed and paedophilia is described.
Extraordinary (TV Show)
In this show, people possess powers that violate other people's sexual consent. S1E1: a joke is made about how we should not be Michael Jackson fans. A teenager accidentally gives his father multiple orgasms at a family reunion. All of this is played for laughs as they discuss how it is not funny. S1E2: someone's powers make them accidentally naked in front of another naked person. They do not have a good sense of boundaries. S1E3: a mask of a statutory rapist appear on screen. Also, a medium channels an old man who makes a state joke, and then uses the body of the medium to sexually assault herself. A laundry list of bad crimes is given in a comedic context including rape. S1E4: a serial murderer and rapist is mentioned. S1E8: a boyfriend uses his power to turn back time so his girlfriend canno't break up with him, over and over. A man spiritually posses a woman and sexually harasses another woman by grabbing her butt multiple times and writing degrading songs about women. He later possesses her again to sing about sexual consent and then gets annoyed saying he would never sing about that.
An adult supernatural creature uses psychic abilities to cause the teenage protagonist to have sexual dreams about another character against her will. Nothing graphic is described, but she describes the act as "out of line." The process of becoming a vampire is left deliberately vague, but is said to require the person being converted to be "intimate" with whoever is turning them. What this means is unspecified, but a vampire coercing a teenage girl into letting him convert her (when she was hoping her boyfriend would do it) is treated as an assault and traumatic for the girl.
S1E1: a husband is abusive to his wife and uses sexist language and derogatory comments inferring she is a sex worker. S1E4: the titular character is bullied. S1E9: children are kidnapped but returned safely. One of the parents says that the kidnapper could have been a rapist. S1E10: this episode revolves around the ethical implications of sexual relationships between neurotypical people and developmentally disabled people. Someone is arrested for rape for sex that would have been consensual otherwise due to her disability.
A woman says multiple times that she was held down while aliens performed tests on her. She does not say that she was assaulted but she is visibility panicking while speaking so the scene could be upsetting. A police officer taunts a man he arrested with threats of being raped while in prison. A man is anal probed to death by the aliens.
A woman is harassed and slapped on the wrist by a soldier for being out in public with her lower arms/wrists exposed.
A man rapes a woman and tries to cover it up. It is implied he may have had sex with or raped a young boy as well.
The movie deals with sexual power dynamics within high society. It is left ambiguous as to whether a sex worker is ritualistically killed or sacrificed by a cult. Worthy of note: one scene briefly implies that a female teenager had sex with two older men.
Eyeshield 21 (TV Show)
S1E4: the female protagonist presses the male protagonist against her breasts while she hugs him (without sexual intent). S1E16: two women are harassed by three men. They are saved by the male protagonist. S1E102 : a man accidentally walks in a female changing room. S1E104: three boys corner a girl and tell her to hang out with them. She does not want to and is saved. S1E106: a man puts his arm around a girl. The girl tells him to let go and she is clearly scared of him. She is saved by the male protagonist, but later on pushed by the man.
F is for Fake (Movie)
There is a scene, lasting several minutes, in which men eye a woman who is walking near them. She is said to be acting as “bait”. A woman reports having been attacked by Martians - her description of the event may be taken to imply that this attack had sexual elements. Vague dialogue may be taken to imply that woman was raped, but it transpires that this was not the case. She is watched by a man who feels "tempted."
F is for Family (TV Show)
S1E2: a teenage boy claims that his teacher is perv. It is unclear if it is the truth or if he is lying to get off being in trouble for his failing grade. S2E6: a sexual relationship between an adult and a teenager happens before the adult is fully aware that the teenager is 14 years old (25:45). S2E7: the situation is not portrayed as dramatic or creepy, but as a 'funny teenage boy anecdote' (00:10-00:30).
A man is pretending to advertise for a male enhancement pill and chases two unconsenting/unwilling women around the office while grabbing at them. There is a relationship between a 17 years old woman and a man in this 30s/40s.
A drunk character grabs a woman in a way she does not like during a dance. Another character notices a group of men staring at her backside.
The Faculty (Movie)
A man corners a woman speaking ominously about how pretty she looks (05:00): nothing of a sexual nature occurs.
A 44-year-old has sex with a 17-year-old. A character lost his virginity to a grown woman when he was 14.
Fakes (TV Show)
S1E5: it is discussed that a guy was "getting handsy" at a club.
Chapters 30, 31 and 36: the female main character recalls and discusses the sexual harassment she went through in high school - other students spreading sexual rumors, some groping/attempting to touch her, and teachers disregarding her coming to them for help and even continuing the rumors themselves. The topic does come up in later chapters again, but not with explicit details.
S1E3: rape or sexual assault is mentioned at 21:30-23:10.
The whole show is full of workplace sexual harassment. Episodes 1, 2, 3 and 5 feature workplace sexual harassment. S1E2: people at an orgy are being filmed without consent by their host. S1E3: a woman reminds her employees that they signed a contract which included sexual favours. She is very angry they refuse to have sex but it does not go any further and she lets them leave. S1E8: it is implied that a character watched as other people did something to "an Inuit woman". It is not clear what was done, but sexual assault could be implied. Worthy of note: a husband abuses his wife by not helping her medically after receiving major burns. All scenes between them are rather disturbing as he is controlling and threatens that she cannot leave him. He drugs her so she is unable to move or speak frequently and just before she is saved, he removes her teeth with pliers. The scene is not loud and is very quick since she is drugged.
Fallen (Movie)
Fallen Angels (Movie)
Several main characters are obsessive about and disregard boundaries of others, to the point of stalking. One character makes sexual advances repeatedly to someone who is not interested. A fairly brief scene resembles rape; with one person screaming, it is unclear if she was joking or not.
The Falling (Movie)
Fallout (TV Show)
S1E1: before getting married, a character comments “After 10 years of cousin stuff I’m finally ready for the real thing”. Incest is mentioned several times. A man is shown having sex with a woman with the purpose of attacher her afterwards. S1E2: a character in armor removes their armor plate that covers their genitalia and hands it to another character who then puts it back on, in spite of the first person grabbing his hand as if to tell him not to. There is a blunt statement about a man who was sexually assaulting chickens on a farm. It is not shown but the man tries to defend himself by calling this a “scientific curiosity”. S1E6: this episode features reproductive violence / experimentation and death. S1E7: it is revealed that women were forcibly impregnated with mutant animals for an experiment. S1E8: it is revealed that some marriages are part of a breeding program, where only one partner knows what is going on.
Fallout: New Vegas (Video Game)
Players can find documents describing the selling of adults, teens, and children into sexual slavery. There is a quest where the player tries to convince a rape survivor to seek treatment for her trauma. Players discuss the details of the assault with the survivor, her fellow soldiers, and the soldier that was forced to watch the assault take place. The player is also tasked with killing the rapist. A major faction in the game is infamous for capturing or purchasing women and forcing them into sexual slavery. A companion character is traumatized due to being unable to save his pregnant wife when she is kidnapped by this faction.
A man keeps trying to pressure his boyfriend into receiving oral and restrains him while doing so.
Fame (1980) (Movie)
While a black male teen character (who is supposed to be around 14) dances in revealing clothing during an audition, several (white) female teachers look at him in a way that is clear they are attracted. A teenage main character is lured to an older man's apartment, where she is coerced to take her top off and perform sexualized acts before a camera. Two characters jokingly tell each other not to rape anyone, and that they will rape each other. One character tackles another off-camera, and while they fight, one makes sexual comments. Several boys watch high school girls changing clothes in multiple scenes, making suggestively violent comments. A gay protagonist is occasionally sexually harassed by another protagonist.
Fame (2009) (Movie)
A character sets up a camera as if a young female character is going to do an audition when he is actually trying to sleep with her, though he does not succeed.
Familia (Movie)
Family Business (TV Show)
S2E4: someone implies that some other characters would be assaulted in prison.
Fancy Dance (Movie)
Fanny (Movie)
A 18 year old girl has no choice but to marry a much older man when she learns that she is pregnant from her former lover. When the latter comes back after a few months, he forcefully tries to kiss her before his father stops him.
Fantasmas (TV Show)
S1E1: someone makes a joke about a teacher having sex with a student.
The sexual assault discussed involves (what is essentially) mind-control and has a clear racial component.
Chapter 7: a group of guys verbally sexually harass a girl. Chapters 8, 9, 11-14, 22: mentions of rape which are all brief and mostly in relation to rumors. As the story is told through many different accounts, there is talk of rumors of rape happening or fear of that happening but in no part of the story is that shown to be something that actually happened.
In the opening scene, a woman is grabbed by a masked man. The leaking of a woman's sextape is mentioned.
Far and Away (Movie)
The main female character runs out and screams that she has been raped (she was not) after stabbing the main male character in a barn.
Sex trafficking, including trafficking of children, is mentioned in passing in one panel.
S1E3: after getting drunk together, a father figure tries to convince the 15 year old protagonist to walk into the mother figure undressing. He objects but ends up stumbling into the room: she slaps him. He later on gets a wet dream about her. When he wakes up, he is embarrassed and weirded out as he does acknowledge her as his mother.
A character recalls a memory in which adult men stared at her chest when she was a teenager.
Fast Colour (Movie)
Prior to the events of the movie, the protagonist struggled with drug addiction. During this period, she became pregnant. At one point during the film, she says that she does not even remember who the father of her child is because of the addiction. This could imply that drugs may have been involved with sex and that it was not wholly consensual, but this point is left rather vague.
A character comments on how the protagonist is blinded by a girl: a cop then proceeds to say "I don't blame you, I'd get off on her surveillance photos too buddy", to which the protagonist pushes the cop down (00:54:36), A man harasses a woman for racing, calling her baby and saying "how about I race you for that sweet little ass": she then races against him (01:10:34).
Fast Five (Movie)
A character makes a threat towards a character's sister ("I hear your sister is very beautiful, wherever she hides, I will find her") (18:23). A man checks a woman out (41:11). A man makes a 'flirtatous' comment towards a woman ("Sexy legs, baby girl, what time to they open?"). She then immediately pulls a gun on him and states: "They open the same time as I pull the trigger, want me to open them?" (42:49-43:00). A man compares entering a money vault to penetrating a woman ("No matter how much I caress her, no matter how much I love her, in the end she still ain't gonna give up that ass"): male characters around him then laugh (59:31-59:44). The film contains many shots of women's behinds for 'eye candy' (particularly at 01:03:19-01:03:53). A woman uses her 'sex appeal' to get fingerprints from a man who touches her behind. A scene later, two characters jokingly ask if he slapped or grabbed her behind and laugh about it (01:09:08-01:10:34)- A man breaks into a woman's apartment and pins her against a wall, covering her mouth and pulling off a necklace she is wearing (01:15:53-01:18:18).
A 15 year old girls flirts with a man and tells him she is 19. She later meets up with him. He asks an again if she is really 19 and she insists that she is. She later gets pregnant and gets an abortion. A high school aged girl undoes her bikini and shows her breasts to another high school aged boy in his fantasy daydreams which he masturbates to. She walks in on him masturbating and quickly shuts the door and leaves.
Faust (1926) (Movie)
Repeated instances of women being grabbed and kissed with no consent.
The main female character repeatedly details her rape fantasies throughout the film. She is also slapped on the bottom several times by men during the first sequences of the movie. During the opening credits, a cartoon woman is catcalled by a man. Overall, the movie contains abundant misogynist, racist and homophobic jokes.
Chapter 5: mentions of rape and trafficking as crimes
Chapter 2: the female main character recalls when an ex blackmailed her after secretly filming them having sex. He threatened to send the video out to her family/job/etc if she did not either pay him or have sex with him again but her boss found out and was able to get rid of the recording. Chapter 11: there is a brief conversation about a drug dealer who tried to get addicts to let him have sex with their children. This does not happen in the story. Chapter 29: the main character's ex forcibly kisses her after she tells him to leave her alone.
A rape by a brother is mentioned in passing.
The main character is constantly followed by a girl who seems to be obsessed with him.
S1E1: sexual trafficking is referenced as an aspect of mob activity.
Fear Dot Com (Movie)
There is no on-screen sexual violence, but it is a torture movie, and the victims are shown in bondage gear. All of the dead women have their breasts revealed.
Fear, Inc. (Movie)
A man says that a company has "murders and rapists" working for them. Later a man sees his girlfriend tied to the bed with her shirt ripped, but nothing has happened to her.
Fear Itself (TV Show)
S1E3: mentions of a serial killer/rapist. S1E5: brief verbal sexual harassment. S1E11: inappropriate relationships between a teacher and his young students and also mentions an old man who watches young girls in their swimsuits.
The protagonist makes woman he is holding hostage at gunpoint kiss him to hide his face from cops.
Gendered threats of violence and threats of rape are made throughout (11:00-12:00; 17:15-17:25; 46:25-47:00; 54:55-55:00; 01:12:22-01:13:10; 01:14:05-01:15:30). The male antagonists wants to break into the house but it is not for the sole purpose of assaulting the women within.
Worthy of note: A teenaged boy tries to persuade his girlfriend to have sex with him after she tells him no by giving her a necklace. She continues to say no but gives in. Consent is slightly blurred here, but no sex happens. A teenage boy brings a teenage girl to a private room during their prom and tries to have sex with her though she is not ready. He tries to pressure her, but nothing sexual happens.
Fearless (TV Show)
There is brief discussion and suspicion mentioned at various points that the murder of a teenage girl was sexually motivated. It is revealed and mentioned throughout that an adult male photographer was taking 'glamour' shots of teenage girls. In episode 3, a character talks about a statutory crime which occurred when she was 15 and of parties she was told about where young girls 'met' older, wealthy men. SPOILER: They turn out to be irrelevant to the story, and the conversation in episode 3 is the only one with any detail on the subject.
One fight sequence features the male protagonist disguised as a woman in order to distract his male opponent, who is described as a pervert. During the battle, the opponent continuously touches "her" (fake) breast, kisses "her" and fondles "her"without "her" consent, which is played for laughs.
Feedback (Movie)
The plot of the film involves a man being held hostage by vigilantes as punishment for his participation in the rape and murder of a woman. This is discussed throughout the film.
A woman humps a man's body whilst he is asleep.
The Feels (Movie)
One character is upset throughout the film because she is about to get a divorce. The first person she tells (the only man present) consoles her and then initiates sex with her (28:21-32:51). This scene is framed as consensual, some viewers might find the underlying dynamics troubling. At various points throughout the film, individual characters face the camera in a documentary-style interview to speak about what their first orgasm was like. One character (1:00:28-1:02:43) states: "growing up, I couldn't actually have sex without it being this really, like, painful, intense thing ... 'cause in a way, I was reliving things that a lot of women live, unfortunately".
The whole movie is about an old man befriending a desperate woman to kill her (in the process, he convinces her to have an abortion). He fails at the last minute (in the final scene) but some video footage and dialogues imply that he previously befriended and killed many other women.
Later, a guy who the protagonist is visiting tries to initiate sex. The protagonist says that he is not ready for sex yet. The other guy seems to try to pressure him to continue, but eventually listens and stops. Worthy of note: the protagonist, a teenage boy, mentions in passing that "creepy older men" tried to buy him drinks at a bar.
In the first 20 minutes of the movie, a woman is actively being pimped out. It is not a violent scene, but she implies she does not want to do it later in the movie.
Femina Ridens (Movie)
A woman is being captured by a sadistic man and held hostage for a weekend while he tries to play out his devious sexual fantasies. Spoilers: The main male character implies to have raped women in the past, but this turns out to be a lie. The woman turns out to have let herself be captured and has a plan of her own.
Chapter 1: the author recounts the story of St. Maria Goretti, "a young Italian teenager who was almost raped and then subsequently murdered by her assailant" and who "is now the patron sain tof chastity, teen girls, and rape victims."
One character is sexually assaulted by a group.
As a teenage girl comes back home, she discovers an intuder in her kitchen. She calls the police saying that she is scared for her body and that this intruder may hurt or violate her (1:10:08-1:11:00). Worthy of note: a character is preserved to be in a catatonic state because of a panick attack. While In that state, the main female character gets undressed in front of him thinking he would not notice. It turns our he was aware and was just in a panicked state and saw her get undressed. This is not shown just brought up and neither of them are uncomfortable with what happened.
A group of men surround a teenage girl, whistling and grabbing at her while she asks them to stop (1:18:00-1:18:40): another man approaches and gets them to leave.
Fido (Movie)
A character has a young female zombie that he keeps as a servant and he is implied to have sexual relations with. Nothing is shown or discussed, but the consent is dubious as she does not have a choice.
The main character attempts to kiss a woman whilst she is sleeping/unconscious. She wakes up and asserts that he didn't have her permission to do so.
A caste of people called breeders must bear children with whoever authorities tell them to have sex with. A protagonist is one such breeder. The man she is set up with turns out to be gay, but he has had sex with women because he has no choice.
Story 1: a male manager only hires women he thought were attractive. Story 2: there is a mention of middle school boys who always smack a female student's bottom.
Fight Club (Movie)
One character jokingls tells that she had sex when she was in grade school. There are also discussions of incest in a support group.
A teenage boy jokes about being raped by a male dentist under anesthetic. An old man leans over and sniffs a woman’s hair on an elevator without her knowing. A fellow male character in the elevator notices but chooses to ignore it.
A teenage boy takes an up-skirt photo of an unsuspecting teenage girl.
One male character is generally sleazy towards several women in the movie. He also goes to get a massage, harasses the attendant at the desk and requests several times for a "happy ending".
Chapter 8 : a very subtle implication is made that if the main character does not win the money from a race his friends will be forcibly prostituted to get that money Worthy of note : women characters are often sexualised throughout the game.
Final Girl (Movie)
A character hallucinates kissing his mother while on drugs. The protagonist is interested in her adoptive father, but her interest is explicitly not reciprocated.
Violence against women perpetrated by men is a central theme. It is not exactly sexual, but is often obsessive, personally targeted, and creepily intimate. There are multiple instances of stalking. When one major character was 16, she became very close with a police officer who saved her life from a brutal attack. He was her crush and her hero. When she was 18 and he 41, he saved her life again and then seduced her into an emotionally manipulative relationship. (He was already married.) He took advantage of her emotional vulnerability to exploit her personal traumas for his financial gain. In the present day, when she is an adult, he ends up directly supervising her while she is in jail.
A character jokes that another character only has sex with drunk girls, calling them his "conquests."
About 18 minutes int, there is a discussion of incestual rape involving a minor resulting in pregnancy.
The protagonist overheard her brother being taken away by Child Protective Services and at first wonders if they’re child molesters. Later, the protagonist falls asleep in a public place and wakes up to find a man watching her. He tries to get her to go with him in his car, but she escapes.
Finding Carter (TV Show)
The male main character develops a wholesome relationship with male children, and a side character makes remarks implying that the main character may have sinister ulterior motives with the children: this is not the case.
Finsterworld (Movie)
Film features a rape accusation.
In a few of the game's paralogues, bandits mention selling a woman when they capture her. It only goes as far as the comment. There is a scene where the protagonists believe a grown man is trying to chase down a young girl. The girl is a dragon and much older than sure looks. Though regardless the man is actually not doing that and it was a misunderstanding. There are a few scenes of sexual harassment in the supports. Such as one of the characters attempting to watch at women while they bathe. A female character repeatedly making advances on another character despite them shown to be uncomfortable. A player could interpret some of the optional relationships in the supports as being underage or a underage looking character with an adult as uncomfortable.
In chapter one, a brigand comments on the female protagonist being 'pretty' and it is a 'waste' before trying to kill her. Nothing happens but the implications of desire to assault her are clear. In chapter three, a brigand corners a female character. He talks with another brigand about how she would 'fetch a pretty penny' and that she deserves it. Her friends save her before anything happens. In chapter fourteen, one of the NPCs mentions that his granddaughter was taken away to a castle because the ruler found her 'pretty.' A character in the main cast is flirtatious both in his cut scenes in the game and in his supports, even if female cast expresses fear or discontent - this is played as a joke. One of the characters in the cast has abusive past at an orphanage which has led him to show severe symptoms of PTSD. Although it is never stated what happened, the vagueness of it as well as some character traits makes it suspect he experienced CSA - the presentation of his trauma is handled respectfully. There are a few supports where teenage characters lead to having a romantic relationship with an adult, along with endings where it states that the teenager and adult got married and had children together.
Throughout the game, a villain makes repeated predatory comments about the young female protagonist. He thinks of her constantly and talks about her as his 'prey.' When they meet, he announces that he would like to 'take her, be her 'master,' and that he wants her to struggle as it will be 'more fun for him that way.' Any scene involving him it is blatantly clear he desires to assault her, however this never happens and he is eventually killed. Within the supports, there may be a few unsettling relationships. Such as the support between the main female and male protagonist (twins). It is implied in their support and ending that their relationship is incestuous. One support involving an older woman and teenage boy has the woman repeatedly trying to convince the boy to do things he does not want. Such as become a dancer, touch his face, and kiss him. He tries to deny her several times but she continues to touch and manipulate him into inappropriate situations. She even tells him he reminds her of a 'ten year old child' to which he responds comparing her to his mom. The relationship they have is similar to an victim and groomer. There is a character that is a dragon who is designed to look like a small child but is an adult. There are uncomfortable scenes between this character and the male protagonist as she tries to have a romantic relationship with him. In the story itself, the game mentions pillaging of villages and victims of war. There is no direct talk about sexual assault but a warning might still be recommended because of the relation to pillaging in war in general.
The protagonist is a gay teenage boy who is closeted for most of the book. At a party, girl says she likes him and kisses him without asking. The protagonist lies to his friends and says he slept with this girl at the party to throw off their suspicion that he is gay. This lie gets back to her, and she becomes understandably upset with him.
It is a common theme throughout the book that the main character is constantly verbally and physically harassed/assaulted by men. She often mentions the way they look at her, think/say threatening things, and even grope her. She also mentions how they often threaten rape, and that she feels unsafe around men. On page 44, it is mentioned that a man's wife was raped, resulting in a child. "He'd handpicked a brute from his prisons, a dirty, savage man, and sent him north to punish Brocker by punishing Brocker's wife." Page 48: "the few women he couldn't seduce with the power of his beauty or his mind, he raped. The few women he impregnated, he killed" Pages 143-145: a man verbally assaults the main character and says horrible things about what he will do to her – it is implied that he threatens to rape her. His specific words are not written.
Fired Up! (Movie)
One character is beaten up, milk is poured down on them and their guts are torn open. The way it is filmed is very sexual, and the matter of consent is unclear.
The age gap between the main character and her love interest (a high schooler and a fifth grader) is of five year. The show also sexualizes children.
The protagonist of this book is friends with the protagonist of The Trouble with Hating You. Consequently, in this book, the latter's sexual assault is discussed here and there. Some people in the community do not believe she was raped, or they believe she brought it on herself. Worthy of note: the protagonist of this book is referred to by some antagonist characters as "defiled" for having consensual sex before marriage.
First Strike (Movie)
While in a parking lot, a man is forced to strip naked at gunpoint so the person can search him for a wire. A group of women walk by while it is happening and stop to stare at him, one woman takes photos while he tries to cover himself.
As a plot twist towards the end, it is revealed that an adult man has unknowingly been in a sexual relationship with a teenager (played by an actor who is visibly in her twenties). When one of the protagonists reveals this to him, it is meant to be a moment of comedic triumph for her, as she will be able to use this information as part of her revenge on him. The character is portrayed sympathetically, particularly compared to the other mistresses, but the implication is that she lied about her age in order to sleep with a powerful man able to help her with her career.
Fisk (TV Show)
S2E6: this episode features sexual harassment and a comparison to Harvey Weinstein is made.
Fitting In (Movie)
Worthy of note: A teenage girl agrees to be observed during her gynecological appointment but clearly changes her mind during and is unable to communicate this. She begins to look increasingly more uncomfortable and even starts crying.
In the early chapters of the story, a woman is traded for food to an orc village against her will. She is brought in to have children with one of the orcs and several of them make inappropriate comments about/towards her.
No child sexual abuse is depicted, but a character who is fired for being gay is the subject of rumors that he was fired for peeping at boys showering, even though he was not.
Full nudity is shown in a medical context. In one scene, a male student lifts up the cloth which is covering a body's genitals in order to taunt a female student in his class.
Fleabag (TV Show)
The possibility of rape is mentioned several times, and there are a few occurrences of catcalling, as well as a non-consensual kiss. S1E4: a woman’s teen stepson attempts to get in a bath with her, despite her repeatedly saying saying no. A man must attend a company-mandated workshop to become a “better man” after touching his coworker’s breast several times, presumably without her permission. This is not shown, only discussed. S2E2: a woman mentions a lawyer who "mostly defends rapists".
S1E2: one character recounts when his wife thought she got drugged (roofied). She was not sexually assaulted, but the threat of this was implicit in the incident. S1E3: a joke about getting roofied is made. The show calls out these kind of jokes, and comments upon how they were frequent in the 1990s. A man sexually harasses a woman at work and when she rejects his advances, chooses not to promote her. A doctor breaks a woman's water without her consent right after she discusses sexual assault. S1E7: a woman's forced labour (a result of an induction she did not consent to) is shown; it is clear that this incident is highly traumatic for the woman involved.
Flight Risk (Movie)
The protagonist makes several aggressive, sexual comments throughout the film. He references being assaulted in prison and assaulting others. He repeatedly verbally threatens other characters with sexual violence.
The protagonist enters a fake relationship with her costar to promote the television show on which they both act. In the contract outlining the parameters of the relationship, it states that the costar must get explicit consent for any touching or risk a lawsuit. The costar's manager claims that the wording of the contract insinuates that the costar is a predator when he has not done anything.
Flirting (Movie)
Around 24 minutes in, we see a flashback of a man appearing above a woman and the woman looking frightened. The flashback is very quick. In present day, the woman casually tells tells the story of the man raping her.
Flora and Son (Movie)
An officer tells a teen boy that he will be going to prison if there is another violation and he tells the boy that they “anally rape them” in prison. After making a few flirtatious signals, a woman asks her guitar teacher to take his shirt off over video chat. It is clear that he did not appreciate the comment. She later sends an apology message to him, offering to send him a picture of her breasts to make up for objectifying him.
Flower (Movie)
A teenage girl extorts an adult man for money by performing oral sex on him and blackmailing him. The same teenage girl tries to extort another man for money: they make out but he refuses oral sex. An adult male character is said to have a history of sexually abusing middle school students.
Flower of Evil (TV Show)
A girl is asked why she killed an elder man: she answers that ‘he tried to…’ but does not finish her sentence (sexual harassment is implied). There are also scenes of a woman in a cage that might be stressing for some vieuwers.
Flowers of Evil (TV Show)
Flus (TV Show)
S1E3: during a threatening scene (about 13 minutes into the episode), it is implied that a person will be assaulted with a broomstick.
A man gets mad at his ex for spending time with another guy. He also makes a few sexual comments towards his ex. Worthy of note: The film contains a lot of talk of abortion. A women even has a nightmare about an abortion where she gives birth to a maggot.
The Fly II (Movie)
A boy and a girl are recorded having sex without their consent. Later on one of the men who recorded tells the boy he enjoyed watching him and his girlfriend and laughs.
Follow Her (Movie)
The plot of the film centers around a fetish worker who films clients without their knowledge and posts the videos online with their faces blurred. She is made to say she faked stories of sexual abuse. She finds out she has been filmed (and posted) without her consent including while in the shower and while having sex.
Rape and necrophilia are mentioned, as they describe the deeds of a dead serial killer, who is heavily inspired by Richard Ramirez. One male friend "ball checks" another, them both laugh about it.
Food of Love (Movie)
A young boy (18 year-old) has an affair with a much older man. A woman makes sexual advances towards the young boy who shows he is clearly uninterested.
While speaking to a man at his dojo, the main character says very crudely that he would be assaulted in prison because he is feminine. He is also creepy during conversations with a new female student, stares at her during practices, and tries to kiss her multiple times. He also talks about sexual acts with one of his other students. All of it is played for a laugh.
A man coerces a woman who had been living in isolation (and knowing no one but her father) into kissing. His commander comes upon them and sends the man away but then blames and accuses her - stating it would have been her fault if he assaulted her.
A man watches two people have sex through a camera feed. A man walks in a woman in the bath and does not leave when she tells him to.
A man hits on the female characters even after they have said that they are uncomfortable.
While seeming to be high/affected by a fungus, a woman grabs a man's hand and forces him to grope her chest.
The main female character has her nude picture put up in a naked collage in a male bathroom: when asked, the restaurant owner refuses to take it down.
The protagonist is lying in a hospital bed and a hooded man she suspects was her attacker leans over her closely (7:30). She wakes up as if it was a dream. The protagonist's friend suggests her amnesia might be due to having been abused (20:00). There are pictures of the protagonist graphically tied up (48:00). Throughout the end of the movie there are flashes of scenes of the protagonist trapped and tied up, but nothing sexual occurs.
A woman has to avoid flirtatious advances from one of her students. It is revealed that he is 19 but it is still unwanted and makes her uncomfortable hence why she repeatedly avoids being alone with him. It is revealed that a man had to perform sexual acts for another man in order to get a play produced.
Characters hear a female character screaming at night. They go outside to find a male character having loud intercourse with his ex-wife. They think he is assaulting her at first, but when the man stops, she encourages him to keep going.
There is a passing mention to the attempted assault from the previous book.
Four Rooms (Movie)
The male protagonist is put under a spell by a witch who then sleeps with him to acquire his sperm.
The Fox (Movie)
A man interjects himself in the lives of two women living alone and sexually harasses and threatens one. Because it is implied the women are bisexual and lesbian, respectively, these tense scenes particularly are difficult (and possibly triggering) to watch.
Fragtime (Movie)
The protagonist, who has time-stopping powers, looks up the deuteragonist's skirt while time is frozen. As the deuteragonist can also move when time stops, she quickly catches the protagonist in the act - though they both reach an agreement and the deuteragonist starts a consensual relationship with her afterwards. Later on, the deuteragonist is the target of sexually-charged bullying, with other students slut-shaming her and spreading false rumors that she had an affair with an older teacher. She also states most of her sexual advances are because she's only acting out of her partner's interests rather than her own - the implication being that she may have been the target of sexual objectification or sexual assault in the past, though this is never directly confirmed.
A 12 year old girl tries to kiss an 18 year old guy when he falls asleep with his head on her lap after nearly fainting. He moves away on time when he thinks he hears something.
Depending on the version of the book in question, the woman the protagonist marries is either biologically his first cousin and was raised alongside him as his sister, or someone technically unrelated to him who was raised as his sister. In either case, from a modern perspective, their marriage might be viewed as unorthodox despite the fact that it is never consummated.
Frasier (TV Show)
S1E10: a man aggressively kisses an unwilling woman while holding her face firmly in place. (7 minutes in). S2E10: a joke is made about buying a bride from a country with high poverty.
Freaked (Movie)
Freaks and Geeks (TV Show)
Free Guy (Movie)
A male character is very happy to see another male character and when they disagree a little, he stands with his crotch touching the other's crotch very closely face-to-face, while speaking and breathing in a somewhat sensual way. There is some discussion about this.
The author discusses the case of the Scottsboro Boys (1931) and the Kissing Case (1958), both instances of young Black boys being falsely accused of rape. There is also an exploration of how carceral feminism, which promotes incarceration as the primary or only response to sexual violence, itself perpetuates sexual violence and does not address its root causes. The book also contains a discussion of the case of Marissa Alexander, who was arrested for shooting warning shots into the air to protect herself against her abusive husband, who had been sexually assaulting her.
Freeze (Movie)
A woman is found as a stowaway on the ship: one male crewmember implies that if others find her, they may rape her. Later, another man explicitly states that if he was not tied up, he would rape her.
At some point, a woman giving a lecture about a male artist casually mentions that he tried to rape her: it is played for laughs. A 60-year old woman sleeps with a teenage boy. Before that, she voluntarily surprised him in his bath.
French Kiss (Movie)
This film contains non-consensual kissing, and sexual comments when the other person is clearly uncomfortable: it all comes from characters the viewers are meant to root for the protagonist to end up with. The comments and kissing are played for comedic effect. Another love interest continues kissing and touching the protagonist (in an attempt to initiate sex) after she says stop: she has to hurt him (unclear how or what happens) to get him to stop. This is more 'caught up in the moment' than violent, but it was surprising and can be upsetting.
Fresh (Movie)
The main character wakes chained up after being drugged: she asks her captor if he is going to rape her. He promptly responds no, but exerts extreme physical power over her and many other women for the entirety of the film. A woman bites off a man's genitals. A woman receives an unsolicited dick pick on a dating app.
S1E5: date rape is discussed when a mother teaches respect to her son.
A man pretends to drown to get one of the girls to give mouth to mouth: he then grabs her and begins kissing her while pulling her on top of him (about 20 minutes in). A police officer mentions that crime statistics including rape go up during a full moon. Multiple adult men comment on the appearances of teenage girls.
A man slings something at a woman’s ass without her consent. Later on, the same man watches the same woman skinny dip and steals her clothes. The killer lays under the covers with a dead naked woman while her dead boyfriend to pinned to the wall. A woman’s body is seen at the killers shack near the end despite the fact she was not killed anywhere near it implying that the killer is planning on molesting her dead body.
A teenage couple have sex on another person's property. A man watches two teenagers have sex.
Friendsgiving (Movie)
A female character mentions that men used to not ask before having sex in the 70s and one of the other characters asks her if she is talking about rape.
Friendship (Movie)
There is an implied incestuous / inappropriate relationship between a mother and a son. He feeds her then kisses her on the lips Later, when the son has a girlfriend, the husband asks if the son replaced his mom with his new girlfriend.
One of the main plot points of the movie is that a teenage girl is "enchanted" by an adult vampire and engages in sexual acts with him. While all of their interactions seem to be voluntary, she is under some kind of magical influence during all of them. He also changes her clothes while she is unconscious. In the beginning, the same character agrees to have sex with her boyfriend only after he voices his frustration about them not having slept with each other yet and after she initially says that she is scared of having sex. They end up not having intercourse in that scene.
A vampire kisses the female lead (a high school senior) against her will and this puts her under his control. Derogatory language is used about women throughout the movie. Worthy of note: the scenes where the main male character feeds on women is sexual in nature and they often beg him not to before, which could be triggering.
It is implied that a ghost has sex with a mummy. Afterwards, the ghost comments “I like it when they don’t move.”
Frightvision (Movie)
In the third story, while presenting, a female scientist is asked by a male investor if she is going to take off her clothes.
Fringe (TV Show)
S1E1: a character's colleague is mentioned as having sexually assaulted three people.
From (2022) (TV Show)
Worthy of note: A woman says that she was “mind-raped” by the place she is living in. S3E8: a male character drags a female character down into a dungeon against her will while she screams for help. He does not want to hurt her and tries to be gentle.
From the Dark (Movie)
A male friend greets women by hugging them tight and grabbing their bottom: they are not upset by it. A demon pulls off a man's penis before killing him.
A woman is hired to enter a sexual relationship with an enemy spy. While she consents to this, she was lied to regarding the purpose of this.
Rape is mentioned once. A character has a dream about an adult man nursing from his stepmother’s breast. There is non-consensual touching that disturbs and distresses that main character. The touching is not sexual, but could be triggering.
One of the underage protagonists has sexual relationships with adult women and men. Nothing is explicitly shown, but it is heavily implied.
Fruits Basket (TV Show)
The main character's mother was in a romantic relationship with a trainee teacher (21 years old) at her school when she was 15/16. She has a baby (the main character) at 15/16. It is not explicit. One of the protagonist's best friend (a high-school student) has romantic feelings towards a man in his late twenties. A man makes flirty comments towards the main character (ages 16-18). There are some couples in the story that are ambiguously related (nothing explicit). A character falls in love and becomes obsessed with a girl before she is even born. He proceeds to groom her throughout her life and it is implied they had sex before she turned 18 whilst he was in his mid 20s, along with her having sex with another man of a similar age at around the same time. The groomer never seems to face any repercussions for his actions and the pair end up getting married. A man in his late 20s falls in love with an underage high-school girl. She laments whether or not this is legal yet still ends up in a relationship with him. There is a scene in which a teenage girl promises to do "anything" to/with/for an adult man for information on how to break a curse. He turns down her advances. A teenage boy flashes his privates to another boy offscreen to prove his hair colour is natural. The other boy becomes very shocked and the entire scene is played for laughs.
The entire story revolves around a 21 year old trainee teacher falling in love with a student whilst she is still underage. The pair have a child together before the student turns 18.
Fubar (TV Show)
S1E1: human trafficking is mentioned. A undercover father pretends he has slept with his daughter: the others do not know they are related. A joke about cow rape is made.
Fucking Amal (Movie)
Discussed in the context of news.
One soldier exposes himself to a sex worker. The drill instructor is also shown to use abusive and derogatory language towards soldiers with sometimes sexually aggressive undertones. A man tells a rape joke.
A man is catcalled by a group of women as he is running. Throughout the movie, six men repeat a striptease dance while a young boy (the son of one of them) is present. At some point, a police officer witnesses the scene (as they are in their underpants) and brings them all to a police station to explain the situation.
Three dancers are interrogated by a senator's guards following the murder of a diplomatic representative. The leader of the dancers pretends not to know anything, so the highest ranking officer throws the youngest into the arms of the guards and tells them to have fun with it. The young woman screams, is pushed and grabbed by the guards. The leader speaks and the young woman is released. Later, the head dancer is locked in a room with guards, heckling her to torture her husband, she tries to escape and cries out for help, she is seen walking past the open door, struggling in her battered clothes. Towards the end of the film, the high-ranking officer tells the husband that they have done nothing to his wife, it was simply a plan to make him talk.
Episode 45, 19:20-19:48: a commanding Officer slaps a soldier beneath him in rank on the butt, and it is implied that this is not the first time he has harassed her.
The side of a teenage girl's shirt is ripped off by a man: the side of her chest is shown a bit. There is no sexual intent as he did it to reveal a tattoo that she had.
A girl bear accidentally gives a male bear the wrong idea: he grabs her and holds her against her will (28:37-29:24 and 30:00-30:10).
The author discusses at multiple points how her father had sexual relationships with teenage boys, although she does not go into explicit details.
The initial scene follows a young-looking teen girl naked in the shower (she is later established to be around 18) where she is 'attacked' by a figure that is later revealed to be her younger brother (around 12) with a fake knife. A woman is attacked by a male figure who paid her for a sex act (shown non-graphically onscreen). The man then wants his money back, rips her clothes and strangles her.
A man zooms in on a woman's chest though a video security feed. A woman watches a couple have sex in the bathroom. A woman kisses another woman after killing her.
A woman is undressed, bound and gagged (47:18-50:53).
Family is taken hostage in their home, a woman is forced to strip naked in front of her husband and son.
Throughout the book, there are news stories about women and girls who go missing and/or get found murdered. It is implied that many of these victims have been raped, but it is not spelled out, and there are not any descriptions of the violence they must have endured.
Furious 6 (Movie)
Two women interrogate a man and get physically violent after he makes a comments about them (39:23-41:40). Two men forces a third one to take off his clothes down to his underwear as payback (42:18-43:34). A man states he used to run women for an associate (01:01:54). The film contains many 'eye candy' shots of women, notably at 10:52 and 01:05:04-01:06:10.
Furry Shades of Gay (Video Game)
While all other sexual scenes and story paths are consensual, the "Dorm Buddies" story contains scenes of non-consensual grabbing, groping, questionable consent, and sexual coercion. After on character meets his new roommate, he reaches down to grope his buttocks. The latter announces his discomfort and politely asks him to stop. He continues and begins to coerce and pressure the other man into having sex with him. The man ends up having sex with him after the player progresses past this beginning scene. This story path is optional and is not required for players to view if they wish not to.
Fury (2014) (Movie)
Soldiers break into a young woman's home and threaten her with rape, driving her to tears. When one of their colleagues prevents them from assaulting her, they express their frustration by continuing to treat her unkindly (i.e. by licking her food). Other encounters between soldiers and civilian women throughout the course of the film may have undertones of exploitation or threat.
This game includes instances of dubious consent. Some may also view the usage of the term "futa", short for "futanari" in the game's title to describe transgender women or female-presenting people with male genitalia as objectifying, transphobic, or dehumanizing as well.
Over the course of the book, the protagonist realizes that he is bisexual and dates another man while closeted. Others guess that they are in a relationship, including the captain of the protagonist’s soccer team, who asks him invasive questions about his sex life and tries to pressure the two to breakup.
A female character responds to catcalling with suggestive comments to make the man uncomfortable. This is primarily played as comedy.
Fuuto Tantei (TV Show)
This show continuously hypersexualizes women. S1E11: one female character hides an object between her breats and a child takes it from her. He then forces her to take her clothes off for him: she stops when half of her breast is exposed, and manages to escape. This scene is presented in a sexualised way.
Fyre (Movie)
Worthy of note: first hand account of someone who thought they were about to be coerced into sex as a business favor. This person does not perform that act but the entire memory he recalls and the way he recalls it may be very unsettling.
S1E6: a girl calls vampires child molesting perverts.
One of the characters in the show loves the cuteness of kids and gets nosebleeds around them that is slightly creepy, but it is not sexual in nature.
Gal Pals (TV Show)
Worthy of note: a lesbian and a heterosexual man have sex while both are very intoxicated. This is treated as a comedic plot point, although the consent involved is dubious. This plot point is addressed in S1E7 and S1E8.
Galaxy (Movie)
A woman is forcibly stripped and changed by another group of women. She is then brought out to the men who surround and grab her with the intention of raping her but they are all stopped before anything further can happen.
Chapter 8: Non-graphic mention of a child who was born as a result of rape.
Game Night (Movie)
There is a brief mention of the villain being involved in sex trafficking, and a computer display shows two people have been charged with human trafficking.
Gamer (Movie)
In this movie, real-life people are avatars in other real people's video games. One man uses his female avatar (a real woman) to have sex with other male avatars (real men) and the avatars/real people have no say, nor can they deny these orders (16:30-19:08). This happens a couple different times, only one of which is graphic instead of implied (54:48-57:19). There are other sexual acts in the background of these scenes by other avatars.
Gantz: O (Movie)
A group of man makes remarks of how big the female protagonist's breast is.
Garcia (Movie)
This movie is about a wife who stages her kidnapping to frame her husband. About 45 minutes into the movie, two scenes show what is apparently (at this point), her (a tied-up hostage) being raped by her captor (wearing a mask): it is in fact consensual (since they are in fact lovers playing their 'role'). At some point, a drunk male character lifts up the skirt of a prostitute and then threatens her with a gun when the man she was dancing with protests.
Garden State (Movie)
Towards the end of the movie, a young woman reads a passage about rape from a book out loud.
A teenage girl mentions being gang raped in the past by three men.
Gavin & Stacey (TV Show)
S1E1: one character gives another a rape alarm and makes a comment which is victim blaming (“If you turn up Sunday, raped, the fault will lie solely at your door”). The rape alarm goes off twice in the episode and is joked about at the end. Offscreen, a male and female engage in sexual intercourse in a bathroom and it is implied that the female put a toilet brush into the male’s anus which he appears to be distressed about the next day. S1E5: characters discuss a mutual acquaintance at the breakfast table who is going on trial after his semen was discovered on a woman’s dress. Sub plot: two character’s went on a fishing trip which ended in the breakdown of their relationship and trauma. It is revealed what happened was ‘perfectly legal in this country’ but it is never revealed what occurred. Subplot: an adult male character is in a fairly long term relationship with a girl who is 17 but turns 18 in the course of the show. She is never shown on screen but is frequently referred to as having immature hobbies (e.g. colouring printed maps in, going to Brownies) Themes - Serial killers are frequently referred to as an ongoing joke.
Gay USA (Movie)
Gecenin Ucunda (TV Show)
The sexual harassement of a woman is discussed at the begining. A man stalk a woman and takes non consensual pictures of her by putting a camera in her house facing her bedroom where she changes.
Gen V (TV Show)
S1E4: a character with the ability to influence minds uses it to try to sexually assault a character. S1E5: a different character talks about her experience of getting raped while under the perpetrator's mind control Neither victims recall the rape and the attempted rape, but they are clearly under distress from what happened. the character who was raped is tearful and emotional when talking about it.
The author of the last essay in the anthology references having been sexually assaulted as a teenager and using kink and sex work to heal from that experience.
The author recalls a sexual fantasy they experienced as a teenager with an illustration that depicts a grown man touching a youth's penis, reminiscent of ancient Greek pederasty depictions.
Generation Kill (TV Show)
This is a historical and political book addressing a range of genocidal events throughout history. In some sections, sexual assault and rape are addressed as elements of the genocidal events in question.
Genshin Impact (Video Game)
A young girl (age 8-13) who works in a bar complains that all her fans are drunk old men. It is implied that they view her sexually and sometimes harass her. A teen girl is an idol with a lot of fans, including adults. While the majority of these fans enjoy her music innocently, there is one NPC (an adult man) who often crosses the line into obsessive and creepy territory and disrespects her boundaries. One optional quest involves the player and the idol trying to hide from him. There is a repeatable quest where the player attempts to dissuade him from stalking her, but the problem is never fully resolved. One character's backstory is that she was separated from her brother and sold to a nobleman as he "took interest in her unique features". It is implied in her voice lines and story that this was a form of sex trafficking. Another character found out about this and killed the trafficker before he could harm her. Her age is never explicitly stated, but it is highly likely she was a minor at the time as she was adopted into an orphanage immediately after. All of this is implied through optional dialogue and not necessary to play the game.
Gentefied (TV Show)
S2E6: there is a passing mention of settlers raping indigenous people.
Gentleman Jim (Movie)
The main male character tries to kiss a woman, who slaps him. At the end of the movie, it is revealed that she was in fact in love with him.
The beginning of the movie features several scenes of catcalling.
S1E5: rape jokes.
S1E1: a possessive husband takes a picture of his wife (the female protagonist) while she is in the shower, without asking for her permission. She tells him that she disapproves but he does not care. S1E2: the possessive husband uses the nudes photos to blackmail her. Aditionnally, her new alcoholic husband (the male protagonist) violently pushes her against a wall while he is drunk and pursues her while grunting. She flees. S1E4: while drunk, the male protagonist gets very violent once more, pins his wife to the ground, and when she escapes, shots in the air with a rifle. She manages to flee. S1E5: a side character beats his wife. He is manipulating the female protagonist into becoming his wife, a process which includes repeatedly and secretly writing misogynist slurs on the frontdoor of her house while pretending to protect her.
A woman faints and is carried around by a man whilst she is unconscious. Whilst there is no implied sexual intent, he does repeatedly touch her face and neck while she is passed out. A man is sexually harassed by a gorilla.
Get Backers (TV Show)
A 21 year old man and 17 year old high school student are in a relationship. This anime contains jokes and scenes of sexual harassment.
Get Duked! (Movie)
A character speculates that the villain is a pedophile because he believes all old, posh people are pedophiles: this is mentioned several times throughout the movie.
Get Gone (Movie)
A woman is kidnapped and drugged by the family. She is told that she belongs to the son and that they are going to have lots of children together. He locks her in the basement, but she and the other woman there are both able to escape before anything further happens.
Get Hard (Movie)
The implication is made that it is necessary to be able to perform oral sex on men in order to survive in prison, despite the character's reluctance to engage in this activity. Sexual violence within the prison system is mimed and somewhat graphically described. Various predatory personalities, hand motions, and emotional emphasis may make this scene triggering.
An intimate romantic relationship is revealed to have been undertaken by one partner for ulterior motives. A woman gropes the main character and asks his girlfriend about their sex life. There are frequent vocal references to sexual slavery throughout the film. Worthy of note: possible disturbing undertones with reference to consent, implication that individuals are made unable to control their own bodies, possibly (although not explicitly stated) also in sexual contexts.
Get Real (Movie)
A girl places her lips on and kisses a man who is not kissing her back (53:10-53:50).
A man walks in on a couple beginning to have sex, then makes the whole group feel uncomfortable by fighting against leaving the area. A man kisses his ex while they are arguing.
Ghare-Baire (Movie)
Ghost Adventures (TV Show)
Some episodes may contain reference discussion of real-life events that can be attributed to a "haunting" that the Ghost Adventures team investigates for that episode, such as cases of murders, child abuse, rapes, or widespread deaths such as disease outbreaks or war. Some guests on the show claim to experience sexual assault by ghosts.
Ghost Hunt (TV Show)
S1E3: a 23 year old woman asks a 17 year old whether he has a girlfriend and that she is willing to put up with him. This seems to be a joke. However, she does refer to his rejection a few times throughout the series. S1E11: the 23 year old woman volunteers to play a couple with the 17 year old boy. She caresses his face, but he rejects her. At the end of the episode a 25 year old man asks the 16 year old girl to go on an actual date. However, he does this to cheer her up and is not meant in a romantic way. He treats her like a little sister and calls himself an uncle throughout the entire show. He never acts inappropriate. S1E19: a girl's clothes are ripped off and she is surprised that she is wearing a kimono under her clothes. It is later on revealed that it was a dream.
The series contains frequent off-color references to rape, sexuality, homophobia, and intolerance, all played for jokes. The underage cast of main characters often catcall each other. There is also some brief perverse panty shots.
Ghost Whisperer (TV Show)
Season 3: one episode revolves around a teacher/student affair. In another episode, a girl wakes up handcuffed to a bed and people hovering over her. It is later revealed that it was done in order to keep her from hurting herself, as she went through drug withdrawals. The people were watching over her through recovery. S3E8: a ghost duo is composed by a stepmother and a stepson. They reveal they had an affair, and they use living people as pawns in scenarios that imply they are a couple. The people (pawns) are a father and teenage daughter. They do not cause the father and daughter to have any physical or clearly stated relationship but they are controlling actions, and implementing themselves.
Ghost World (Movie)
Early in the movie, one of the main characters jokes that a man will date-rape a woman. The female protagonist (a 20 year old) sleeps with the male protagonist (a 40 year old) while they are both drunk.
A man coerces his “wife” into sex. She refuses, he tries to get on top of her and she escapes the home before anything further happens.
One of the protagonists makes sexually harassing comments toward a receptionist. It is mostly played for laughs because the receptionist is a man and the protagonist is a woman. One of the ghosts is a “flasher,” but the camera stays above his waist.
A man comes up to one of the main characters and kisses her (49:48). It is not violent and she does not resist, but it's sudden and unexpected, and looks uncomfortable for her. Shortly afterwards, when asked if the two of them are a couple, the man repeatedly answers "yes" while she says "no."
Ghostpia Season One (Video Game)
S1E4: a character is sexually harrassed, the scene is mostly protrayed through text, and is somewhat descriptive of unwanted touches. The visuals in this scene mostly display facial expression. The scene is an honest depiction of the topic, describe the encounter as scary and portraying the perpetrator as a manipulative person. This scene is skippable, simply fast forward until sayoko leaves the car after being driven home by renja.
Ghosts (TV Show)
A ghost character has an affair with a decapitated ghost’s body which the head of the body does not consent to. Another character talks about assaulting women and pinches a woman's bum.
The female lead of the team makes suggestive comments to a woman under her command. A later conversation with someone else implies that officer believes she would need to sleep with the commander in order to advance in rank, but she is not interested in the promotion. A man hits on a female colleague several times.
G.I. Jane (Movie)
A female character enrolls in Navy Seal training. A few of the male soldiers make sexual comments about her when she arrives. During a captive training exercise, the master chief beats a female character. This training is meant to simulate the torture Navy Seals might face if captured. The other soldiers are held back while the female character is held down by the master chief. He begins cutting at her uniform and asks her and the other men to think about what would happen to her in a real captive situation. No rape occurs. She ultimately head butts the master chief and breaks his hold.
A character is revealed to have been mind controlled into two different relationships, both implied to be sexual.
The film's hero (a man) kisses his female colleague while she is sleeping next to him on an airplane. The two had not been romantically involved beforehand.
A boy lies to his friends that that another friend went down on him in his sleep. This spreads, and it hurts the person. A girl reveals that at a party, she woke up naked in a closet and did not remember anything other than that (53:50).
A man hits on his sister-in-law several times, including lamenting that he did not marry her instead even after she reminds him they met when she was a child.
The Gifted (TV Show)
It is revealed that a character discovered her powers when she was almost sexually assaulted.
Gigi (Movie)
Worthy of note: the movie is about a man who falls in love with a teenager and who takes her as a wife. Throughout the film, the women are speaken of as objects or preys. A the beginning and at the end of the movie, an elderly man sings a song named 'Thank Heavens for little girls'.
Gigli (Movie)
The protagonist consistently sexualizes and harasses the main female character, who is a lesbian. He goes on a rant about how lesbians are inferior to men in pleasing women. The narrative makes her out to be a viable romantic choice for him, and they even end up having sex.
Gilda (Movie)
A woman is catcalled by a man, she does not seem to notice it.
Gilmore Girls (TV Show)
S2E9: a character remarks that he can only imagine his girlfriend kissing someone else if she was crying (implying that she would have to be forced to do so). S3E19: a plot point is that a male teenager gets angry at his girlfriend for saying no to sex. He pushes her down on a bed and continues to kiss her, attempting to remove her belt despite her protests. In order to end this interaction, she has to physically push him away. Season 4 (in particular, S4E9, S4E10, S4E19, S4E20): features a relationship between an 18-year-old student and a professor in his 60s. This is handled with a comedic touch, but some viewers may find the imbalance of power between the two (due to the professor's position and age) unsettling. S4E17: while on a Spring Break trip, a character talks about how hungry she is. Then she hears about a “banana eating contest” and rushes to join in for some free food. A few moments later we hear some commotion and see her running away and shouting, “Excuse me for thinking a banana eating contest was about eating a banana!”
Gingitsune (TV Show)
S1E11: the uncle of the female protagonist grabs her by her butt. Throughout episodes 11 and 12, he compliments the girls in a way that does not seem appropriate. S1E8: the driver of one of the girls thinks she is beautiful. He realizes that she is in high school and that it is inappropriate for him to develop feelings for her. When he arrives at a shrine, he makes a wish not to fall in love with her. He appears in episode 11 and seems to be shy around the girl but nothing develops any further. One of the girls seems to have a crush on the father of the female protagonist. Nothing happens.
Gintama (TV Show)
Girl (Movie)
The main protagonist has sex with a guy who lives in her apartment building. It's unclear how old either of them are.
The premise of this book is that a wealthy woman falls in love with someone on her security staff. The female lead directly asks the male lead if he feels coerced into having sex with her because she pays him. He says no. When the two decide to be a committed couple at the end of the book, the male lead quits and talks about pursuing other work in order to remove this conflict of interest and power dynamic. This decision to quit is framed as his own decision and was not prompted by the female lead. The female lead makes a passing comment about how she was groped when she was a teenager and that her father thought she was making it up. Prior to the events of the book, the female lead was kidnapped for ransom and has has PTSD as a result. Although there is no mention of any sexual assault involved with this kidnapping.
Though the sexual violence is mostly implied, a major theme depicted in the movie is violence against women.
Worthy of note: violence against women is a common theme throughout the book. There is mention of a relationship that a main character had with an older man when she was a teenager. There is no detailed discussion of their sexual relationship, although it is specified that he waited until she was "of age" (16) to engage with her sexually. This character also mentions that she was a sex worker as a teenager. During a police report, it is mentioned that a crime was not sexually motivated; the book specifies that this means the victim was not raped. This is mentioned twice over the course of the story. In one scene, a couple has sex despite the fact that the woman involved does not want to; this is because she "does not know how to say no". The encounter is not necessarily forceful, but some may find it uncomfortable (pg. 268). On another occasion, the man in this relationship tries to persuade the woman to "come back to bed" and she says no, but he holds her forcefully and says "I'm not taking no for an answer" (pg. 274).
There is a very brief relationship between a girl and a very old demon (this ends when his true identity is revealed, even if she still occasionally sees him in a positive light).
A prostitute is seen giving a blow job. A man binds a woman and forcibly injects her with drugs.
Girlboss (TV Show)
S1E5: someone mentions getting in jail because they flashed their breasts in a crowd in an attempt to get a guy's attention.
Girlfight (Movie)
A main character sexually harasses and gropes the female characters often.
Girlfriends (Movie)
A cab driver makes inappropriate comments towards a woman.
There is a storyline in one of the seasons where it is heavily implied that one of the main characters was groomed and either sexually abused or pimped out to be sexually abused by a photographer when she was a young teen in the modeling industry. The woman who groomed her now has children who go to the same school as the characters children, and so they have many tense interactions where the character is treated as crazy for being defensive when her former abuser is around her children. When the situation is explained to other central characters there is a lot of kindness, sympathy and understanding, and anger at the abuser, but no justice is ever sought or received. There is a scene at a school auction where a provocative photo of the victim is being auctioned off, and many of the background characters are bidding on it, but the victim ends up spending an exorbitant amount on it just to bring it home and burn it. The photo is shown in full, and though in real life it is not an image of a child, it is implied the character was underage when the photo was taken. Topics like rape and harassment are also mentioned throughout the show in vague ways, and jokes are made about the #metoo movement. There is a questionable relationship between an older male lead and a newly adult female celebrity, but the character is of age, and the relationship is consensual, though it creates an uncomfortable dynamic.
Girlhood (Movie)
Girlhouse (Movie)
Women perform sexual acts for customers on the internet. Two young girls trick a boy into showing them his genitals, then they make fun of him. A killer chokes a webcam girl to death with a sextoy. Earlier he hallucinates being accused of sexually harrassing women at his workplace.
A major plot point in the latter half of the film involves a sexual relationship between a teenage student and an adult teacher and the resulting pregnancy. The two are shown in bed together but nothing more explicit. Also in the latter half, there is a scene depicting a teenager giving oral sex to an old man in exchange for money. Nothing explicit is shown, but it is heavily implied.
The book centers around a cult, so there is sexual coercion and abuse. The main character (who is a teen) is pressured to give oral sex to the cult leader upon meeting him. Later, the cult leader sets up the main character and her friend to have sex with an adult man as a favor.
A teenage boy touches a teenage girl’s breasts without her consent and she smacks him with her purse and runs away.
S1E1+2 mention a political sex scandal involving non consent. S1E7+8 revolve around a sex scandal. In episode 8 it i's revealed that one character is sleeping with another character to use them and uses their phone to change a password and post bad things.
Girls Trip (Movie)
Chapters 1 and 2 contain brief, non-graphic mentions of past rapes, as well as of the experience of hearing a woman being raped in a neighbouring jail cell.
There are rape jokes throughout. A grown man licks a teenage girl’s face in a sexual manner. Another girl jumps in to defend her.
The antagonist expresses sexual desire for his sister; in one scene he harasses her and touches her mouth, and in another he attempts to coerce her into a sexual relationship with him. He also attempts to provoke the main character by telling him his wife has been raped by soldiers.
Gladiator II (Movie)
It is briefly mentioned that a woman got married to an adult at 14 years old. There is a separate reference made to incest. Neither of these mentions are detailed or shown on screen.
The teenage main character's foster father has behaviours that imply sexual attraction towards her (i.e leaning close to her to put on her seatbelt, but making it clear he wants to kiss her). The teenage girl later discusses her discomfort with this behaviour with a lawyer.
Glass Mask (TV Show)
This movie contains a lot of BDSM scenes and imagery, particularly women tied naked, punished or threatened with objects such as knives. The main character asks if people will rape her. The main character says to be underage, but performs in sexual acts. There is a lot of touching without clear consent being given.
GLOW (2017) (TV Show)
S1E9: a middle aged man tells a young woman that he does not know or care if she is over 18, and kisses her. She recoils and reveals that she is in fact his daughter. They are both horrified, but later reconcile. There is a certain amount of ambiguity in this interaction, as up until this point the audience was lead to believe that the woman was romantically interested in the man. S2E5: an executive gropes an actress and tries to coerce her into having sex with him.
Go (Movie)
S1E5: at the end of the episode, a woman is getting harassed by 4 men. She is quickly saved by a hero.
Goat Story (Movie)
The main female character is catcalled and groped against her will: this is played for laughs. Later, a male character spies on the same female character through a telescope while she is nude and unaware of being watched.
Goatman (Movie)
When the male producer meets the female reporter, he pulls her shirt out so he can look down at her breasts. Later he tells her that she needs to "show more skin" when filming the story.
The author is a trans woman, and this book focuses on her childhood and teenage years before she transitioned. Many boys teased her in sexual ways. There is also an anecdote called "Dirty Thoughts" where a boy tries to coerce her into touching him, but she escapes.
God of War (Video Game)
The main antagonist implies to a child (the son of the protagonist) that he had sexually assaulted his late mother: this is probably untrue and said only to anger the kid.
The Godfather (Movie)
During the opening of the movie, a man explains that his daughter was beaten as a result of resisting a sexual assault from two men (she is described as 'no longer beautiful'). The characters say that the victim would be impure and dishonor her family if she was raped. Worthy of note: explicit depiction of domestic violence. Whether or not this includes sexual abuse is ambiguous.
One of the main plots of the movie revolves around consensual incest between cousins.
Godland (Movie)
An old man tells a story: it ends in him saying that several men “took turns” with the man in the story’s wife… implying several men raped her while the husband could not do anything about it.
S1E1: sexual assault is mentioned once, briefly.
The protagonist gets used as "bait" to attract the attention of a god. The god fondles her and kisses her without her consent.
Gogglebox (TV Show)
S9E6: a (fictional) rape victim is discussed in negative terms.
One of the musical numbers shows a kid spying on women changing through a curtain that shows their silhouettes and he goes so far as to deliberately pull up the curtain so as to see the nude women, though when this happens, they have already finished changing.
The Gold Rush (Movie)
A man forcibly kisses a woman after she tells him no: she slaps him afterward. Worthy of note: one of the main characters is played by Charlie Chaplin, who has been embroiled in sexual abuse allegations during recent years.
The main character and her friend has no choice but to be very much degraded with a strong sexual undertone by their fellow students. They are not forced, but they mention they have no choice but to do so. A few pages later, a boy attempts to sexually assault a sleeping girl, but is stopped by the main character.
The Golden Girls (TV Show)
There are repeated jokes about rape of one of the main characters. I it explicitly narrated in S5E3: she says that she was drugged and that her mother never believed her and blamed her. She often makes fun of her daughter for becoming pregnant. This rape shamed the main character into marrying this man. S1E20: a students professor sexually harasses her. He says the only way to pass his exam is to have sex with him. S6E6: a woman's dentist touches her breast. She notices it after the gas wore off. S6E10: a main character's date jokingly says that if he was not such a gentleman, he would make her drunk and take advantage of her. S6E16: one main character sexually harasses a police officer mistakenly thinking he is a stripper. After finding out he is not a stripper she slaps him one more time. This moment is used for laughs.
There is a passing mention of rape against domestic workers.
Goliath (TV Show)
S1E4: at the end of the episode (50:00), a young woman is coaxed to her boss’s office after the alarm in her workplace building goes off and she gets stuck in the elevator. It is implied that her boss caused this to happen. Her boss is naked when she arrives to his office, and it’ i implied that they have sex. The tone of the scene makes clear that this is coercive.
Gone (Movie)
Gone Girl (Movie)
Main character inserts the top of a wine bottle into her vagina to make it appear as though she has been raped (action is obscured and not fully seen). She proceeds to discuss her 'rape.'
Sexual assaults, rape, sexual torture and sexual interests in minors are mentioned (but not shown).
A woman lies by saying her adoptive child tried to “steal her husband” and the child is distressed by the accusation. S1E8: a woman receives a multitude of hate comments online and one of them is a man expressing that he hopes she gets raped (47:35).
Good Boys (Movie)
Good Game (TV Show)
S1E4: at the 8:59 minute mark the word rape appears on-screen. S1E6: at a party, one man hugs another, who is visibly uncomfortable during the exchange (12:05 minute mark). Later on in the episode (at the 18:18 minute mark) a bartender mentions that the name of one of the drinks he is serving has been changed because the old one "makes people think of rape."
Good One (Movie)
A teenage girl questions her father about allowing three men they do not know camp near them. An adult man propostions a teenage girl to sleep in the same tent as her to 'keep him warm'. When this girl tells her father about this incident, he dismisses her.
Good Manners (Movie)
A woman who is sleepwalking unconsensually kisses her maid, who eventually consents to it before being bitten because the woman is "possessed". They later engage in a relationship.
The crimes of a serial killer based on Dennis Rader (the BTK killer) are mentioned, and they involve the victims being sexually assaulted or raped. One of the victims was a child, but it is also mentioned that the killer didn't anticipate the child being there while going after the child's mother, so it is not known if these same acts were also done to the child or not. Pages from a pornographic magazine themed around torture are also shown at one point.
Good Mourning (Movie)
Good Satan (Movie)
Two demons are in a room with a sleeping woman and they debate raping her. There are also scenes of sexual harassment throughout the film.
A fugitive hides in a house inhabited by an old woman and her granddaughter. The man and the 16-year old girl are watching TV, when the portrait of the criminal appears on the screen, he immediately kisses her and brings her to a room as a diversion. They engage in a consensual sexual relationship but are quickly interrupted by a noise in the house.
Good Trouble (TV Show)
This show, which features bosses sleeping with their employees, is a spin-off of the series The Fosters, which is flagged for 6 out of the 8 warning materials. S1E8: a character talks about being raped while in foster care, during a larger discussion of sexual harassment in the workplace. S4E17: a cult, including sex abuse is discussed. Women are being held against their will. The cult is discussed several times during season 4 Worthy of note: throughout season 4, one character is blackmailed by her parents to attempt to give up her baby for adoption.
At some point, the main character, speaking to his therapist, describes a situation where someone was standing over him and began touching him 'down there'. It is treated as a joke and it is only revelead to be a fake story afterwards. A girl is walking down the street when a group of men pass her. They call her names and harass her and make sexual gestures toward her.
Goodbye World (Movie)
A man grabs a female character's breast at gun point, then puts his hand down the front of her pants.
Goodfellas (Movie)
The main character's girlfriend tells him that a long-time family friend tried to grope and assault her, and then pushed her out of a moving car when she fought back. We see her after, when she is a bit roughed up from the incident.
Goon (2011) (Movie)
Verbal and occasionally physical harassment involving references to genitals, crude sexual and homophobic content in the context of 'hockey chirping'.
The Goonies (Movie)
A girl's boyfriend keeps trying to tilt a car mirror to look down her shirt. One character jokes with another one that he has naked pictures of his mother. A girl kisses a boy thinking he is someone different.
S1E1: a person uses time loop knowledge to trick someone into making out with him.
Gosford Park (Movie)
A character kisses and forces himself on top of a protagonist against her will. The character is soon stopped. It is unclear how far the character would have gone if uninterrupted. A plot point includes knowledge of a rich industrialist who has multiple affairs with servants and factory workers. The sexual relationships are not violent, but the power dynamic may be uncomfortable to some.
Gotham Knights (Video Game)
When playing as Nightwing, one villain continuously comments on his bottom. She calls him Night'butt,' rates his bottom, and tells him he should continuing exercising so he does not lose it. In the final act of the main campaign, a female villain touches a male character a few times when he is under the effects of a mind altering substance, calling him 'beloved' throughout.
Gothic (Movie)
A male character constantly grabs or forcefully kisses other characters. This is often (but not always) responded to positively.
Gotti (Movie)
One character says the word "rape", but nothing is further discussed or implied.
S2E5: a man slaps a woman's bottom without her consent. She seems to not like it but makes a joke about it later.
There are mentions of places being "unsafe, especially for women", discussion of characters who harass women, a brief mention of girls who disappeared in one country and appeared in the brothel of another, discussion of a forced marriage of a young woman, and a scene where a teenage girl is harassed and teased by a group of men, who later make jokes about wanting to assault her, saying "If only it weren't for locked door and protective fathers" (this is the most detailed incident). Nothing is described in further detail, and the words "rape" or "sexual assault" are never mentioned.
A music teacher flirts with students and invits them to see him on a tour that summer. A little later, another student comes in to talk about her grade.: we find out that she is being failed and will have to go to summer school. She begins flirting with teacher who at first says "Don't.", and then "Not here, someone might see us." She locks the door and takes off her shirt: we see the teacher bury his head in her chest. A girl and a boy sit on a bench talking about sex. The girl remarks that she wants to fool around, and the boy turns her down. She then unbuckles his belt to his protest: they are interrupted before anything further happens. A women rides into a town and the driver makes rude comments, including using the word 'lesbos'. He forcefully grabs her leg and slides his hand up. She ends up stopping him by grabbing his crotch and threatening him.
Grand Star (TV Show)
S1E16: an older man tells a subordinate woman in the army that she has "a pleasing profile" and that she is "too sexy" while leering at her. He tells her to turn around slowly. She is used repeatedly by the army to entice men and has little choice. S1E22: a man in power beings a teen slave girl in to examine and repeatedly tries to touch her legs and lift her skirt. She is examined offscreen by another man who says he is attracted to her. There are also overtones of racism and the power dynamics resulting from that. The same man is inappropriate in several episodes with another teen girl.
Grandma's Boy (Movie)
A woman accidentally walks in on a man who is masturbating and he ejaculates on her. A woman begins working in the office and over the course of the movie several of the men hit on her or make other comments which she mostly brushes off.
A teenage boy swims underwater around a teenage girl so he can see her in her bathing suit. He then makes suggestive comments and forcibly kisses her. There is one mention of a woman who was raped in the past. At the end of the movie, one character discovers that his grandfather raped his daughter (the character's mother) which is how she became pregnant with him.
In a fictional movie inside of the film (satirical), a couple making out uses coercive language. A man who is recording walks in on his male roommate masturbating and continues to film as he is being told to leave. Later, the roommate is passed out drunk and the guy teabags him and posts pictures of it online.
One of the central plot threads involves a series of ritual murders, described in some detail. Each one appears to begin as consensual bondage sex and clearly becomes physically violent while the women are restrained. It is unclear whether anything overtly sexual occurs after the violence begins. Additionally, the male love interest repeatedly pushes the female lead's boundaries (non-sexually mostly but not always). Not quite to the point of harassment, and she does reciprocate his feelings, but the dynamic may be uncomfortable for some.
Gravity Falls (TV Show)
Throughout the series, a boy constantly harass a girl who has stated plenty of times that she does not like him, nor does she want to be with him. He even kidnaps her a few times. The main male character has a crush on a girl a few years older than him, and it is frequently played for comedy because he i too socially awkward to admit it to her. The girl eventually lets him down easy once she admits that she always knew about the crush.
A female character mentions that she was raped before. This topic is never addressed again and she seems to not realize the seriousness of what happened.
The Gray Man (Movie)
A woman about to be interrogated by her boss complains that this is harassment: he jokingly brushes it off by telling that what is coming to her will be worse. When he puts his head close to hers, she asks him to get out of her personal space, which he does. During the final fight scene with the antagonist, the protagonist has flashbacks of being abused by his father (drowning him in the bathtub). The abuses have been addressed previously as an important backstory of the protagonist.
This show features frequent cat calling. S1E1: a student sleeping with a teacher is mentioned. A rumor is spread that a teenage girl had sex with half a baseball team. S1E2: the sexual harassment continues. S1E3: there is a musical hallucination of racist sexist homophobic men: one of them appears to grab the main teenage characters bottom. S1E4: the student-teacher relationship is mentioned again. A teenage girl is blamed for "distracting boys in class": she sings a song about the double standard. S1E5: the teenager is alone with the teacher and they appear about to kiss. S1E7: casino waitresses are sexually harassed. S1E8: the student and teacher kiss again. A girl trying to hide her sexuality tries to force herself on a guy. When he says no, she says "a real man would be into it" S1E9: the recap shows all the previous sexual harassment and assaults and the sexual relationship between the student and teacher.
The main protagonist (based on real life musician Jerry Lee Lewis) marries his 13-year-old cousin and sexual intercourse is shown on-screen.
One of the co-hosts repeatedly makes sexual remarks about the contestants baking process and final creations. Both co-hosts repeatedly make homophobic remarks about themselves and the other contestants.
There is a scene where a character calls in his secretary and then holds her down as though to kiss her, until he is interrupted by a phone call.
In a magic dream-like sequence, a female character is nude and fights an antagonist who shouts "vile" things about what he will do to her when he defeats her. The remarks are not written out; it is only stated in the text that he shouts things leaving the reader to imagine what they may be. It is unclear if they pertain only to the violence of combat or if they are sexual in nature. However, because the female character is nude in this scene, one could assume the comments may have been sexual.
A mouse performs a suggestive dance number in a bar, and some patrons of the bar can be seen desperately attempting to get on stage with her. In a bar scene, a patron makes kissy faces at a waitress, who then punches him in the face.
There are a lot of jokes about a teacher falling in love/sexualizing teenage girls.
This book takes place England and India in the 1890s. The protagonist's brother, noting that the protagonist was alone with a man during an emergency situation, asks the protagonist if her chastity is still intact. A satyr looks up a woman's skirt. A teenage character's parents plan to marry her off to a rich man to improve the family's financial situation. One man whom they allowed to court her kept pinching her bottom while they were dancing. Towards the end of the book, she is forced to get engaged to a man who is older than her own father, and she commits suicide as a result.
Greatest Days (Movie)
Greed (Movie)
A dentist forces a kiss on a patient of his after he sedates her. This man later falls in love with the same woman and forcibly plants kisses on her a couple more times.
A bed-ridden patient catcalls a nurse, he is ignored.
Green Hell (Video Game)
A written note can be read at the illegal mine that categorizes a group of women, presumed to be part of a tour group, by their sexual features alongside their names. It is optional to read the note. During the "Spirits of Amazonia" side story, the elder of the first tribe the player meets says the men of his tribe have been murdered, the women kidnapped, and the children spread out across the rainforest by the enemy tribe. Upon discovering a camp belonging to the enemy tribe, there is a chance the player will find women in cages and crying. It could be implied they have been sexually abused by the enemy tribe. The player can choose to rescue these women.
Gregory (Movie)
S1E1: in the first 20 minutes of the episode, one character mentions that a blackmailer and presumed killer threatened to rape the mother of the titular character.
The film opens with a group of teenage boys peeping on a woman undressing.
Gremlins (Movie)
A gremlin wearing a trench coat flashes a woman. Because gremlins usually do not wear clothes, it is not presented as predatory or creepy, but more as a joke.
A man is non-consensually touched between the legs by his female manager while at a restaurant. He is visibly uncomfortable, knocking over a glass of water, and tries to leave immediately. She then grabs him by his tie and kisses him near the mouth.
Grey (TV Show)
S2E21: one of the male doctors forcefully puts his hands inside his female friend's shirt after following get into a washroom, attempting to retrieve an intentionally hidden item. She openly says "that's my breast, that's my breast". It is played for laughs and stops when another woman exits a stall.
The Grifters (Movie)
Incest is discussed.
A male character peeps into the bathhouse to watch two girls showering. Another male character makes jokes about a girl's chest size multiple times.
One of the female kidnappers makes suggestive comments to a man that they have kidnapped One of the male kidnappers tries to kiss a woman they have kidnapped and he later tears off her bathrobe.
Groundhog Day (Movie)
A man pressures a woman to kiss him and have sex with him after a date, despite her repeated protests (53:30-55:00). She ultimately slaps him and walks out. Later, the same man threatens to grope the woman while she is sleeping, but does not act on this threat in any way (1:02:15-1:02:30).
Grown-Ish (TV Show)
S2E7: Offscreen, a boy and a girl meet at a party, get drunk, and end up having sex. While both parties insist the encounter was 100% consensual despite their intoxication, the story spreads and is twisted to the point where the boy is accused of having raped her while she was blacked out. This leads to the school instilling an official policy that all sexual encounters on campus are expected to have "sober, enthusiastic consent" from both parties. Most students doubt this policy really protects anyone, others feel it's just the school covering their backs, while others feel that if it gets people to stop and think, it's a good thing. The episode revolves around the characters discussing what counts as "sober, enthusiastic consent," and where the line between consensual and not when alcohol and lack of communication is involved. A character recounts a time a male friend felt pressured into having sex with two women and only went along with it for fear of being mocked. Other characters laugh at the idea that this was assault, until it's pointed out that if the genders were reversed, no one would be joking about it. Multiple characters feel that alcohol is essential for their "game," and the merits and flaws of this view are discussed. Worthy of note: an adult college student has a romantic subplot with a professor at her school.
GS Mikami (TV Show)
The main male character frequently sexually harasses the female characters.
The Guard (Movie)
About 5 minutes into the movie, a sergeant fondles the genitals of a male corpse at a crime scene. It is done with humorous intent.
This show centres around a romantic relationship between an adult man and a high school student: however, the relationship is not physically intimate. S1E2: Two men kidnap a student and threaten her with rape; "a female student goes to such a remote place and what happens to her..." (1:14:24).
In prison, a male character is approached by another (visibly physically stronger) male character who makes a suggestive comment to him and touches his face without consent. Worthy of note: In the same prison, a female character is aggressively harassed and cornered by several male characters, though not with the goal of sexually assaulting her but rather with the goal of killing her. Though sexual slurs are used, the situation in itself is not sexual.
There are a lot of jokes with pedophilic undertones or straight up pedophilia jokes. S1E1: the male protagonist asks a young child whether she called him so they can take a bath together. And if so, he would gladly accept.
Gui Da Gui (Movie)
Two men watch a couple having sex through a peephole without their consent. A woman claims that a man she was having an affair with tried to rape her, but the narrative makes it clear that this did not occur. She also gaslights the protagonist throughout the movie.
The Guild (TV Show)
Guild Wars 2 (Video Game)
While this video game's world is relatively void of sexual reference and the main story does not touch on sexual relationships, some would constitute the works of a character named Snargle Goldclaw to be a form of sexual harassment. The game features a collectable series of steamy romance novels written about famous in-universe individuals, usually using plausibly deniable fake names such as “Gritlock” as a stand in for the character Rytlock. This is a meta-aware gag about real-person erotic fanfiction, and these collectibles always fade to black before they can become explicit. Snargle’s works are also considered popular in-universe, and characters have in the main narrative made fun of the “real” counterparts depicted in these novels, calling them by his plausibly deniable stand-in names to tease them for having steamy fanfiction written about them.
S1E8: a man keeps kissing his wife for a moment, even though she does not want it.
Guilty Gear Strive (Video Game)
The backstory of a clinically deranged female character involves her happening upon an anthropomorphic key, which she takes and declares to be her "Husband". She is constantly fawning over it and it is generally played lightly. A victory screens shows her cuddling it and making suggestive advances. The key, which is conscious, is implied to be uncomfortable with the situation.
The entire film is about a man dismembering a woman. There are some scenes where he suggestively feels her thigh, but no sexual violence takes place.
Guns Akimbo (Movie)
The male antagonist kidnaps a woman and acts threateningly towards her: it can easily be assumed that he would sexually assault her if he had the chance. The male protagonist reads a comment about how someone wants to kill the female protagonist and "teabag" her corpse.
Gurren Lagann (TV Show)
Gut (Movie)
A theme in this movie is the derivation of pleasure from thoughts or images of tortured women. There are scenes in which women are restrained, undressed and caressed against their will. A wife exerts pressure on her husband to sexually perform.
One of the character grabs a woman and turns her around and forces a kiss on her. Worthy of note: a man tricks a woman into drinking alcohol on a date. She then seems to want to sleep with him but he finally renounces (1:18:20- 1:37:11).
The Guyver (Movie)
A young woman is repeatedly pursed by the villains throughout the movie. When she is abducted by them, she wakes up to an older man touching her (clothed). Until she get rescued at the very end, the same man keeps touching and grabbing her despite her visible discomfort. He also repeatedly comments on her appearance.
S1E2: a chiropractor touches the thigh of a 16 year old boy and compliments his legs. He also grabs his face and gives him his card. The chiropractor is not actually interested in him, but the boy does feel uncomfortable.
Chapter 18: there is a brief flashback that suggests rape.
The a relative of the author alludes to the risk of sexual violence that she and other women worried about while crossing borders during the Ethiopian-Eritrean war. The author describes a situation where a classmate in a dance class kissed her hand and made her uncomfortable.
A woman is groped by her father-in-law. A teenage girl's grandfather refers to her as 'tempting.' There are incestuous undertones to the family's relationships as a whole; for instance, one character is heavily invested in the details of her brother's sex life. There is a relationship between a teenage girl and an adult man who seems to be in his twenties (his age isn't explicitly stated).
Hackers (Movie)
Hacks (TV Show)
S2E8: incest/pedophilia is mentioned as a joke. S3E1: a joke about Roman Polanski is made. S3E7: sexual assault joke. S4E4: sexual assault joke. S4E7: rape jokes.
Hairspray (Movie)
A villain (female) tries to pretend that a male character is cheating on his wife and hits on him, despite him showing no interest multiple times. She is then briefly seen sitting on his lap, still against his will. The scene is short but it might be uncomfortable for some viewers.
A male character has the common but problematic view that one can kiss someone without verbal consent because of a "look." The movie goes in the right direction by having a woman reject his unconsented kiss, because a "look" (in this case, highly mistaken) does not count as consent (they both kiss each other without consent). The movie ends with the woman kissing a man without consent.
A teenage boy makes a joke about taking the clothes off of the little girl his girlfriend is babysitting: the girlfriend laughs. As a child, the villain stabs his topless sister in the breast. He watches a girl in her underwear get stuck in the window. He also pretends to be a girls boyfriend and watches her shake her breast.
A boy kisses a girl without her consent.
A girl jokes about date raping men.
The villain pretends to be a woman's boyfriend and sets his hand on the woman's body allowing her to caress and kiss his hand.
Brief mention of a sexual assault that occurred earlier in the series.
The male characters continuously sexually harass the female characters and it is treated as innocent joking.
Hamilton (Movie)
A female character is forced by her husband to seduce and sleep with the titular character multiple times. In the beginning, the latter does not want to either, but he eventually agrees. During one of the songs, a 19 year old flirts with two ladies, implying they will sleep together. He makes a comment about how the women he sleeps with compare his abilities in bed to his father's. This implies a significant age gap either between him and the women, or the women and his father. An age gap like this, especially for someone his age could make some uncomfortable. Most of this is implied and not outright stated.
Hamlet (1948) (Movie)
The film has been directed to imply that Hamlet has incestuous feelings for his mother; they kiss on the lips passionately several times.
Hamlet (1996) (Movie)
Worthy of note: a male character throws a female character onto a bed in a fit of anger. This is not intended to be sexual but may be alarming for some viewers.
The Hand (Movie)
A younger man is given a hand job without consent very early in the film.
A teenager has sex with his neighbour (an adult woman).
Handy Dandy (Movie)
There is an implication that one of the men has pressured/assaulted women in the past.
Chapter 13: a man theatens to cut off another man's penis. He snips a hole in his pants but lets him go.
The Hangover (Movie)
A man catcalls women from his car. There are two scenes in which a man moves a baby as though to suggest that it is performing a sexual act; this is played for laughs. In another scene, the protagonist questions whether or not he has been a victim of rape. This is undetermined, although the suggestion is that this most likely did not occur.
One of the characters in the film is a child molester.
About 3/4 through the movie, a woman tries to touch another woman who is tied up and unconscious. She asks her an explicit question. It lasts about 15 seconds and she is stopped by another woman.
A boy sees a woman being pinned to a bed and yelling for help, but cheers and leaves the room instead of helping. It turns out that the assaillant was not trying to rape her, but to kill her: he fails.
Happy Face (TV) (TV Show)
The book contains a mention of male hikers on the AT trail cuddling up to the female main character while she is sleeping (she felt their male parts against her). This is very briefly mentioned in a passing thought and the main character does not dwell on it and moves on quickly as it is merely an annoyance she deals with being a woman in a male dominated activity.
'Ipso Fatso': a character hits on 2 characters to their discomfort.
Happyish (TV Show)
S1E4: towards the beginning of the episode a man jokes that black men are running in the streets raping white women. He states it twice, to prove that another person in the meeting is being racist.
Hard Boiled (Movie)
A man is told to take his pants off. It is stopped before anything happens (toward the end of the movie).
Hard Target (Movie)
In the very beginning of the movie, it seems like a woman will be assaulted for a brief moment, but she is quickly saved.
An attempted rape is discussed. Women are grabbed many times and harassment occurs frequently throughout.
Hardcore (Movie)
This movie is about a father looking for his runaway teenage daughter, who is making porno films. He often finds himself in situations with women (and sometimes with men) where he does not consent to intimacy, but is pushed or forced to. Rape, bestiality, teenage prostitution and snuff movies are discussed.
A man slaps a woman's butt (17 minutes in). Worthy of note: domestic violence is mentioned two times.
It is mentioned that a teacher sold one of his underage students for human trafficking. Pictures of underages girls, crying, were found in his desk. [This serie is reviewed till S1E5]
Harold is 19, and Maude is 79. They have a romantic - implied sexual - relationship. The age gap might be uncomfortable for some viewers.
The protagonist kisses a woman without her consent though she herself also does not want to do so but is instructed via a note. The woman is shocked but does not seem disturbed by this and teases the protagonist about it several times.
Near the end of the film, a man calls a teenager beautiful and touches her face without consent.
A ghost looks at the 14-year-old main character while he is in the bath and gets close to him. This clearly makes him uncomfrotable. It is implied that she has spied on other (15 to 17-year-old) students. While the ghost died as a teenager, she is played by an adult.
A teenage girl sends a teenage boy sweets infused with a 'love charm', which would cause him to become immediately infatuated with her and lust after her if he ate them. The sweets are eaten by another teenage boy accidentally and have the same effect on him. He is soon provided with an antidote. The intentions of the female character are never explicitly stated to be sexual, but it is worthy of note that she wished to simulate romantic reciprocation from somebody who did not naturally provide it. Worthy of note: at the holiday party, Hermione talks about her date being 'all hands' and eats a smelly hors-d'oeuvre to put him off.
A male character is hung upside down in front of a group of people and another character says that he i going to take his pants off. We do not see if it happens or not.
An older man recounts that when he was 14, he lost his virginity to a 20 year old woman.
Hataraki Man (TV Show)
S1E1: an editor in chief mentions that whenever he makes a comment, he is accused of power play or sexual harassment. S1E2: the female protagonist pretends to kiss her co-worker during a stake out . He is uncomfortable but then goes along with it to make someone leave. S1E6: a man accuses a female reporter of sleeping with someone to get an up-close scoop. A woman says she does not mind sexual harassment if she can use it to her advantage. S1E10: a man says a woman has an air about her that says ‘I am yours.’ However she has already turned him down multiple times and he calls her worthless because of it. The same woman is later on ordered to take off her clothes by another man. It is revealed that she models for his paintings. The situation at hand seems consensual. Worthy of note: there is a lot of misogyny.
Hatchet (Movie)
Two women are led to show off their bodies and touch each other under false pretenses, another man says this is a good idea.
Short but detailed description of rape, by the survivor. This happens on a handful of occasions, relating to two separate incidents. The veracity of these accounts is unclear. Mention of paedophilia in the context of discussing vigilante justice against child sex abusers.
S1E2: mention of rape S1E3: a man’s fiancée is a teenager, but nothing is shown between them.
Project DIVA is a rhythm game series, consisting of music made with the voice synthesizer program, Vocaloid, and its sister program Piapro Studio NT. Some songs available throughout the series contain some themes of sexual assault or other unhealthy relationship dynamics. Note that some songs may vary in availability or playability across the series, as it has had multiple installments and reboots since its original release in 2009. - "Adolescence" by SignalP features a relationship between two siblings that is heavily implied to be romantic/incestuous in nature. However, the lyrics are also intended to have multiple interpretations - for example, another interpretation of the the song is simply about how platonic affection between siblings is scrutinized once they reach teenhood. - "break;down" by hmtk: The song is about a woman who is in obsessive love with her coworker; there are undertones of stalking and possibly sexual harassment. - "Cantarella" by Kurousa-P: Loosely inspired by the story of Cesare and Lucrezia Borgia, it depicts a man who drugs a woman in order to assault her; they are also heavily implied to be siblings. - "Close and Open, Demons and The Dead" by Hachi: Often interpreted to be about sex workers of the Edo period, specifically about the assault and abuse sex workers faced. Another theory posits it's specifically about children conscripted into sex work in the same era. - "Don't MyList Me!" by Live-P: Included in the compilation song "Cool Medley: Cyber Rock Jam", but is not included as its own song. It features a meta-narrative about Rin becoming popular on Nicovideo, a Japanese video service where many Vocaloid users share their work. Throughout the song, Rin expresses feeling victimized and objectified by her fans who "MyList" her (a feature on Nicovideo that allows people to save songs to favorited playlists). - "Envy Catwalk" by Tohma: While the lyrics are not explicit and do not contain themes of sexual assault, it is heavily implied to be about a sex worker. - "Gothic and Loneliness" by Narushima Takashi: The song is about an immortal woman who has spent centuries in isolation; when a well-meaning knight comes to her castle, she begins to monopolize him, prevent him from leaving the castle, force-feed him aphrodisiacs, and force him into a relationship with her. - "Holy Lance Explosion Boy" by rerulili: While it does not contain themes of sexual assault, it has explicit lyrics about a teenage boy's reckless sexual behavior, which may be disturbing or uncomfortable for some players. - "magnet" by minato: While this song does not have themes of sexual assault, it depicts a relationship played by characters who are an adult and a minor, respectively. Many fans choose to interpret this as the minor being aged up or playing the role of an adult in the song. - "Rin-chan Now!" by OwataP: The song is about Miku and Luka showering Rin with affection and openly dreaming about affectionate and romantic scenarios with her, some of which have sexual connotations (like Luka making a comment about making sure Rin does not find pornographic content of herself). While it is intended to be lighthearted and humorous, the song does have mild themes of stalking, harassment and possibly unhealthy age gaps (as Luka is 20 and Rin is 14). - "RIP=RELEASE" by minato: The song is about a woman who engages in reckless sex with a man who does not reciprocate her feelings. She obsesses over him, possibly stalks him, and threatens to kill him. - "Secret Police" by BuriruP: While it does not contain themes of sexual assault, it is about an oppressive police state that spies on its citizens - many undercover police are also close family members or romantic partners of citizens being spied on. Some aspects of the song may be uncomfortable to some viewers. - "Two-Sided Lovers" (aka Two-Faced Lovers) by wowaka: While the lyrics are vague and up for interpretation, some theories are that it's about a woman addicted to love or sex, or that it's about a woman who falls in love with a man, but is quickly discarded by him once he's had sex with her. - "Your Diva" by BokuP: The song itself is a meta-narrative about Miku, as a program, learning to work and sing alongside her new producer. There is a brief joke about her producer making her sing perverted songs, which she immediately rebuffs and tells her producer to instead create lyrics from their heart.
Haunted Maze (Movie)
A cop taunts a suspect about being raped in prison.
There is a scene (about 2/3 of the way through the movie) where the ghost of a man pins a woman down on her bed and is coming at her. He does not get her or touch her but is menacing.
A man goes into the women's bathroom while filming: we only see the women kicking him out, nothing that was recorded.
Haven (TV Show)
S1E1: a pedophile is mentioned. S1E5: many men are compelled to have sex with a woman who is inhabiting the body of her ancestor and also has no choice. She has a rapid pregnancy after each encounter. The men then die rapidly of old age. S2E1: a story of child sex abuse is told. S3E5: a man up skirts.
Haxan (Movie)
A woman uses a series of love potions on a monk. Witches have to kiss the devil0s ass against their will.
He, She, They (TV Show)
A running subplot of the show is about a woman who accused a driver at a rideshare company of sexual assault.
S1E8: the protagonist is mistaken for liking "lolitas" because of how he observes and dresses a young girl. It later turns out he was looking out for signs of abuse. S1E8: employees lament how sexual and power abuse is utilized by higher-ups in their company. S1E9-9: a young child is often physically abused and beaten by an adult. Although it is unclear whether there is a sexual connotation to the violence, it is shown that she is being beaten and has bruises on her body. She eventually manages to escape the situation and is taken into custody in a safe environment; the perpetrator is arrested.
This film contains several rape jokes.
A woman enters a room from the shower, holding a towel to her chest. A man surprises her and pretends to have a gun in his pocket to force her to put her hands up. The towel falls and the man is shown staring at her: both appear sexually aroused. The man goes forward and kisses the woman.
A deceased male character had abused victims as a sexual sadist. A major male character had deliberately drawn the brunt of his abuse to protect others. He was definitely repeatedly beaten, and implied to have been raped. All this happened before the series begins and is named without any detail.
One scene from this documentary about a film show three women entertain soldiers by dancing during which men storm on to the stage and attempt to grab the women and the women are rescued and taken away by other soldiers.
Heartstopper (TV Show)
S1E1: a teen is pushed against a wall by his ex-boyfriend and forcibly kissed despite his protest (20:20-20:38).
A character pushes the protagonist against a locker and starts kissing him, despite the latter's repeated verbal protests. Another character acts on the protagonist's behalf and interrupts the situation.
The Heat (Movie)
Heat (1995) (Movie)
Worthy of note: the film depicts very troubled domestic scenes and features a storyline about a serial killer who has sex with women before beating them to death. A scene is shown in which this serial killer (who has a swastika tattooed on his chest) has sex with a black sex worker before accusing her of lying about how good the sex was and grabbing her roughly by the hair. Her battered body is shown in the next scene.
In the first sequence after the opening credits, a police officer watches a naked woman (later revealed to be a girl of 15) through a window. This girl is later brought to the police station, pregnant, and a man is accused of statutory rape. Soon after, we meet the man who actually abused her: he handles her roughly but no sexual assault occurs on-screen. An adult man describes how he was arrested after watching the same girl disrobe.
Heathers (2018) (TV Show)
There is a teacher who is a pedophile. He is seen making out with a student, and also putting something in another girl's drink, but someone warns her and helps her sneak out of the bar. Additionnally, he is seen watching cheerleading on TV with a creepy look on his face. As a dark comedy, the show contains scenes with victim-blaming and jokes about how creepy this guy was.
The movie features a brief scene where a drunk man makes unwanted advances on a woman.
S1E1: a flashback shows that the protagonist (an older teenage) met his love interest when he was a young child. However, by the time there is any romantic interaction both are immortals, adults, and over thousand years old along with the older protagonist not realizing the child they met is the love interest in the present. S1E2: men make lewd comments and touch the corpses of women. S2E2: a woman attempts several times to convince the protagonist to do a sexual act with her despite him being shown to be uncomfortable and denying her multiple times. She eventually leaves him alone.
In the third book the main character breathes in something of an aphrodisiac (a poison that basically sends him into a mania that was meant to make him partake in sexual activities) After that, the fruit of the plant that did that to him harass him and a solider (who is a minor) verbally, and by appearing as naked human beings. This so for the purpose of the main character to have sex. A minor is there, and involved. Due to the situation the main character self harms to prevent himself from becoming unpure, as that is where he gets his power due to the kind of cultivation he uses.
An adult and the protagonist (a 14 year old girl) have sex. Even if she agrees to let him into her bed and later goes to his house (explaining in a voice-over that she had no choice), the younger character is clearly disassociating and flashes in and out of fantasy sequences replacing her reality. Earlier in the film, the other main female character explains, during an expose in front of a classroom, that a (fictional) queen has to escape her husband's constant sexual sollicitations: it is played for laughs.
Heavy Rain (Video Game)
A woman the player controls is forced to strip at gunpoint. A man harasses a sex worker at her door until he eventually breaks in: attempted rape may be implied, but nothing explicit is mentioned or shown on screen.
A woman is repeatedly cat-called.
There is an adult male character who continuously hits on an adult female character (not the YA perspective character) despite his advances being clearly unwanted. It's played for laughs; the perspective character even considers arranging a marriage between the two adults. (The situation consensually resolves for political reasons after a point.)
It is mentioned that a guard should be hired so the female characters do not get raped. One male character routinely harasses one of the female characters, asking her to take her top off and propositioning her. Some male characters walk into a woman’s room while she is in her underwear and a t-shirt. They excuse this by saying she should have left her door closed. One female character plays a damsel in distress type: while her hands are bound, a male character cuts the front of her dress so that her underwear is visible.
A male bank robber puts money in the bra of a female bank teller who is clearly fearful. A man intimidatingly corners an assumed sex worker and asks to "sample the goods," but she is able to escape the situation.
Hellbent (Movie)
A secondary older male character makes the female lead uncomfortable by gripping her hands and wrists, and by some creepy flirting.
Hello, Dolly! (Movie)
A woman get into the shower with another woman and makes sexual advances on the woman which clearly makes her uncomfortable. A possessed woman and her father make out.
A bonus chapter at the end of volume 3 briefly explores the relationship between a teenage girl and her adult girlfriend. It is not made clear how large their age gap is, and this relationship is not referenced anywhere else in the story.
Two female cenobites touch a man without his consent. A man jokes about a woman being "Too old" for another man.
Helluva Boss (TV Show)
An employer frequently oversteps his boundaries with an employee by stalking him, joking that he has a small penis, and threatening to have sex with him and his wife if he performs poorly at his job. This is all played for laughs. There is an ongoing relationship between two characters in which there is a severe power imbalance and lack of respect, with the implication that the consent of the lower-status character is under duress. The more powerful character has scenes where he dirty-talks the other character, who is visibly uncomfortable, which is played for laughs. Further into the series, this dynamic is explored with nuance. One of the major characters is in an abusive relationship with his wife, who proudly admits how much she loves abusing her husband and making him feel weak and powerless. A main character is threatened into an arranged marriage with his ex-boyfriend by his abusive father, which is just as much played for humor as it is for drama. A main female character catfishes several horny men into going out with her, only for the men to be violently murdered as part of a bet. S1E3: one of the main protagonists is sexually assaulted by a group of succubi antagonists. This assault is on screen, but sillhouetted, so details cannot be seen. This is played for laughs, but the assault is the 'final straw' for the main character to escalate his feud with them. S2E4: a woman and her brother share a conversation at around the middle of the episode. The brother uses words like "vixen" to refer to her, and is overall very flirty, though nothing is outright stated or shown on screen (10:42-12:19). Worth noting: in S1E2, one character makes several sexual comments in front of his teenage daughter. One of these is a comment that "people want our money and our bodies", including both him and his daughter in the statement. This is played for laughs. There are also frequent jokes about characters being 'perverts', and characters being uncomfortable with others' sexual advances.
In Her Shoes (Movie)
Early on in the film, one of the lead characters has her car towed, along with two other men. They all agree to hang out before heading to the impound lot to retrieve their cars. As it gets dark, Rose realises she feels uncomfortable around one of the men, who has his arm around her. When they reach the lot, she says goodbye and tries to leave. One of the men pursues her, trying to get her to hang out or go somewhere, which she refuses. He grabs her but she manages to shove him off and get in her car. The other man shouts for him to leave her alone but does not intervene.
A man spies on a woman as she' is getting changed. It is presented as a comedic moment.
A female character is subjected to physical and verbal of abuses from men. She is being held hostage by a monster who she later says "thinks 'no' means 'yes' and 'get lost' means 'take me I'm yours'". A male character watches women characters from hiding in a bush and then chases after them, not taking no for an answer.
S1E6: the attempted rape of a woman is mentioned.
Here and Now (TV Show)
S1E1: a 17 year-old girl has sex with a mid-20s male model.
Heretic (Movie)
Hester Street (Movie)
A man grabs a woman's hips and she aggressively pushes him away.
A woman is forced into prostitution after becoming a prisoner of war: we see her pimp grab her roughly. Two men have a discussion implying they will take advantage of a sleeping woman.
It is implied that a young man is framed for sexual assault. There is reference to him being a 'peeper' and stealing women's undergarments, although it is unclear if these things are true.
High Noon (Movie)
A man forcefully kisses his girlfriend when she is leaving him. She rebuffs him and manages to make him stop.
High Potential (TV Show)
S1E1: this episode features a woman who was sexually assaulted.
High School DxD (TV Show)
Sexual harassment, which is recurrent, is played for laughs. The main character touches or makes comments about girls without their consent, and the show never really treats it seriously. It is not violent, but the way it normalizes that kind of behavior could definitely be upsetting to some viewers.
Highlander (TV) (TV Show)
S1E1: a man breaks into the main character's home and threatens the woman vaguely with rape twice before leaving. He stalks her, calls her to threaten her, and breaks back into her home to hold her hostage in a really creepy way. A police officer insinuates that men in jail will rape a boy who is going to jail. S1E21: the plot of this episode revolves around the rape of the main character's stepdaughter.
Hightown (TV Show)
A man jokes about how he would “eat any girl” if he were a cannibal.
A brother is in love with his sister.
The protagonist reflects on how she and her classmates had relationships with adult men while they were in secondary school. As an adult, she ends up marrying someone who is 13 years older than her.
Discussion/mention of sexual harassment and of a teacher touching a student inappropriately, non-explicit. The situation in which this inappropriate touching occurs is shown, although the touching itself is not depicted in any great detail. This plot line could potentially be upsetting to viewers, especially as the movie's judgement on these events is left more or less ambiguous. A different teacher, less than 5 years older than the student in question, is sexually propositioned by said student and does not react negatively.
Hit and Run (Movie)
Rape and sexual violence are mentioned throughout the film for comedy purpose.
Hitman: Blood Money (Video Game)
The player has the option to approach a prostitute and be alone in a room with her. What the player discovers is that she is an assassin hired specifically to interfere with the protagonist's own assassination and results in a game over screen where she kills him. An another level, the player can follow a middle aged woman to her room who drunkingly hits on him, before she passes out on her bed. The only reason the player is motivated to do this is to gain a vantage point to snipe a Saudi Arabian CEO, his intended target, to fufill the contract
Hitman: Codename 47 (Video Game)
A prostitute kisses the protagonist, who reacts as if he is physically disgusted.
Hitman: Contracts (Video Game)
A hooker kisses the protagonist, causing him to physically recoil. He looks physically disgusted after the fact.
The trilogy of games sold in one package as a single piece of software includes Hitman 1 (2016), Hitman 2 (2018), and Hitman 3 (2021) The player has the option to "Roofie" any NPC or target's drink with 3 types, sedative (Knocks them unconcious) Enemic (Forces them to puke) and lethal (Instant death). A runner for a fashion show may be heard telling stylists to be mindful of make-up use on models lest they look like "Unkempt sluts" The protagonist can disguise himself as a golf instructor to get his intented target alone. The player is motivated to "Roffie" her drink with any of the 3 described poisons with the end goal of killing her, as he was paid to. One of the targets is a rockstar that, in the heat of the momen , pushed his girlfriend in a heated arguement, and crawled to his father who enacted a social media campaign to portray the girlfriend as a rowdy, drunk party girl that very likely threw herself off the roof but simultaniously deserved it, resulting in his acquittal for the manslaughter case.
In a flashback, a woman's butt is groped at a bar.
Hoax (Movie)
While camping, a man watches and records two others having sex without their knowledge. A woman is captured by the family living in the woods. She is told that she is going to marry one of the men in the family, and it is revealed that they captured one of the missing women from the camping trip at the beginning of the movie.
Hocus Pocus (Movie)
When two sisters get on a bus, the bus driver hits on them and says that he will give them anything they desire. They say they desire children. He says "that may take me a few tries, but I'll certainly try" in a very sexual way. The main character is constantly harassed in the film for being a virgin. A main female characteris constantly being sexually creepy. Two bullies discuss watching girls undress. Worthy of note: non consent is a running theme through the book, with the witches constantly mind controlling people.
Hocus Pocus 2 (Movie)
Two children are supposed to get married. One woman gets sad that she does not get to lure children anymore.
Hold Me Back (Movie)
About halfway through the movie, the protagonist remember a past agression and memory loss.
Hold Tight (TV Show)
S1E4: this episode contains two scenes of sexual harassment. S1E5: rape is mentioned.
Holes (Movie)
A man repeatedly makes advances towards a woman despite her repeated refusals.
A white man makes unwanted advances on a white woman who rejects him. Later, when he finds out she's in a relationship with a black man (this section of the novel being set in the 1800s in Texas, meaning interracial relationships are illegal), he leads a lynch mob and murders the woman's lover. When the woman initially realizes her lover is in danger, she goes to the sheriff for help. He only agrees to have her lover's life spared if she kisses him, which she refuses to do, so in retaliation, he allows her lover to be murdered. In another section of the novel, also set sometime in the 1800s, a 15 year old girl is married to a man old enough to be her father. She does not seem to care, but was also given little say in the matter.
Holiday Hell (Movie)
First story: while at a party, a man kisses a girl and she pushes him off her. Third story: a man shoots another man several times in the penis with a nail gun.
The Hollow (TV Show)
S3E5: someone kisses the hand of one of the main characters: she reacts in disgust (05:03-05:10).
The protagonist is kidnapped, drugged, and taken to a party where it is strongly implied some form of assault took place, then taken to a room upstairs where he is undressed, forced to witness an antagonist sexually assault and murder another man, and then left there with the intent of framing him for the other man's murder.
The protagonist is followed by men who sexually harass her until she yells at them. This prompts the protagonist to recall a real-life rape and murder case and reflect on rape culture in general.
Hollywood (TV Show)
S1E2+3: a Hollywood agent pressures an actor into sexual acts.
There is a group of sex workers in this film and one of them is a child. A man comes up to girl and kisses her hand. A man says that he often has sex with his employees with the intent of getting them pregnant and trapping them into being his wife. A woman, as part of an art exhibit, has her head covered but is otherwise nude. Her body is painted. A man approaches and fondles her breasts and vagina while this happens, possibly without her input.
Homestuck (TV Show)
Webcomic/book. No rape is shown, but sexual assault/harassment are implied in multiple scenes. Pages 3507, 5553, 7449, 6707, 6794-6830.
S1E4: sexual harassment.
Honey Boy (Movie)
The main adult character (the father of the other main character, a child) is a convicted sexual offender, who attempted to rape his son's mother in a car (she had to jump on the road to escape him). This is mentioned several times during the film. The boy also has several intimate interactions with a adult woman in a motel. Except kisses on the cheek, nothing sexual is depicted, but the nature of their relationship is clearly not platonic.
The college love interest is designed to look and acts like a young child, which may make some readers uncomfortable. At the end of the manga, the uncle of a young college protagonists confesses to having feelings for her.
There is passing mention of a tertiary character who cannot keep his hands to himself and disrespects the fact that the protagonist is a lesbian.
One romantic lead refers to her ex-husband as a “serial sex abuser” for cheating on her with three different women.
The film contains sexual scenes that are not consensual and forced intimacy.
Honkytonk Man (Movie)
An adult woman tells a teenage boy (said to be 16) to come back to her when he is older, implying that she is willing to have sex with him. Later on, the uncle of this same teenager brings him to a brothel and arranges for him to have sex for the first time. The story takes place in the 1930s. The titular character (an alcoholic man in his fifites) wakes up naked in bed with a female teenage character (16 year old). It is implied that they had sex when he was drunk. This female character, portrayed as being enamoured with him and willing to have a child with him, functions as a comic relief throughout the film. It is implied that she was abused by her former boss and the protagonist constantly treats her like a maniac. At some point, she mentions having to deal with "dirty old men". The protagonist explains that his former lover was a woman who was married by force when she was 14 and had children with her husband.
The female protagonist is kissed twice by her boss without consent, each time accompanied by him insisting they become a couple. She denies him during both instances.
Honor Society (Movie)
Rape culture is alluded throughout the film and roofie pills are part of the plot. An adult school counsellor propositions an underage student to have sex with them.
Throughout, the author discusses her experiences with being sexually harassed, drugged, and assaulted. She also shares statistics about sexual violence, particularly sexual violence at the hands of the police.
A character is mentioned to have had a slaveholding ancestor who impregnated one of his slaves.
Hook (Movie)
The protagonist kisses an unconscious girl without her consent (about 3/4 through the movie).
The Hoot Owl (Movie)
This film features a story of a past murder where a couple was killed and the man's penis was cut off and put in his wife's mouth.
A girl agrees to show her genitals to a group of boys in exchange of jewels.
Horace and Pete (TV Show)
S1E1: the episode starts with a woman intruding on one of the main character's privacy. They also have a long discussion about refugees and rape. S1E7: the episode starts with the discussion of Sodom and Gomorrah.
A movie is shown where a woman clearly is getting sexual harassed in an alley. But she has super stength and beat the guy.
Horizon Worlds (Video Game)
While no sexual content is part of the gameplay itself, there have been numerous instances reported of players being virtually sexually harassed and assaulted in-game, such as being groped by other players' characters. However, the game offers a safety feature that allows you to prevent unknown players from approaching a boundary around your character called "Safe Zone".
Horizon Zero Dawn (Video Game)
The villains discuss raping the main character at the end of the film, although they do not do this.
Horrific (Movie)
Story 1 : a man has sex with a woman while she is possessed by a demon. Story 2 : a monster fondles a woman while she is sleeping. Later, it watches another woman while she is showering and touches her while she things it is her husband. At the end of the story both women are implied to be pregnant.
Horror 101 (Movie)
A prison rape joke is made. A man gropes a woman when the lights go out.
This documentary contains discussions of 'Birth of a Nation' and the stereotype of black men being predatory towards white women.
Story 2: a man finds a woman's dead body in the woods and talks to her as if she was alive. He brings her home for a date, and later he is seen sleeping beside her in bed. They are both clothed, no sexual acts are shown. Story 6: a woman looks in on another woman while she is in the bath.
At one point, women spy on a couple having sex without their knowledge.
At the beginning of the movie, a male character breaks into a home where a female character is and kisses her. She pushes him off and runs outside. He runs after her and gets on top of her on the ground. She tells him to get off and he does.
Hostel (2005) (Movie)
A man and a woman have sex in a bathroom stall. He photographs his actions on his phone and sends it to his friends without the woman's consent. One character gets gropped on a train by a strange passenger.
Hosts (Movie)
Attackers lick and drool on the characters, and one rubs his face on the face of an unconsenting woman. He later grips/strokes her thigh (attic scene), saying he "just wants to get to know her."
Hot Box (Movie)
The Hot Chick (Movie)
A teenage girl falsely accuses a woman of groping her.
Hot Fuzz (Movie)
There is an off-hand joke made about a character's parentage saying that the character's mother and sister are the same person. The character in question also is described as 'having the mind of a child' and unspecified developmental disabilities. It may trigger people sensitive to incest. It is brief and does not go into any further detail than that.
Women appearing underage is presented as a desirable trait by multiple people. Man refers to some women in the sex industry as ‘teeny-boppers,’ implying that their lack of experience (real or apparent) is a significant part of what makes them sexually appealing. Potentially exploitative sexual relationships/dynamics are a continuing theme; glorification of sex with very young people (teenagers, mostly girls), and of unprotected sex, as well as people entering into sex work in order to remedy financial struggles. Many young women are encouraged to take up sex work with promises of money and other luxuries. In one scene, a man pretends to be the adult friend of a young girl’s family, ‘taking advantage’ of her sexually. The actress is instructed to act as though she is ‘never fully engaged’ in the sex, and the actor is told that he should begin undressing her and assume that he can continue although she never explicitly expresses consent. Later, she talks about how much she 'hated' filming the scene. References are made to websites which specialise in pornographic videos specifically of exploited teenagers. One storyline addresses the prevalence of ‘forced oral sex’ and other abuse in pornography, often taken to extremes (one woman is made to vomit and lick her vomit off the floor). Women are verbally abused; often, there is a racial element to this abuse. A woman jokes that a dog ‘tried to rape her.’
Hot Shots! (Movie)
Rape in prison is discussed, but only in the hypothetical.
Towards the beginning of the movie, a group of male zombie construction workers witness a female zombie walking past. They wink and nudge one another, but they do not bother her. Later on, a human character reaches through a skeleton’s ribcage. She takes offense at this and another skeleton comes to defend her.
The straight male lead has a magical weakness that makes him more vulnerable to seduction and manipulation. Several female characters use this against him. Some female allies leverage this to tease him (including kisses that are not unwelcome, but are partially compelled) and make the point that he needs to be more cautious while his enemies are in active pursuit. One female character whose allegiances are ambiguous wears a passive "I'm beautiful, so you wish to do things that please me" charm that the protagonist actively resists. The impact of these episodes is softened considerably by the fact that he views them as annoyances, turn-ons, and/or reminders to protect himself, rather than seeming especially distressed. There is a running gag in which his sentient dog begs for a harem of French poodles. The dog is extremely excited when his master arranges for a date with a group of poodles in heat. It is played for laughs at every point, which can get uncomfortable as a reader.
A guy watches a woman undress when she is unaware.
Rape joke (~5:00).
About 17 minutes into the movie, a man pushes the female lead onto a bed. She protests and he finally gets off. There is also a romance including intimacy between a high school student (the protagonist) and her neighbor who is in college (52:00).
A man brings a woman breakfast and says he put something in her orange juice. She thanks him for telling her and says she usually does not find out until much later. He says that is not what he meant and that he added zest to the orange juice. The entire movie is filled with men sexualizing women and talking about their bodies.
A ghost story is told involving a little girl being raped by a gang of men and left for dead (1:10:00). The movie also revolves around a woman taking a very drunk man home and making sexual advances on him. He is always very willing in sexual situations and tries to instigate additional ones.
A female character is strapped to a chair, where a mad doctor touches her around the shoulders and head (54:00). He then violently tortures her.
S1E4: it is mentioned how a female character was almost harassed by a man. She turned him away and nothing end up happening. This is not shown on screen. Worthy of note: it is mentioned how geisha's have to be bought out of prostitution if they want to live a normal life.
The author describes being groomed and repeatedly sexually assaulted by a married middle-aged man when she was a teenager.
An 18 year old flirts with a 14 year old girl touching her and flirting with her and telling her sexual remarks. He later knocks her unconscious and puts her in a boat with the intention of taking her across the bayou. He states to her mother that he wants her to be his wife. Her mom asks if he touched her or hurt her and she says no.
It is mentioned that women are not safe around a particular male character. The protagonist demands that his friend give him a kiss in front of a large group of people. This makes her and most of the other people in the room extremely uncomfortable. Only one person is happy with the situation, the most powerful person present. This powerful person encourages the protagonist to treat women and girls this way.
The movie takes place in a brothel, and one of the character is 16.
A character's top becomes covered in blood and she changes it. During this, an antagonist character watches lustfully and two of the characters friends shield her from his gaze. Later, the same character is kidnapped and held by a man who glued her mouth shut as a gag. Nothing sexual is shown, but the man's reactions and way he talks to the character could be interpreted that way. It is implied that one of the male antagonists kidnaps and rapes women in the basement of his gas station. There are polaroids on the wall that show naked women, although it is in the background and not not focused on at all on screen.
A witch kisses a man while disguised as his girlfriend.
There is a sexual relationship between twins. It is dubiously consensual in the backstory, and one is actively trying to escape it during the film's plot.
The Housemaid (Movie)
One character threatens to falsely accuse someone of rape.
The only mention of rape or sexual assault occurs at 57:15. A woman flirts verbally with a police officer in an attempt to avoid arrest. In the next scene she laments her actions and says "did you see me practically rape that policeman?"
This books contains a discussion of the #MeToo movement and corporate responses to sexual harassment and sexual assault scandals.
There is passing mention of sexual harassment charges levied against some of the author's clients.
A few chapters include non-specific, passing mentions of the Abu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuse. Worthy of note: each chapter is named after a person the author interviewed. In Lina's chapter, she gets engaged at one point to a cousin. However, she ends up breaking off the engagement.
A man makes a joke about a woman having to sleep with someone to get her job. A joke about incest is made.
A man repeatedly phones a woman to ask her out despite her telling him not to.
S3E1: around the 7:05 mark, someone makes a joke about someone consenting to sex by being drunk.
A secretary is grabbed, and she pushes an older boss off of her. Secretaries frequently joke about how common sexual harassment is in the office. A boss has an affair with a secretary and is blackmailed about it. One of the songs is a satirical bit titled “A Secretary is Not a Toy” as a reminder of the company policy on not sexually harassing your secretary. The main character gets his direct boss’ job by sending in a secretary his CEO likes that he knows will be sexually harassed/assaulted. She is grabbed and kissed. A secretary threatens the main character and says if he does not kiss her she will tell the boss he did.
A woman develops a crush on a man upon seeing him for the first time. At one scene, she kisses her fingers and attempts to plant them on the man's lips, to where he shows visible disgust and wipes his mouth off.
The main character (17 years old) dates a student teacher at her school (20 years old). The two previously dated when she was a freshman in high school and he was a senior. The relationship is not portrayed positively by the narrative, and the power imbalance is remarked upon.
A woman mentions that her step father attempted to rape her. A director tells a actress her character will be gang raped for a scene.
Bestiality is mentioned.
A girl kisses a boy without his consent.
A pair of armed soldiers see a much smaller, civilian woman walking alone in an alleyway. They begin to flirt with her pretty aggressively, blocking her path and ignoring her efforts to get away from them. One of the soldiers remarks that he thinks the woman is "even cuter when she's scared." The scene ends relatively quickly.
The show is about the daily life of workers in hell. They mention how people are punished for various sins such as sexual assault. The sins are never detailed, but briefly mentioned to explain why someone is getting punished.
Hudson Hawk (Movie)
A man asks his colleagues whether they want him to rape a man and woman (who are not present) (55:13). This question is not taken seriously by the colleagues, who tell him to shut up. A man grabs a woman from behind, without her consent (01:03:30-01:03:50). Standing behind her he briefly forces her to dance, and then thrusts his groin against her buttocks twice in an overtly sexual way.
S1E3: at the beginning of the episode, there is mention of assaulting women. It is not clear whether this refers to sexual assault. Later on in the episode it is mentioned that a police officer sexually abused undocumented women. The assault is not shown on-screen and is only briefly mentioned. S1E4: a man stalks a woman across multiple countries. While in a drunken rage he pushes her into a room and starts beating her. He then fumbles with his belt. The woman pours hot water on him and escapes. He keeps stalking her and tries to murder her. S1E6: children are kidnapped. The concept of human trafficking is then explained, including different types of human trafficking such as sexual exploitation.
Human Nature (Movie)
About 50 minutes into the movie, a man who was brought up as an ape, jumps on two different women and mimicks having sex with them. It is part of a 'test' to help him become civilised/human. The scenes are played for laughs. Shortly after, he is seen in a stripclub, and it is said that he had sex with a prostitute. This occurs several times in the rest of the movie. About 1h15 into the movie, a man gropes a naked woman without consent. He is rebuffed.
An elderly man becomes infatuated with a woman. He forcefully grabs and threatens her. Later, before he is about to execute her, the man offers to save the woman from death if she submits sexually to him. She refuses and he proceeds to carry on with the execution. The woman is later saved. The elderly man comes up behind the woman and pulls her arm behind her back, holding her forcefully in front of him. He leans in to smell her hair. It is implied that he is imagining sexually abusing her.
There is a passing discussion of Israeli Occupation Force soldiers raping Palestinians.
When being introduced to an adult man, the 17-year-old protagonist is suddenly kissed by him on the lips. She seems surprised and uncomfortable, but everyone else just laughs it off as a joke. No further scenes of this man are shown.
A male character grabs a female character and kisses her. A male character talks about how he was prostituted as a child.
A male character describes being forced into sex work by the government after winning the Hunger Games.
Even if there is no rape, sexual assault or child sex abuse in this film, it contains many jokes stemming from the fact that some of the characters assume that one of the character (a 65-year-old man) had kidnapped the 13-year-old protagonist in order to coerce him into having a sexual relationship with him. It is not the case.
A woman tells a ghost story about a woman who was beaten and likely raped by her husband.
Chapters 5 and 48: mention of rape as a general crime Some parts of the book are told from the perspective of a man who has a very "but I'm a nice guy" attitude towards one of the women in their group.
S4E69: it is mentioned that an inmate has committed rape. S6E6: the chimera ants pure evil intentions and love of the hunt for humans is demonstrated with one of the monsters killing a female character and eating her corpse. The act is only showed from behind and there is virtually no detail other than slight movement. Regardless, this level of violence is never shown to be these intense through the whole series, and can be extremely shocking or triggering for someone who cannot anticipate it coming. Worthy of note: a character is a masochist and gets aroused during fights. The twelve year old protagonist also goes on a date with an adult woman, though nothing sexual is implied. In one episode, an adult man is seen looking at two young boys lustfully (played for laughs).
A man, who has control over that child's body, says a child's beauty is turning him on (enough to make him throw up). Another male character mentions how two young boys are his unripe fruit.
Hunters (TV Show)
S1E1: in the opening scene, a man caresses a woman and makes comments about her appearance at a barbecue. One character briefly mentions a Nazi raping a prisoner. A central plot point is that a Nazi doctor takes a romantic interest in an Auschwitz prisoner. She rejects his advances, and there is no indication in the plot that he rapes or sexually assaults her. He instead turns all of his aggression towards torturing her romantic interest, a fellow prisoner. Although there is no child sexual abuse per se, a side character is framed as a pedophile. He denies that he is, and the plot provides no evidence for it: according to the plot, the pedophilia framing occurred to get him to stop investigating the presence of Nazis in America. In addition, an adult main character mentions playing the child to get information out of someone.
A male character has a harem or cult of women whom he calls his wives. One of the protagonists, a teenage girl, seeks help from this community. There is discussion about the protagonist being made one of his wives, but that never happens.
The Hustle (Movie)
Women use sexual manipulation to hustle men out of money.
Hustlers (Movie)
Paid sexual favors (strip tease, unconsensual touching and even sexual acts) are the main themes of the movie.
Hwarang (TV Show)
S1E5: a guy starts dragging a girl somewhere after saying something that could be interpreted as a sexual innuendo (43:48-44:40). The situation is resolved by another guy. S1E7: a girl mistakes a man for another one and grabs his butt (54:00-54:30).
Hypnosen (Movie)
A man makes an awkward observation about him standing outside a playground with no children, as an attempt to put a mother at ease. A man puts sleeping pills in his girlfriend's drink, though this is not with sexual assault in mind.
There is a mention of a case where a woman reports a rape. A later scene shows two men engaging in intercourse. The man has a flashback/panic attack, asking to stop and hallucinating an unconsenting partner.
Hysteria! (TV) (TV Show)
S1E5: a girl coerces a man into having sex. When he tries to say no, she heavily coerces him into having sex. She also forces him to drink, and is using him to summon a demon without his consent or knowledge. A man lies and tells the whole school that they slept together.
While rape and sexual assault are discussed, it is treated sensitively as it is being discussed by women comedians recounting their experiences performing comedy over the years. There is no sexual violence depicted, only a discussion of unfair standard men impose on women.
Hytti Nro 6 (Movie)
The protagonist is a teenage girl possessed by a demon. The demon forces a kiss on her at one point, and she defends herself against it.
Chapter 5: a side characters step father is described pressing his genitalia to his teenage step daughter. same man takes a photo up the skirt of the main character. Chapter 6: the main characters uncle sticks his fingers in her mouth. one time, he does it much deeper than usual, so the main character bites him so hard she draws blood. Chapter 8: the main character and her mother are cleaning the house of an older man who is described by the main character as staring at her mother inappropriately. Chapter 22: the main character learns that her mother was raped at gunpoint while her father was forced to watch. She also discovers that her older sister was the product of this rape. This is mentioned multiple times throughout the rest of the book.
I Am Sam (Movie)
It is implied that the main character's daughter was conceived from rape, and it is revelead that one of the characters was molested by her father as a child.
I Am ZoZo (Movie)
A woman is pinned down to the bed by a ghost.
I Came By (Movie)
It is implied that an unseen young man might have been forced into a sexual relationship with a character's father (1:06:25-1:08:30).
I Care a Lot (Movie)
The film centers around elder abuse (financial, emotional) although no sexual abuse was shown or mentioned. A man says he hopes that the main character gets raped.
There is a passing mention of someone whose touch lingers inappropriately while adjusting the ballet dancers' posture.
I Hate Suzie (TV Show)
S2E2: it is mentioned that David Bowie is a statutory rapist.
Many of the essays throughout the book deal with sexual assault, particularly how it is handled or mishandled in leftist queer communities.
A teenage girl begins working as a stripper and when her boss is made aware of this, she is hired anyway.
I Like Movies (Movie)
A woman explains her experience in the film industry and mentions without giving any details that she has been abused by a producer (01:02:00-01:05:00). She obviously still suffers from it.
In one scene, a man's friend gets up to make an announcement while at a dinner party with his friend, his friend's fiancee, and a number of their family members. In this announcement, he heavily implies that the man's fiancee should perform oral sex on his friend, much to her embarrassment.
No rape or sexual assault however there is brief discussion where it is implied that men are coerced into performing oral sex in return for favours while in prison. The scene is played in a comedic way, leaving it up to the viewer's interpretation. It is also implied that the character Phillip Morris has been lied to by men in the past in order to be persuaded to perform sexual favours for them.
A teen girl falls in love with her teacher, who falls for her as well. The teacher is a man pretending to be a woman: the girl does not know this and only finds out at the very end.
Prison rape jokes are made. A woman lets a man touch her breasts because she thinks he is gay, which he is not.
One character continually kisses his girlfriend despite her saying "no". This continues in two scenes where he trying to take her clothes off while she resists. Near the end of the movie, the male protagonist suddenly and forcefully kisses his brother's wife. Throughout the movie, it is (more or less) implied that the protagonist entertains an incestuous love for his sister. The siblings write "love poems" to each other and threatening letters to their sibling's significant others.
One character denies the rumor that an unseen character claimed she touched her boobs. It is unclear whether it happened or not and the conversation quickly shifts gears afterwards. A scene where domestic violence can be faintly heard upstairs but the nature of it is unclear.
There is a mention of necrophilia.
I, Tonya (Movie)
There are two instances of sexual harassment on-screen: in one scene, an underage girl is groped, without her consent, by her older step-brother. In another, there is a short shot of non-consensual/forced kissing. Worthy of note: this film contains repeated scenes of domestic violence.
The One (TV) (TV Show)
S1E2: a few minutes in, a girlfriend asks her boyfriend if he would get with someone else if she died. He replies that he would wait till her body got cold and then find someone else. She replies, “That’s not funny.” I’d love to believe this wasn’t a rape joke but I don’t see how it could’ve been anything else".
I Vitelloni (Movie)
Throughout the film, men sexually harass women and one of the scenes could even be described as an attempted rape.
There is flirting between adults and two teenage girls mid film. The men are unaware the girls are underage when this happens (no sexual contact is ever made).
In the last 30 minutes of movie, there is a joke about someone "having his way" with a housewife.
In the backstory, a teacher (22 years old) has a sexual relationship with a student (17/18 years old). She insists it was consensual, but he was fired when they were found out, and other characters recognize the relationship as inappropriate. The same character also leaked nude photos of his ex-girlfriend (her age goes unmentioned). The main character is cornered by her best friend's father when he is drunk, and he stares at her inappropriately and makes several sexualized comments to her, which traumatizes her and causes her to blame herself. He is later discovered to have coerced his younger coworker into an affair. Many characters' personal letters are made public and read aloud in a deliberately humiliating manner, the letters often relating to their sexual experiences.
Icarly (TV Show)
This show contains a lot of weird behavior/scenes around the minors who star in it. Real-life incidents regarding the staff leaked into the show itself. A villain repeatedly tries to blackmail another girl into kissing him. Both characters are underage. S1E23: one character (a minor) is forced to rub an ice pack on the stomach of a sweaty man, who asks him out. S5E5: this episode centers around this teen boy who tricks this teen girl into a date. When she rejects him. He then tries to kiss her. Visibility upset, the teen girl runs from him and he chases after her. She yells for her older brother, who separates the two and keeps her safe.This was played for comedy. And a sort of "heroic" moment for the older brother (given the sitcom sound effects).
An old rabbit turns to kiss an old sloth and she stops him with her cane (1:16:17-1:16:21). It is implied that she would have kissed him, but not on the lips.
The protagonist, believing that he and the female lead are the very last mammoths alive, awkwardly asks her to help her repopulate the species. This is misinterpreted as sexual harassment by the female lead, with her adoptive brothers accusing him of being a pervert. However, the conflict is later resolved and the protagonist explains it was not his intent to harass her.
Rape is mentioned, but not at all detailed.
A man walks in on a woman while she is changing. While he continues to move boxes into her house, he makes her feel uncomfortable by continuing to stare at her.
The Ice Storm (Movie)
The main female protagonist (a teenager) proposes to show her genitals to a boy about her age if he shows his. After she did, the boy gets nervous and shouts: 'what do you want?' and they are interrupted by his mother. Later on, she gets him drunk and both get naked in bed. Even if he (drunkingly) says that he loves her, he later seems distressed by the experience. Another girl (about 16-17 years old) passes out between the legs of a boy who has a crush on her. She had just told him that she only sees him as a brother and the boy takes (what is presumably) a few minutes to move her head from this position. At a 'key party", where married couples swap sexual partners by having wives select other husbands' keys from a bowl, a man makes a comment about the young boyfriend of a woman, saying that 'she brought her son'. He says that he regrets that nobody brought his daughter.
ID: Invaded (TV Show)
S1E4+6: a man kisses the female protagonist without her consent. He could not control his actions due to a brain injury.
There are a few scenes where the protagonist's classmates make harassing comments to her and others.
The author references false rape allegations used to excuse lynching, rape against slaves, false rape allegations against the Exonerated Five, and the kidnapping and gang rape of Recy Taylor.
Ideal Home (Movie)
There is a mention of the serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer being a rapist.
The Idiots (Movie)
The movie follows a group of people who pretend to be mentally disabled in public areas. One of them (a man) is left by his friend with some bikers in a bar, caught at his own 'game'. When they think he has to go to the toilet, they try to help him by pulling down his pants and holding his penis to help him pee. He seems visibly distressed by the situation but can not tells the truth, out of fear of being beaten up. Near the end of the movie, the group initiate a gang-bang. When one woman refuses to join in, she is groped, purchased and stripped by several men. She is not distressed at all and laughs as if it was a game. She finally accepts to take part in the orgy.
Idle Hands (Movie)
A man knowingly tries to hook up with a girl still in high school. The hand grabs a woman's chest before killing her. A man accidentally tears off his girlfriend's dress while he and his friends are trying to get her out of a trap.
The Idol (TV Show)
S1E1: non-consensual choking.
Idolish7 (TV Show)
While not a major aspect of the story, the show does have occasional commentary on the sexualization of boys and men in the idol industry and the negative effects that have on them. Mainly this includes one character in particular's experience with his image being twisted into something more sexual than he is comfortable with, but there are also a few scenes of blatant sexual harassment, one of which includes a minor. S1E2: a 23 y/o man's answer in an interview is immediately sexualized by the interviewer and he is shown to be uncomfortable. S1E11: a 23 y/o man is uncomfortable with a woman touching him and tries to move away. She continues to touch him until his friends come in the scene. S1E12: a female ambiguous in age attempts to manipulate 17 y/o boy to kiss her in an act that she will tell him where his missing family member is if he does. He does not kiss her and is shown to be disturbed by the experience afterward. VibratoE2: a 23 y/o man is shown to be upset about being over-sexualized in a commercial. VibratoE8: in an intentionally similar scene to S1E11, a 23 y/o man is uncomfortable with a woman touching him and tries to move away. He is only able to when his friends come into scene.
The film consists in three stories. In the first, a man kisses a woman without her consent. When she rebuffs him, he apologises and leaves. Later on, that same woman asks him to have sex in order to get pregnant (her husband being unable to do it). He starts to kiss her but she quickly changes her mind. It takes several seconds and a a few protestations from the woman for him to stop.
The central conflict of the book is that one of the protagonists was accused of rape. It is believed by most of the characters that this is a false accusation, but whether or not it did happen is ambiguous.
A character repeatedly flirts with the male romantic lead and tries to get him to ask her out. He ignores her and then directly says he is not interested, but she persists.
The Two Popes (Movie)
Towards the end of the film, during a discussion between the two main characters, one of them confesses that he heard stories about priests molesting children and did nothing against it. As he continues to describe it, his voice is covered by an high-pitched sound. Once he is finished, the other man, visibly shocked, has to give him his benediction.
A man kisses a woman while she is limp from the effects of a drug, thinking that she will not remember the incident. He leaves her alone after this.
Il Sorpasso (Movie)
A man mentions putting his hand up a woman's skirt when he was younger. This same character also mentions forcibly kissing a woman a who slaps him in response (this happens of off screen). Earlier he had pinched this same woman on the cheek. He also tries to kiss his ex-wife when she does not want it and stalks a couple of girls who appear to be minors, following their car, though he ultimately leaves them alone. A girl who is stated to be 15 is in a relationship with a much older man.
The main character undresses his wife even though she is telling him to stop. It then cuts and it is implied that they have had sex even though they are both dressed. The main character (around 50 years old) massages a girl's (around 17) back because it is hurting, while she moans (in pain, although the scene feels sexual in nature). Then, it is revealed that they do have a sexual relationship.
An adult female being held captive asks her male captor if he plans to rape her: there is no danger of it and he does not intend to hurt her.
The author mentions a time when an Uber driver said he could smell a young girl passenger's "sweet pussy." Sexual harassment and sexual violence are discussed in abstract terms throughout.
I'm No Angel (Movie)
A possessive man embraces the protagonist: she pushes him away and he stops (20:59-21:19). The protagonist visits her jealous lover in jail. They hold each other's arms consensually, but he grips her arms tight and expresses his possessive jealousy (26:48-27:28). A man takes the protagonist's arm and pulls her firmly closer to him (37:28-38:38). The leading man leans in to kiss the protagonist and she stops him, but it is clear that she is just teasing him (41:53-42:06). The leading man takes the protagonist's hand, which she initially objects to, but it is clear that she loves him (59:47-1:00:30). It is subtly implied in the movie that the antagonists take young adult girls and put them to work in the sex industry.
The protagonists have to go through a neighborhood with many abandoned houses where "things happen to girls." In that area, a man starts following them and making sexual advances. Worthy of note: Both protagonists are high school students. One is dating a 20-year-old and keeping his age a secret from her grandfather. It i not confirmed whether or not this relationship is sexual.
S1E3: a girl is harassed by three other girls. They lift up her shirt, exposing her chest while they are streaming online.
The author makes a passing mention about fearing that her body would be "violated by the state".
Two people discuss the song 'Baby It's Cold Outside' and one implies that it is a song about rape.
The female lead is subject to some verbal sexual harassment. The government ultimately forces the protagonist to undergo chemical sterilization in the form of hormone therapy in harmful doses. Agents seen interacting with him or discussing his case are portrayed using casually homophobic language.
The Immortal (TV Show)
S1E4: a man chases a woman with the intent of assaulting her. S1E5: men repeatedly touch and pick up a woman in a bar.
The Imperfects (TV Show)
One of the main characters is a succubus who does not know how to control her power, so there is a lot of non consensual harassment.
Impetigore (Movie)
A man sexually harasses a woman whose husband has been gone for a long time, crudely asking if she wants to see his erection.
Several episodes show nonconsensual touching. One episode even shows nonconsensual touching of a mans pelvis region. Several episodes use eluding to child sexual abuse for comedic relief. S1E37: a rape joke is made. S1E38: a rape joke is made.
Worthy of note: A woman and a man are about to have sex and it is very clear that the woman is drunk. However, as the scene goes on, she becomes more lucid and participates in a way that depicts her as consenting to the interaction.
An off-handed jab is made, asking an alien abduction survivor if the aliens performed sexual experimentation on him, in an attempt to get a rise out of him.
A man grabs a woman and says that he can do what he wants to her before forcefully kissing her without her consent. The woman reprimands him before forcefully kissing him herself, again without explicit consent. Later in the film, he holds a gun on her, shoves her against a wall, and threatens to choke her, but this is not in a domestic or sexual context. She threatens to scream if he does so and he does not threaten her any further. The woman in question is a Nazi and the latter act is done to retrieve stolen intel from her before it reaches the other Nazis. However, the former scene is not handled sensitively.
Towards the end of the story "Airwave Pirates," there is an illustration of the symbol for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls (MMIWG), which is a red handprint covering the lower half of a person's face. The illustration has no caption or descriptor identifying at s the MMIWG symbol.
About 01:15:00 into the movie, one of the main male characters, who is in charge of his boss' wife's security, asks her to leeave her husband for him. When she goes away, he grabs her, pins her to a wall and forcefully tries to kiss her despite her protest. She then slaps him and leave.
During a therapy session, a female psychiatrist confesses that as a child, she falsely accused a man of molesting her.
Chapter 16: while on a date, a man forcibly kisses a woman.
During an argument between a child and her father, the child explains being frightened to stay alone at home "because of rapists".
Infinity Pool (Movie)
It is stated that the police will rape and kill women they arrest. However, we do not see this happen, and there is no implication it happened to any of the characters in the film. A character is snuck up on and masturbated to completion by someone without any consent given: he does not resist but is clearly shocked by it. A woman is in the process of having sex with a man when intruders pull her off of him while she is nude. She is tied up and forced at gunpoint into a living room where she sits on her knees still nude. She is not touched inappropriately. A man is held captive and tied up with a cover over his head and is urinated on by another man. The film is largely about a cult-like group drawing a new person into their sadistic psychosexual games.
Influencer (Movie)
A man is drugged at a bar by an acquaintance (his girlfriend’s roommate). She takes him back home, strips him and herself, and simulates sex acts with him in order to convince him that they had sex (she even opens and throws a condom onto the ground). She also takes photos of them together.
A man implies that he wants to sleep with a woman and attempts to intimidate her when she refuses, forcing himself into the room where she is and blocking the exit.
Inherent Vice (Movie)
A woman says that she was raped to a man, which is quickly followed by very abrupt sex with no verbal consent from the woman. A teenager is in a sexual relationship with a man.
There are very detailed scenes of a woman being tortured. She worries to herself that she will be taken advantage of. Worthy of note: the protagonist, who is 15 at the start of the series and 18 by the end, ends up with an elf who is over 100 years old. The elf had hitherto this point stated that their age difference was a reason that they should not be together.
One character caresses another character's face without her permission.
Inhyeongsa (Movie)
An older male tries to coerce a high school girl to privately model for him, and attempts to take a photograph of her using the bathroom.
Ink (Movie)
A man puts his hand on a woman’s bottom as she helps him up from a fall (24:43). That same woman later warns another girl that the guy has “wandering hands".
Insatiable (TV Show)
A large part of the plot revolves around the sexualisation of teenage girls. At ont point, a man is falsely accused of inappropriately touching a teenage girl S1E9: a male character sends off strong signals towards another man who does not want it. A character meets again with the boyfriend of her mom: they talk about how he was 26 and she was 14.
Insectula! (Movie)
A woman on an inner tube is impaled through the anus by the monster. A male scientist accidentally shows a video he took of a woman while she was in the bathroom. The scientist molests a woman who is trapped in the insect's nest. The scientist kidnaps his assistant and strips her down to her underwear. He tells her that when he was a college professor he kidnapped one of his students to try and force her to love him. He later gropes his assistant's chest.
Insecure (TV Show)
S1E5: the protagonist refers to a video of her online as "rap rape" because the video was taken without her knowledge or consent. S1E8: a group of female friends dares one of them to grab an unsuspecting male waiter's behind. She ends up grabbing his crotch instead.
Inside Man (Movie)
Comments/jokes are made about assault occurring in prison. Hostages are forced to strip down to their underwear; one elderly woman is particularly upset by it. They are all immediately given other clothes to change into. Several comments made about womens' cleavage; one hostage referred to as "Boobs" and "Fat ass".
One interview subject readily admits to having written a song praising an incel murderer. When the interviewer challenges him about it, he expresses remorse. Another interview subject repeatedly catfishes attractive women to humiliate them. This is shown on screen (the victim is not shown). The man states extreme misogynistic viewpoints and reveals that he physically abused a girlfriend in the past and was arrested for violating a restraining order. He does not show any remorse.
Insidious (Movie)
One of the ghosts that appears suggestively licks the female protagonists on her face and she screams.
Characters sexualise, nonconsensually touch and kiss two young women, whose ages are not specified (1:33:33). A man physically and verbally abuses his daughter. When she is 16, he makes a comment which off-handedly implies sexual abuse/carries sexual implications, saying that 'all you've ever done is ask for it.' (38:10) This is never expanded on. Worthy of note: women are held captive in a dark room in their underwear.
Child sexual abuse is briefly mentioned in a discussion. A teenage girl exchanges nude pictures with an adult (nothing explicit on screen).
The main character's backstory is that she was sexually harassed by a superior. There is a shot of him groping her butt and one of him touching her face, but nothing beyond that. At one point, she returns home and finds her home vandalized. Some of the graffiti is rape threats, including one that says they left semen on her pillow. A man touches a woman against her will and says he will rape her when he has the chance (39:30).
A fascist officer enters a house at night in a secluded village: the voice-over explains that he is planing to rape a young woman (nothing more is shown or said). He is killed (off-screen) by men of the village.
The protagonist has an obsession with true crime stories, many of which involve rape. Some characters sexually harass the protagonist at work.
S1E2: this episode contains a joke about sexual harassment.
The Intern (Movie)
A female massage therapist unpromptedly and without "warning" starts massaging a man's shoulders (they have not met before, and she approaches him from behind) in an open office office environment in full view of two of his co-workers, and goes on to rub his back and sides (getting close to the buttocks and thighs) in an inappropriately sensual way. He obviously enjoys it (even gets an erection) and happily fist-bumps two other men right after the therapist has left, so it is clearly a positive experience for him.
Intersect (Movie)
There are zeo scenes where a male bully verbally harasses a female student: one in which he licks her face while she is restrained by someone else. A similar scene happens towards the end of the film between the same two characters when they are adults.
The Interview (Movie)
A young girl sings a satirical patriotic song for North Korea, which includes wishing rape on women of other nations. This happens at the very beginning of the film.
A vampire who resembles a child flirts with and attempts to have a sexual/romantic relationship with an adult man. A woman is stripped on a theatre stage against her will. Many of the vampire feeding scenes involving women evoke sexual assault imagery.
There are a handful of discussions (some direct and some indirect) through the book about when the main character was 18 and her high school boyfriend shared the naked photos that she sent him. Chapter 10/11: a man verbally sexually harasses a woman at a bar (the same event overlapping both chapters).
A few brief, non-detailed mentions of one female character's past experiences of sexual harassment.
Into the Night (TV Show)
S1E2: three soldiers are discovered to have been on trial for rape and murder before the apocalyptic events of the show take place. One of them makes unwanted sexual advances on a stewardess: she refuses. The soldiers are seen as evil by the other characters, but it is heavily implied that the stewardess is left behind with them when the other characters escape. Her ultimate fate is unknown, but likely rape and death.
Into the Wild (Movie)
An adult (in his early 20s) and a teenage girl have a romantic relationship. She attempts to seduce him but he refuses to sleep with her on the basis of her age.
The scenes featuring Red and the Wolf imply rape and/or sexual assault off-screen. On-screen, the Wolf makes overt physical and verbal advances towards Red. Worthy of note: the scenes between Little Red Riding Hood and the Wolf are an allegory for a child predator attempting to kidnap a victim.
At one point, a man touches a women skirt at a marriage, which she does not want. Another man tries to force his way into a woman's house after a date.
One of the main characters is often hitting on a woman who is clearly disinterested. It is played as light hearted bravado and the woman never seems distressed or frightened by this.
Forced kissing (around 16:30). This movie contains domestic abuse and stalking throughout.
Inu to Boku SS (TV Show)
A 15 year-old female character and a 20-something adult male are involved in a romance and mistress-servant type relationship which develops throughout and eventually leads to discussions of whether or not they wish to get pregnant as a couple. The said male also has a stalker-like side to him. The same female has a previous arranged engagement to another 20-something adult male. The said male is a BDSM fanatic and labels everyone and everything "S" or "M" based on his determination. He often references and foists fetishes on the rest of the characters, even casually putting one young girl in a metal slave collar. S1E2: one female character goes missing and another female character pulls out a camera and fantasizes over the potential of her being sexually assaulted (12:30-12:45). She uses the word "rape" in this occurrence and makes light of it by saying she hopes it is happening.
One of the main characters drugs and has sexual contact with another character. The scene is fetishized.
Inuyasha (TV Show)
S1E2: the main characters skirt is tugged on and inappropriate remarks are made about it (12:10-12:40).
Inventing Anna (TV Show)
S1E1: a discussion of #metoo happens. There is a thoughtful dialogue on how journalists are exploiting women. S1E5: a guy gropes the protagonist's bottom when she is clearly uncomfortable, and he insists on going up in her room (about 26 minutes into the episode). A man touches protagonist's hand and back without asking. She is uncomfortable.
The conceit of the movie is that only the main character can lie, thus everyone believes any lie he says: he attempts to use this superpower to get sex. The entire movie has giant tones of women only having value as baby incubators, and men owning womens' sexuality. The protagonist hits on a woman, who rejects his advances until he says that the world will end if they do not have sex, which she immediately believes is the literal truth. As this does not meet his fantasy (she focuses on the time in order not to die), he cancels the plan and fakes a call from NASA saying that the world will not end. She is relieved and wants to talk, but he just abandons her immediately. This is played for laughs. In a different situation, rape is mentioned in the list of "bad things that if you do you won't go to the good place". There is anothe scene where a female character dates someone else, so the male protagonist gaslights her into not having sex with the other person by saying there is a rule that you can only have sex after marriage. Later, he lies again to have sex with her.
The film opens with the murder of a woman by her lover (the protagonist) while they are having sex. Shortly after, flashbacks show them enacting roleplays where the protagonist always ends up killing her: rape is mentioned multiple times during these scenes (in the first 20 minutes of the movie). Similar scenes and mentions of rape are also featured a couple of times throughout the rest of the film.
In pages 82-85 of the hardcover edition there is a sexual harassment scene in which a man forces a kiss on a woman and gets angry when she refuses him. On page 192 (resources section) there is mention of the sexual abuse of autistic children.
At 18:41, one character states: "an Invisible man can rule the world, nobody would see him come no one would see him go, he can hear every secret, he can rob and rape and kill!"
Discussion of sexual violence committed by police against women as a form of police violence.
Once it is revealed that one male character is a vampire, a female character attempts to leave but is blocked: he kisses her cheek despite her saying “no” and crying.
Ip Man (Movie)
A man briefly acts threateningly towards a woman after commenting on her appearance, but he is stopped before getting started.
The narrator's brooding vampire ex (a clear parody of Twilight's Edward Cullen) is still stalking her. He acts very possessive but not sexual toward her: he declares his love periodically; enters her bedroom to watch her sleep; interferes with her plans in the name of protecting her from harm; etc.
Iron Fist (TV Show)
S2E10: a woman briefly mentions her time in captivity, stating that she was questioned, raped, and tortured (39:27-39:45).
Iron Man 2 (Movie)
A male character looks up a woman who is his employee and, upon finding pictures of her posing in lingerie, makes a suggestive comment to a second woman who is the first woman's superior. It is unclear whether he was talking to the second woman or to himself; nonetheless, she promptly shuts him down.
The Iron Mask (Movie)
A hoard of men chases a woman with intent to rape or assault: one of them grabs her chest. A woman pretends to be prostitute and seduces a man in order to steal a man’s clothes. An old man dies after desperately asking a woman he had not seen for 30 to touch her.
From the author's note: "Please be aware that this book contains scenes of violence and abuse, suicide ideation, discussion and references to sexual assault (though no on-page depictions), alcohol addiction, and torture." A character reveals that he killed his brother because the latter raped a girl.
The Irrational (TV Show)
S1E2 mentions sexual assaults.
One of the female main characters is in love with her older brother, whose only emotion is his love for her, and the two often appear as a couple to other characters who sometimes point it out. An adult male abuses and brainwashes a high school girl off-screen and attempts to do so to other characters on-screen.
The female romantic lead works throughout much of the book to uncover details about a Russian sex trafficking ring. This character gets kidnapped towards the end for finding out too much, but she escapes and survives and is never sexually assaulted.
The IT Crowd (Movie)
S1E2: a character says that he can't go to prison because 'they'll rape the flip out of me.' S2E2: a male character who is a sexual harasser is introduced. There are multiple mentions of him getting sued for sexual misconduct in the past. For the rest of the season, there are multiple mentions of his inappropriate conduct towards one of the main characters while being their boss. S2E6: the previously mentioned character makes unwanted advances multiple times when he hires one of the main characters as his personal assistant. When rejected, he turns to spiking her drink with a "love potion" which turns out to be Rohypnol. Two of the main characters get locked in the room with previously mentioned character, who, having drank the spiked drink becomes aroused and approaches them. S3E3: we are told that one of the characters that got locked in a room with the previously mentioned character was kissed against his will, but has no memory of it due to having disassociated. S4E3: a masseuse kisses a male character's backside while he is lying down for a massage. In the same episode, the character goes to court to give evidence against the masseuse on sexual assault charges; this is played for laughs.
A woman remarks that her troubled brother "did something quite obscene" with the maid (28:17). She says further, "she was terrified, of course." A man grabs the buttocks of a woman while she is boarding a bus. It is made clear that this is done for sexual reasons, while he pretends that he is helping her. In the next scene, he and the woman are shown arriving at a police station, in a police van. As she struggles to get through the door of the police station he again grabs her buttocks. While stopped in traffic, a man reaches out to a random passing car and strokes the arm and hair of a woman driver through her window. The woman slaps him.
Page 11: it is mentioned, in passing, that the young daughters of poor families were sometimes forced into sex work "having barely reached puberty." Page 48: mentioned within the context of women's marital rights during the Victorian era. It is observed that women would not be legally eligible to be granted a divorce if their husband had committed adultery, but only if he had committed adultery alongside another crime (one of the examples listed is rape). Pages 69-71: discussion of the sexual threat, exploitation and violence to which homeless women were often subjected during the Victorian era, including a number of examples. Page 72 includes a discussion of homeless women who chose to turn to sex work; although these women did not make this choice as a result of direct coercion, it was as a means of survival. Pages 169-170: discussion, in general terms, of the sexual liaisons which often occurred between women working as servants and their masters, colleagues or other individuals; it is mentioned that these liaisons were sometimes consensual and sometimes non-consensual. It is mentioned that these liaisons often resulted in unplanned pregnancies, the consequences of which women were often forced to bear on their own. Pages 171-174: discussion of laws enacted during the 1800s which required women suspected of engaging in sex work to submit to regular genital examinations, under the pretence of preventing the transmission of diseases. References to this process and its implications are made throughout the remainder of the chapter. Page 247: it is mentioned in passing that, during this time, it was largely seen as socially acceptable for a man to physically abuse his wife if she resisted his sexual advances. Page 312-316: there is an extended discussion of sex trafficking during the Victorian era. This discussion is not graphic in nature but elaborates on how women were often deceived into travelling abroad and then coerced into sex work.
A captain harasses a nurse in the army: he goes with her in an isolated place (a forest), and eventually kisses her without her consent. Another character then arrives and it stops.
A woman repeatedly takes pictures of a couple kissing without their consent.
Jack Jeanne (Video Game)
In Yonaga's route, a character leads the protagonist away and attempts to touch her without her consent. Her friend saves her before anything happens.
Jack Reacher (Movie)
Early in the film, rape is mentioned as a minor plot point (justifiying a past action of a side character under investigation).
S1E3: the topic of prison rape is jokingly insinuated (26:00-27:00).
Jack's Back (Movie)
The main topic of this book is counterrevolutionary anticommunist efforts around the world, but focusing on Indonesia. These efforts involved torture via sexual violence.
Mention of rape (3:40).
There is an incest mention. A woman questions whether she should start a relationship with her 18 year old student. She ultimately decides not to.
The Janes (Movie)
There are multiple sexual jokes made that fall under sexual harassment: some of these jokes involve children.
The story plays out in an empire in which women are valued only as dutiful wives, mothers, and religious sacrifices. Misogyny is a constant backdrop via concern about women's purity and proper place, and threats of violent execution. One main character is in a complicated marriage that she sought out to gain leverage to protect her conquered people. Her husband treats her with the empire's version of love and respect for one's wife. She implies that she considers her marriage, and sex and pregnancy, to be sacrifices she found necessary and would rather not have needed to make.
Worthy of note: a man complains about having to use a condom until his female partner is coerced into throwing the condom away. There are several genre-typical scenes of women struggling to avoid violence, often while scantily clad.
Jawbreaker (Movie)
Three high school girls lie to the police and imply that their friend has been raped and killed in a home invasion: the audience knows this is not true from the beginning. One of the high school girls, who we assume is underage, later has sex with an adult stranger in her dead friend's bed in order to frame him for her rape and murder.
A man talks about lusting after his 11 year old daughter.
One storyline of this movie is about a woman who was sexually abused by her step-brother during many years when they were children. This is discussed throughout.
It is mentioned and joked about that the protagonist was sexually abused by her step father. Worthy of note: the director of this movie is a convicted child molester.
Two of the main characters, who are teenage girls, touch an adult woman’s breasts in a bath, while she questions the legality of the situation. It is consensual and not inherently sexual, but the age gap is very uncomfortable nonetheless. An adult of ambiguous age hits on one of the characters, asking her immediately about her breasts. The main characters are also occasionally shown from revealing angles.
A drunk teenage girl is kidnapped by a group of men and she thinks that she is going to be raped (she appears frightened and fighting to get away). She is in fact captured to be sacrificed to Satan. Rape is mentioned several times throughout the movie. Seducing people and then killing them is a major theme of the film.
Jigokumon (Movie)
The film centers around a man who is obsessed with a woman who is already married and has rejected his advances. At one point, he grabs hold of the woman he obsesses over, telling her menacingly while she is visibly terrified that he will kill anyone who gets in his way of getting to her.
Jigsaw (Movie)
Throughout the movie, an annoying man heavily tries to seduce a woman, who ends up hitting him to get rid of him.
A woman constantly flirts with one of the protagonists, despite the fact that he is visibly uncomfortable with her actions. She is constantly pushing herself on him and trying to get him to touch her or hold her.
Jinsimi Dadda (TV Show)
A case revolves around a woman being stalked by her ex. He enters her room without consent and is about to hurt her, but she gets saved. The main protagonist is stalked by a rich investor of her drama's. One time she gets drugged through her drink. She wakes up in his apartement. The stalker stares at her and said that he enjoyed staring at her while she was sleeping all the time. Whether it is kept to just "staring" at her while she was unconscious remains unknown; she was however fully clothed when she wakes up at his couch. The same woman is lured by the stalker in a room alone. He grabs her firmly, but then cops enter the room. The stalker is at her house one night. He again gras her and yels at her to love him. Then her boyfriend comes to rescue her.
Joan (TV Show)
S1E1: a gangster forces a gun into a woman’s mouth. Later, she is sexually harrassed by her boss, who presses up against her and insinuates that they should sleep together. She pretends to be on her period to evade him. He reappears in later episodes and is generally sleazy, looking her up and down. S1E6: after he gives her a ring, the boss undoes his trousers and says “I know you want it” (25:00).
Joe (Movie)
Joe Dirt (Movie)
The main character threatens a town with a bomb if he does not get what he wants, which includes a woman showing him her breasts when she very clearly does npt want to. It is played for a laugh and we are meant to side with the guy.
John Carter (Movie)
A main theme of the movie is of the female lead being coerced into an unwanted marriage to prevent the destruction of her city. Her father, who is the leader of the city, takes a leading role in the coercion. She states several times, often tearfully, that the marriage would be against her will. The male lead grabs or picks the the female lead and carries her off on more than one occasion. This is not portrayed as sexual, but is done without consent. The female lead slaps the male lead on the backside. This is done in anger rather than playfully.
One character is implied to have rape feature as part of his backstory but this is not made explicit.
The titular character mentions being harassed by a doctor who constantly attempted to have him take off his shirt and explicitly describes it as “sexual harassment" (31:30-34:00).
A man gropes the protagonist while patting him down for weapons. The scene is played for laughs but the character looks uncomfortable.
The main character is an American soldier who has lost his four limbs, as well as his ability to see, hear or speak, while fighting in WWI. Still, we hear his thoughts as he tries to make sense of his surroundings and recalls his past. One of the nurses that tend to him, who is throughout the film presented as the one who is kindest to him and most sympathetic to his condition and the possibility that he might still be capable of thought, is seen in one scene reaching down to his genitals under the blankets. Off-screen, we hear her moan. The scene is quickly cut off and we do not get any commentary of the main character about it.
A woman who wants to work as a bodyguard is insulted, being told instead to try sex work in some detail (21:42-21:55).
The Jokesters (Movie)
While filming, a man goes into a bedroom and sees a woman getting dressed but is quickly kicked out Several of the men grope a group of women while they are filming them, and they rip one of their bathing suit tops off. They refuse to give it back unless she shows them her breasts but when she does they drive away with her top. They record and watch a woman getting out of the shower through a hidden camera, and watch the couple having sex after. When they're found out, as punishment, the men are made to strip naked in front of the couple. The killer has the woman tied up without her pants on. The camera is turned off as she screams in the background so it's unclear what happens to her.
The protagonist gets involved in sex work as a teenager, and some of his clients are adult men. The protagonist reflects that he almost always has sex while very drunk, leading to situations where he blacks out and does not remember how the sexual encounter began or the person he is having sex with. There are several passing mentions of missing and murdered indigenous women and girls (MMIWG).
Two past instances of (non-sexual) domestic partner violence are mentioned. The m/m instance has very little detail. The m/f instance is described in greater detail and involves someone actively protecting the woman and child from harm. The main case involves a man physically attacking multiple women with in escalating force. The attacks are non-sexual in nature.
A male secondary character is being stalked by his controlling, emotionally and physically abusive ex-boyfriend. His friends protect him from further harm. A married secondary character discovers that her husband has been manipulating, socially isolating, and lying to her and her children for years. She has support in safely separating from him. One mystery plotline concerns a woman who (in the past) was accidentally killed by her stalker when he physically assaulted her to prevent her from fleeing.
Chapters 1-8: while one male character never makes any explicitly sexual remarks, or innuendo, he does constantly try to convince a female character to marry him. Despite her repeated refusals he continues pursuing her.
The female protagonist accuses the male protagonist of being a pervert even though he has not done anything perverted. She later on threatens to lie about him sexually assaulting her if he does not bring her somewhere. He tells her to do whatever she wants. The grandma grabs the male protagonist by the testicles. She tells him she will cut it off if he brings the female protagonist somewhere without her permission again. This is played for laughs.
The author recounts several instances where her patients made sexually inappropriate comments about her appearance.
The film features sexual harassment of a civilian by an officer during wartime.
Joyland (Movie)
Early in the film, a transgender character is harassed by a group of aggressive men when she is dancing in a bar/nightclub.
A senior employee talks about how he enjoys looking at visitors' breasts (mostly without their knowledge). He also makes suggestive comments to a significantly younger girl. Late in the story, when discussing a series of murders, a character points out that one of the cases was different because the victim was sexually assaulted.
Ju Dou (Movie)
The premise of this movie (set in 1920s China) is that an old impotent old man bought a wife (after having killed his his two previous wifes), to torture her (including sexually). His (adult) adoptive nephew grows fond of his "aunt", whom he watches showering without her knowledge. She is shown feeling distressed when she discovers it, but the two then starts a romantic relationship. SPOILER: The torture scenes (heard and shown) stop about halfway through the movie (~45:00), since the old man becomes paralyzed.
One of the main characters repeatedly makes unwanted sexually suggestive comments to a woman. He is shown masturbating (with his back to the camera) while watching another woman have sex from across the street. During a topless scene involving the woman he has been harassing, he stares at her breasts and holds out his hands as it to grab them.
Early in the movie, one of the main male character is shown talking to a woman in a Black Panthers party reunion, despite her apparent disinterest. He is called to order by the leader and forced to do push-ups to teach him a lesson. About halfway through the movie, the FBI director explains to an agent why Black people are a threat to the nation and mentions rape.
Judy & Punch (Movie)
The antagonist verbally harasses a woman and calls her a whore.
Jug Face (Movie)
The first 5 minutes show a brother and sister consenting to incestual sex.
Jujutsu Kaisen (TV Show)
S1E1: a demon gets hold of a girl and it looks like it is groping her (no explicit sexual violence). S1E24: a story is told of a woman that was raped, impregnated and aborted multiple times. While none of this is shown on screen, there are visual effects such as blood splatters which emphasize the horror. Fetuses are shown developing on a blank background (04:36-05:32). S2E2: a teacher gives her number to a teenage boy. She seems to be interested in him. This is played for laughs and she is never shown again. S2E22: a woman lays naked next to her little brother. He fawns over her and she seems to ‘playfully’ flirt with him. This relationship has incestuous undertones. However, nothing ever happens. A jujutsu kaisen short at the end of an episode showcases two teachers (a man and a woman): the male mentions “a nice girl” and the female tries to guess which teenage girl the man is talking about. It seems like he is talking about his romantic type, but it is not the case. Worthy of note: in one episode, a male teacher mentions a female student is his perfect type. The same teacher pretends to be a romantic interest of one of the male students in order to embarrass him when he thinks the student is getting hit on by a woman. Both scenes are not relevant or discussed further in the series.
A man guesses that a woman is having a lot of dreams about being raped: at that moment, a monster is seen touching her thigh, so the man exorcizes the monster (~47:00-49:00). (The word 'rape' is only used in the japanese version: the english dub replaces it with 'assault'). Worthy of note: two young girls are seen in a cage with visible wounds on their face. Although there is no sign or mention of sexual assault, this image could be upsetting to some viewers.
Julia (TV Show)
S2E2 features work sexual harassment.
A group of men make harassing comments towards the protagonist and slap her behind while she is shopping alone in a corner store. This takes place towards the beginning of the book.
A group of men make harassing comments towards the protagonist and slap her behind while she is shopping alone in a corner store. This takes place towards the beginning of the book.
A boy attempts to grab his classmate's breast. The scene is played for laughs.
Jumbo (Movie)
This film is about a young woman engaging a romantic relationship with a merry-go-round. It is implied that she is bullied by a group of boys, and all her relatives shames her for her relation. (Worthy of note: she experiences her first orgasm in a surreal sequence: dressed only with her panties, she is progressively covered by a dark liquid, which is implied to be oil). Early in the movie, a man unintentionally walks in on her changing: he immediately turns around but discreetly peeks on her. He tries to start a relationship with the protagonist, who only anwers his advances because she is trying to adhere to "normal" social norms. At some point, he attempts to kiss her and she does not reciprocate. After a distressing experience with her love-interest (the merry-go-round), the protagonist presents herself naked to the man: he tries to touch her but she rebuffs him, suggesting him to get undressed. He then has sex with her without noticing that she is crying and being mute: she is very distressed and forcing herself to have sex with him to fit in and escape social pressures.
Towards the beginning of the book, a boy tries to engage a girl in a game of "I'll show you mine if you show me yours." The girl is uncomfortable with this.
In an attempt to eat the young protagonist, a snake hypnotizes him and handles him with his snake coils in a way that can be very triggering to the audience (9:42-12:12 and 54:06-1:00:25). An elephant lines up his herd military style and smacks his wife's rear with a stick to get her rear end in line (15:16-15:26): it is meant to be comedic. The protagonist's panther guardian tries to pull him off a tree by his loincloth when the protagonist throws a tantrum (19:37-19:58). The loincloth stretches but does not come off when the panther lets go. A curious bear sniffs the protagonist, and the protagonist pushes him away and tells him to leave him alone. The bear picks him up and puts him back down again (21:27-22:16): it is clear the bear is a friendly character. Monkeys kidnap the protagonist and handle him against his will: the king of the monkeys shoots bananas into his mouth (32:42-33:46).
Junior (Movie)
A woman kisses a man without his consent. A woman mentions being attracted to her cousin when she was younger.
A boy mocks the small breast of his female friend and tries to touch her: she rebuffs him. Later, he inappropriately touches the sister of that same girl: he is kicked by both.
Junjo Romantica (TV Show)
A relationship between a man and a boy is depicted as normal, even if some people mention that this is problematic. S1E1: on-screen sexual assault scene (6:00-7:37). The older man (28) pushes the younger man (18) down on the bed. Despite the younger man's struggles the older man proceeds to touch his body, kiss his cheek, and put his hand down the younger man's pants.
Jurassic City (Movie)
There is a news story about a man who raped multiple women. When waiting in the holding cell, a woman smacks another woman's ass then sits beside her and runs her fingers up her leg. A man smacks a woman's ass as she walks by him. Later he demands that two women kiss him as thanks for saving their lives .
Jurassic Park (Movie)
Doctor Ian Malcolm has the famous quote: "What you call discovery, I call the rape of the natural world."
A woman holds another woman hostage while they are trapped on a boat. She hits on her several times, implies that she is going to assault her, and pins her down at one point.
One character is adamant about hugging another who does not want to hug people. Worthy of note: one character who is 2 years older than another (15 and 13) talks about dating her. They seem to become a relationship in season 4.
Jury Duty (TV Show)
The main male character - mentioned below - plays a caricature of himself in this show. S1E1: a male character mentions that he is working for a director that has not been "metoo'ed yet". S1E5: the same character says that a director called "some bitch sweetheart and has been cancelled".
Just 6.5 (Movie)
Child rape is mentioned (1:29:00-1:30:00).
A bully tries to reach under the protagonist’s skirt.
The premise is that the protagonist, a 17-year-old girl, finds out that she and her mother are undocumented. She then decides to pursue a green card marriage to eliminate the risk of deportation. She chooses prospects from a dating site where the minimum age is 21, so they are all older than her, though she lies about her age. One date starts touching her in a way she does not like, so she ends the date. Another tries to get her to pay him lots of money and grabs her wrist to try to prevent her from leaving. She does get away.
A person at a party touches the protagonist inappropriately. She calls him out immediately and her friends and the host kick him out of the party.
Rape is discussed in passing: the main characters are law enforcement and occasionally discuss such crimes. A man admits to being a rapist. The main female character mentions people attempting to assault her in the past. She mentions being worried that her much older mentor and patron might wish for sexual favors from her when she was 17-18 and resigned herself to it, but he did not. She also admits to being somewhat infatuated with him anyway.
S1E1: a teenager is sexual harassed. S1E2: a man makes suggestive comments about a 15 year old girl. S1E7: rape of a dead body after murder is mentioned.
Kageki Shojo (TV Show)
A stepfather of one of the main characters forcibly kisses her when she is a child. Followed are scenes of how she handles this event and continued harassment from her stepfather.
S1E9 & S1E10: a potential victim of a sexual assault is portrayed as "wanting" a potential perpetrator to assault her, despite being unwell.
Kai Byoui Ramune (TV Show)
S1E5: the male protagonist asks a child if he really has a dick. Inappropriate jokes are made throughout the series.
The book is about a relationship between a 19 year old woman and a 58 year old married man. He enjoys her dressing up in a school girl-ish way. The man eventually turns their affair into a sado-masochistic one, such as beating her with a belt. When he finds out she slept with someone else, he begins to verbally abuse her and emotionally torture her until she has a minor mental breakdown and almost attempts suicide. He also blames her for miscarrying their child towards the end.
Kamikaze (Movie)
A woman character mentionned that she was forced to be someone's mistress.
Kanata No Astra (TV Show)
S1E6: one of the male characters tries to force another male character to take off his clothes to show whether he is male. The character is intersex, but identifies as male. Worthy of note: the female characters are a bit over sexualized even though all of them are minors pre-timeskip.
Kangaroo Jack (Movie)
A woman's breasts are groped without her consent.
Kanon (2006) (TV Show)
A major character unrequitedly loves her first cousin; due to differences in culture and attitudes, this is not treated as incestuous. One character walks in on another in the bath and makes a teasing comment about getting in with her; she refuses and leaves and the incident is not addressed again. While sex scenes with potentially dubious consent exist in the source material, they are removed from this adaptation and the only implied offscreen sex is consensual.
Kaos (TV Show)
Sexual assault and rape are referenced throughout the show. The use of the word "rape" could sometimes be used in place of "kidnapping", likei n Greek mythology. S1E5: a woman's acolyte is tortured by her husband in his bed (25:45-27:00). Her screams are heard loudly in the house by male servant and the man's son. The woman walks into the house and calls out for her husband but then sees the aftermath of the attack on the bed. The body is hidden from view on the camera.
Karas (TV Show)
The main protagonist is a product of incest (his mother and brother had a sexual relationship).
A male character roughly kisses his ex girlfriend.
Karen (Movie)
Karppi (TV Show)
In one scene, a woman coerces someone to tell her more information related to a police case by threatening that she will say he groped her breasts (which did not happen) and send him to jail. In another scene, a teenage girl has (consensual) sex with a similar aged boy but the boy records the intercourse without her knowledge or consent.
Keanu (Movie)
A woman tells her husband over the phone that a man she was with was being inappropriate with her and it made her uncomfortable.
Kes (1969) (Movie)
A woman receives an unsollicited kiss from one of her lovers.
S1E1: a character tries to convince his wife to participate in a sexual act she is uncomfortable with and they have discussed before. It is implied that they have sex, and then we see the main character appear to be uncomfortable after the fact. In the same episode, the main character is catcalled, and momentarily trapped in a car with a man who thinks she is sexually interested in him. S1E2: the main character asks to speak to a man and his friends walk past and say something like “use your rape whistle”. She later gets in a car to buy drugs to a man who thinks that she is a prostitute. She tries to leave but there is a child lock on the door. She eventually gets out (34:20-35:32). S1E3: there is a talk of "touching little kids". S1E6: a woman goes on a date with a woman who is cop, so that she will like her and non suspect her in crimes. S1E8: the main character suffers an attempted strangulation from a friend.
Key Largo (Movie)
A woman is grabbed and kissed without her consent and rapey comments are made.
Key and Peele (TV Show)
S4E2: the opening scene features a news segment that mentions sexual assault. It is brief and the joke is that this and a murder story is the "Sports News".
Kick-Ass (Movie)
A father asks his son whether he was abused by muggers: he says no. Worthy of note: one character fantasises about having sex with his teacher: in his fantasy, the teacher is shown removing her top and wants to have sex with him too. Nothing happens and this is played as a joke. One character says that he is attracted to a character who is visibly a child: this is pointed out by another character, but they say that they ‘will wait’. This is played off as a joke and nothing is mentioned further.
Antagonists remove the titular character's clothes and make her pee in-front of them when she asks for the bathroom: she is tied up and screaming, telling them that she is refusing to get naked in-front of them.
The shows features a relationship between an adult man and a high school girl, as well as multiple scenes of sexual harassment and attempted sexual assault. Most of these scenes are used as a plot device to push other elements in the story and are barely mentioned after the event.
Kiki (Movie)
A man briefly discusses how he was sexually abused as a child.
Kill (Movie)
A man is held captive by a group of young girls. His sexuality is discussed. His girlfriend finds him and ends up accidentally murdering him while he is tied up. There are implications that if given the chance one of the characters would have assaulted him. A teenage girl is revealed to have had sex with a member of the band, all of whom are young adults. The encounter was consensual and she allowed him to take racy photos of her, but afterwards, he sent them to his friends despite her begging him not to. He then invited two of his friends into their room while she was still naked in order to humiliate her. Another character mocks the girl for this after the fact.
Chapter 14: a woman says she was asked to perform sexual acts in order to gain a publishing deal Chapter 20: non-graphic mention that within a book one of the characters is writing, a man rapes his female assistant Chapter 25: non-graphic mention of a time in the past where a group of white men raped a black woman.
The protagonists are both young Chinese American women in 1930s Los Angeles. They are targeted a few times throughout by orientalist sexual harassment.
The plot is based on a black man being falsely charged with the rape of a white girl. This is discussed throughout the film, although not in particularly graphic terms.
A substantial portion of the plot deals with the trial of a Black man who has been accused of raping a white woman. It is very clear in context that this is a false accusation.
Killer Pinata (Movie)
While one couple is having sex, the pinata crawls under the sheets and touches both of them. While a woman is asleep, her ex boyfriend uses her hand to masturbate but she wakes up shortly after. The pinata bites off a man's penis.
Killer Sally (TV Show)
S1E1 (49:10-49:49): a woman describes being raped by her husband in the context of a violently abusive relationship.
Killer Sofa (Movie)
A man stalks and harasses the main female character, trying to get her to marry him. He is seen installing hidden cameras in her apartment and he masturbates in her bed. Nothing sexual/personal is seen in the videos when the cameras are discovered.
Killer Toon (Movie)
A girl draws scenes of people's death that is going to happen in the future. One drawing is of a woman on the floor, hit by a vehicle, but her corspe is surrounded by men with evil expressions like tongue sticking out and about the touch the body. When it happenend, her death was only mentioned that she was hit by a car. Nothing was shown, but told afterwards.
There are several non-consensual grabbing/groping, particularly in the first half of the film.
The main character (a surgeon) and his wife act out a sexual fantasy where she pretends to be anesthetized. The main character reveals to his son at one point that, as a teenager, he sexually stimulated his own father while the man was unconscious. The female protagonist performs a sexual act on another character in order to gain information.
A character says that the prostitutes he visits are not “pretty enough to rape”.
Killjoys (TV Show)
S1E1: bad guys threaten to sexually assault the female lead. She fights and beats them up fairly easily, revealing that she was never in any real danger. The scene is played for laughs and nothing bad happens to her. The phrase 'rapey hill people' is used at one point. S5E5: a main character refers to the “bad guy” character as a “mind-raping” bitch” when talking to her partner.
Killshot (Movie)
Diane Lane is forced to undress down to her undergarments and her nipples are visible through her top very briefly. A woman is physically assaulted by a man as he tries to get her undressed.
Kimi Ni Todoke (TV Show)
One of the main characters is an underage teen in a relationship with a college-aged man for most of the first season. This character is then slapped across the face by said man when she ends their relationship.
Kimjongilia (Movie)
Human trafficking and sexual slavery is one of the topics of the movie, addressed through the testimonies of female survivors.
S1E0: a man does a "dong chim" to another man at work, which involves touching his anus with his fingers, and this is a main plot of the episode. It is implied that the man who experiences this is not actually upset, but is using this to get revenge on the man who did it, for something else. It is a bit disrespectful and tone deaf, but not ultimately disturbing, and the situation is played for laugh.
A police officer jokes about stalking a reluctant female witness for as long as she refuses to give testimony. A young boy in kindergarten looks up 3 kindergarten girl’s skirts while they are standing on a table. Worthy of note: A man slaps a woman and shoves her to the ground. A man often abuses his son and wife. The abuse is not shown and the mother states he is getting counseling for it. A man puts a gun to his son’s head in a kidnapping attempt. The boy is not hurt.
The premise of the movie is that the protagonist goes to visit her boyfriend's mother and brother. The boyfriend dies in an accident, and the mother and brother find out that the protagonist is pregnant. Throughout the movie, the two gaslight her and place extreme control on where she can go. Towards the end of the movie, the late boyfriend's brother starts making romantic overtures toward the protagonist and trying to touch her, despite her distress. At the end of the movie, after the protagonist gives birth, he tells the hospital staff that he is the father of her child, and no one believes her when she says that this is not true.
A man is kidnapped by a man and a woman. The woman talks about having sex with the kidnapped man whilst he is tied to a chair. She sits on his lap and gets undressed in front of him.
One of the first scenes of the movie shows a man in a brothel, groping several women (one of which is asleep). There is a prison rape joke (the main protagonist having spent several years in jail). Near the end of the movie, it is mentioned that one of the antagonists the main character killed was involved in child prostitution.
S1E1: a woman is sexually assaulted.
A male character makes suggestive comments about his wife in front of her son and a third male character, hinting at a sexual encounter between the couple and the third male character. The woman is clearly uncomfortable with this situation. In another scene, a male character makes a suggestive comment to a man suggesting that the third male character from the previous scene is a sex worker, deliberately talking loudly and while standing next to the younger man who is their topic of conversation. Worthy of note: main character is drugged with Rohypnol at a bar, and wakes up restrained in an unfamiliar location; however, the situation is not sexual.
Sexual assault is never depicted, but it is implied that the sorceress acts the way she does because she had been sexually assaulted.
A woman is chained to a bed while a man kisses and caresses her.
There are lots of nudity and aggressive/violent sexual acts with questionable consent.
The films opens with a desperate woman, wearing nothing but a trenchcoat, running and hitchhiking alone at night. She forces one car to stop by staying in the middle of the road: the driver almost crashes but still lets her in. He is mad at her and does not care that the woman is visibly distressed. He even says that he suspects that she has been raped (which is not the case) but he does not seem to care. However, he eventually calms down and helps her. At the end of this opening sequence, both are kidnapped by a group of men and the woman (naked) is tortured to death (we only see her bare legs shaking).
Kiss X Sis (TV Show)
The main focus of this series is the romantic and erotic dynamic between a high-school age male and his twin step-sisters who are a year older than him. The series also features erotic involvement between him and a female teacher.
Kissed (Movie)
A man kisses a dead body on the lips.
The main lead gets non-consensually slapped and cat-called. A boy says a girl wearing the short skirt “is asking for it “. A boy tries to drag a girl into a hot tub before he is stopped.
Kleo (TV Show)
S1E5: a man takes pictures of his clients in their underwear without their knowledge and consent. Supposedly he does it for "collection" and not for "personal use".
Klute (Movie)
Though no character is sexually assaulted, there is an ever present fear of that or murder happening in this movie. The main female character is stalked, her apartment is broken into when she is not there by a guy who masturbates with her underwear, and he leaves her threatening and creepy phone calls.
The film is an expression of the sexual revolution during the Swinging Sixties, thus themes of promiscuity and similar, predominantly in a masculine lens, are present. A prevalent theme shows a man's supposed need to dominate over women, as demonstrated by proclaimed womanizer: “Women. Not individuals. Just types.” It carries an uncritical and flouncy perspective on the topic of rape. Rape is mentioned, though not graphically shown or described, at about 15 minutes in. About 55 minutes in, the above-mentioned character persuades a woman to take off her coat, which she is shown to be uncomfortable with. At 58:30, he forces her against a corner and forcibly kisses her; soon after, at 59:40, he reassures that nobody will rape her and claims, “Girls don't get raped unless they want it.” At 1:06:30, zhe woman expresses discomfort over him touching her, his hands visibly shown going down her chest and to her knees. She objects to this and backs away, and soon faints. Two other characters fortunately protest again him after they find the woman on the ground and try looking for any marks he planted on her. After the woman wakes up, she believes to have been raped and coins the word, saying it profusely all over town and hangs it over one character. It is framed as comedic.
A man briefly looks at a woman undressing/changing clothes on two instances, both without her knowledge.
Knightfall (TV Show)
S1E2: a character implies that he has sexually assaulted a woman before killing her. This is later mentioned in conversation after the battle between two male characters. A female character must undergo an invasive virginity test: no body parts are shown and it is relatively quick but there is an audience and she is visibly upset. Before going into the exam room she says to her mother: "please don't make me do this", indicating that this is not consensual. The arranged wedding of a teenaged girl is often the source of drama and plot movement, she is not always in favour of the plans that are being made. There are several scenes where a teenage character seems to use sexual innuendo to manipulate an older male character whom she calls "uncle" even though they are not related by blood. This. same uncle character is shown to be attracted to her and spies on her in her room including watching her have sex. Worthy of note: A woman sleeps with her husband when she clearly didn't want to in order to hide the fact that she is pregnant by her lover. A teenage character is publicly slut shamed by her soon to be mother-in-law.
Knocked Up (Movie)
An intoxicated woman is lead to a sexual encounter in which she does not have the capacity to consent: both characters are drunk. The man, who involved recounts the situation as if she wanted to have unprotected sex, and gaslights her when she questions his account of what happened.
Knucklebones (Movie)
The demon makes a sexual joke before impaling a guy with a chainsaw.
Kobato (TV Show)
Kokomo City (Movie)
Kokon (Movie)
Mention of a flasher being provoked by girls wearing short skirts. There is a relationship between two teenage girls and, whilst they are both minors, there is an age difference between the two, which some viewers may be uncomfortable with.
Throughout the series, the titular character's beauty means she is routinely gawked at in ways that sometimes make her uncomfortable, including from adults. S1E2: a character asks another to date him, and is definitively rejected. He refuses to respect their rejection, instead forcefully grabbing their wrists and making a menacing comment about how he "won't let [them] get away." He is stopped before anything further can happen. S1E4:a character is romantically obsessed with another character; it initially seems like adolescent crushing, before it is revealed that she has been stalking and photographing the object of her interest. This is portrayed as humorous. S1E7: while they do not say anything out loud, we are shown that a group of boys is quietly "rating" the bodies of their female classmates. S1E11: a character expresses a desire to grope a girl in a dark room so she won't know who did it. Other characters validate this as being a good idea. Later, the same character is accused of filming up said girl's skirt, though this is never confirmed. S2E2: a character spends a few scenes scheming to try and see another girl's underwear for clearly sexual reasons. She tries to take a photo up the girl's skirt, but is unsuccessful. S2E8: a group of teenagers ask a tour guide inappropriate questions, like if she has a boyfriend or would want to date them. She is clearly uncomfortable, but it is treated as a joke. Later, a girl schemes to use a communal bathing area to grope another girl in an overtly sexual way, even outright asking her if she can. She is unsuccessful at doing this. She also tries to covertly observe the same girl undressing. A group of teen girls are depicted on screen discussing and comparing their bodies in a somewhat sexualized way. A group of boys do the same, with one demanding that another undress. We are briefly led to believe we are watching two teenagers have sex, until it is revealed that it is a visual gag and they are actually just posing for a picture. S2E11: a girl surreptitiously photographs another girl's legs for sexual reasons. She also repeatedly invades her personal space whilst clearly aroused. She later steals a pair of the girl's used stockings for sexual reasons.
Kono Oto Tomare! (TV Show)
S1E7: a girl calls a boy a 'pervert' when she sees him at the front door of her house. This is a misunderstanding that is played for laughs. S1E8: three high school boys have nose bleeds when they see the chest of an adult woman. S1E10: in a hot spring, a teenage girl comments on another girl's chest and asks to feel it. The girl tells her to stop before the scene ends without showing what happened. This is played for laughs. S1E12: a boy gets a nose bleed seeing a girl's chest. A separate boy laughs and jokes that 'he probably was thinking of something kinky.' This makes the girl mad but the scene has her comedically punch the boys.
Koshikei (Movie)
The film revolves around the execution of a man who killed and raped two women. Both crimes are discussed continuously throughout the film, with multiple reenactments in the first half of the movie. During one of them, a prison guard kills a woman and lifts up her skirt. Most of it is played on the tone of dark comedy.
Worthy of note : A man randomly kisses an unknown woman: se does not seem to care at all.
Kroll Show (TV Show)
S1E6: a man in jail is told by another man that he is going to rape him. It is played for laughs. S3E4: a rapist is discussed (for laughs).
Kuessipan (Movie)
Just before having sex for the first time with her boyfriend, the female protagonist says that her first time "was not a real first time", hinting at a potential rape (previously, a very short and ambiguous flashback showing her lost in the woods as a child wakes up her at night). A boy playfully holds a girl down on a sofa and eventually kisses her (she is laughing and does not protest).
S1E3: the main heroine teases another girl by pretending she will do something bad to her (but then does not). Afterwards, they make commentary about it, implying that they are joking about sexual assault.
A main character briefly mentions the word rape, and another character tricks a young woman into kissing him.
Kuso (Movie)
A man talks about having sex with a woman who was passed-out drunk.
Kwaidan (Movie)
A man pulls down a woman's shirt.
Kyousogiga (TV Show)
S2E3: a female character describes being sexually assaulted by another character.
In the opening sequence of the movie, taking place in a reconstituted 17th century dinner, the guests talk about how they will use a black houseboy (present in the room) as a sexual slave later. In the final scene, one character mentions that in the 1970s, woman could be raped at any time.
A female teacher grabs another male teacher's crotch in the school hallway. It is later obvious they are having an affair. A male teacher and a female student have an affair.
La Bête (Movie)
A person proclaims to kill women and have sex with them after they pass.
La Captive (Movie)
The plot of the film revolves around a possessive man who monitors the woman he is in a relationship with constantly. There are a few sex scenes which can be read as non-consensual as the woman does not seem to have the option to say no. However, there is no penetrative sex shown on-screen.
In the beginning of the film, the male protagonist says to a colleague that he puts up with his hard job by thinking about the ass of his female colleague, who is sitting next to him. She seems visibly uncomfortable. This is referred to several times throughout the film (mostly after this scene). The same protagonist later puts his hand under the skirt of the said female colleague and makes other inappropriate comments to her. A bit later, the male protagonist tells the woman he is living with that her boss probably tries to grope her at work. Later, the male protagonist tries to force his wife to have sex with him, but she rebuffs him.
La Dolce Vita (Movie)
There are two scenes in which women get slapped by men. In some other scenes, some drunk women get humiliated by a drunk man during a party.
A man flashes a distressed woman on the street (~18:30). A man engages sex with a woman who is crying and visibly distressed: consent is dubious. It is worth noting that the man manipulated her as part of his artistic projects in order to meet her.
La Entidad (Movie)
It is implied that a woman is raped before being killed early in the movie. This is then stated as fact towards the end of the film.
La Flamme (TV Show)
There are mentions of rape, incest, child abuse and sexual assault throughout the show: all of it is played for laughs. Sexual harassment is also played for laughs.
Early in the movie, the protagonist (a middle aged man) is surprised by a group of men while he is showering in a factory. One of them forces him to sit in front of him (still naked) to assert dominance. Nothing further happens. Later, the protagonist stumbles upon a woman who holds a woman captive and enchained as a slave and treats her as a dog, forcing her to give "kisses" to him (licking his face while he is visibly uncomfortable). When he tries to set her free, the woman beats her slave and mutilate her with a knife. The man is then knocked unconscious and kidnapped by human traffickers. They hold him incapacitated and mention selling men, women and children and their body parts, and being able to do anything they want with him. He and the woman eventually manage to escape by killing their guard. Near the end of the film, the protagonist encounters a man while he is in a vulnerable position. The latter is very handsy and the protagonist appears uncomfortable.
La Haine (Movie)
La Llorona (Movie)
A military general is on trial for genocide against indigenous people of Guatemala and one of the indigenous women gives a testimony about his soldiers killing the men and raping the women as a form of warfare. There are no graphic descriptions or anything, however. There is also a flashback scene where a soldier drags a woman through a cornfield by her hair and it could potentially be implied that he was going to rape her, but the next scene just shows her and her kids being held hostage and interrogated. A maid accuses the general of spying on her whilst she is taking a bath.
A 13-year-old has a crush on an older man and is convinced he likes her back, despite his multiple rejections. She threatens to tell his wife that he kissed her. An older man is dating an 18-year-old.
La Nina Santa (Movie)
La Nuit Du 12 (Movie)
This film is about a police investigation surrounding the murder of a young woman (shown on-screen in one of the first scenes of the movie). Among the suspects is a man who was previously condemned for domestic violence: we see pictures of the swollen face of his previous victim and we hear him threatening his current girlfriend with physical and sexual assault over the phone. The woman is presented as being under his influence (protecting him from the police).
La Primera Vez (TV Show)
S1E2: a group of students believe a female classmate is a sex worker and arrange a deal. She gets them to undress and then photographs them by surprise. The scene is played for laughs and the group become friends. S1E10+11: a student consensually performs oral sex on a friend but is later accused of doing it while the friend was asleep. Worthy of note: there is a lot of fistfight violence, including a severe attack on a gay student.
La Quietud (Movie)
La Rafle (Movie)
In the first part of the movie, police officers act sexually threatening towards Jewish women (including underage girls), when they round them up (at home). One girl is particularly subjected to sexually threatning behaviors from policemen throughout the movie.
A drunken man tries to kiss and embrace a woman who does not want it.
La Sentinelle (Movie)
A group of medical students learn to do an autopsy on a man who was apparently raped with a foreign object. The body is not shown but its condition and injuries are described in detail.
Policemen eye women in a creepy way.
La Vanite (Movie)
At some point, the main female protagonist mentions that she learned about sexuality because she was educated by nuns as a child, hinting that she was molested. This is played for laughs.
It is hinted that one of the main characters was raped by a much older man numerous times in her apartment.
L'Adversaire (Movie)
Early in the movie, a woman shows her low-cut neckline to a group of friends. Her husband jokingly warns her that she is exciting "strong and vigorous" men around her. Near the end of the film, the protagonist, who has suddenly beaten up his mistress, goes on top of her to strangle her but fails. For a few seconds, it could appear as an attempted rape.
Lady Driver (Movie)
A 19-year-old man makes inappropriate sexual comments towards a 16-year-old girl.
Lady Dynamite (TV Show)
Lady Jane (Movie)
The main female protagonist is forced to get married against her will but eventually falls in love with her husband. The couple only has consensual sex.
Lady Macbeth (Movie)
A sympathetic character gropes the female main character (25:00-25:20): the man is in a position of power and the incident is treated jokingly.
Rape is mentioned throughout as something that occasionally happens to women. Also the book is set in Dynastic China where women are property, so consent is not possible. None of the main characters are sexually assaulted, but the maids and concubines are.
Ladybugs (Movie)
The film contains two jokes about child molestation.
Historical misogyny is a pervasive theme. The female main characters talk around the danger of sexual assault at intervals. One is forced into marriage, though her husband does not attempt anything sexual before she escapes.
Laid (TV Show)
S1E6: a rape joke is made about cops not believing women. S1E7: it is mentioned that a man in hiw twenties hits on people he thinks are 22 but may have been teens.
The Lake (TV Show)
S1E4: a guy tricks his boyfriend into a threesome.
Lake Bodom (Movie)
An incident where a character was drugged and had nude pictures of her spread throughout her school is discussed on multiple occasions. While this turns out to be untrue, the rumours still have an impact on her life.
One nonbinary main character is provoked into a fight by a bully who misgenders them and snaps their binder painfully. The bully's friends stalk and threaten them afterwards, and some adult authority figures gaslight then about the situation.
Lamb (Movie)
A man makes unwanted sexual advances toward one of the protagonists whenever they are alone, and watched her bathing with her son. In one scene, he attempts to blackmail her for sex but fails.
Land Girls (TV Show)
S1E1: an American soldier preys upon a 17-year old girl. He does not violently force her into anything, but he does encourage her to get drunk and it is clear that he is manipulating her. S2E4: a woman sleeps with a man who has been sexually harassing her for some time because she is in desperate need of money. S3E2: a man tries to forcibly kiss a woman.
S1E4: a man wants to kidnap a girl and tells her comrades that he will take good care of her. It is insinuated that he is planning on sexually assaulting her. The girl fights back and nothing happens. Worthy of note: in S1E6, there is a long drawn out seen of three young girls taking a bath. There is a lot of nudity. The female protagonist is a 17 year old girl.
A young boy touches a woman's breast. A mother kisses her daughter. The last scenes features a woman (the protagonist) visibly distressed but forced to dance a strip show while faceless men (some masturbating) are watching her.
Landline (Movie)
Lantana (Movie)
At some point, a woman is about to engage sex with a younger man in his car. When he becomes too eager, she asks him to slow down, but he does not listen to her. She has to push him off to make him stop. She then leaves his car and he slut shames her. In the last part of the film, it is revealed that a woman died because she tried to escape a man who was driving her home at night. A flashback shows how she got out of his car while driving, when he took a shortcut across the woods without telling her what his intentions were. He then briefly tried to reassure her, but she hid and fell to her death. Worthy of note: it is mentioned several times throughout the film that two of the main character's daughter was killed prior to the events of the film.
An adult man cat-calls a girl, and other men watch her walking by too (54:39). A 30 year-old man watches a girl, blushes, and calls her beautiful again. He is about to inappropriately touch her before seeing another character. Later, another man brings flowers for the girl. Both end up helping her (1:11:34-1:12:16).
The protagonist walks down a hallway of jail cells: the prisoners cat call her and gesturs at her through the bars (28:05-29:00). The protagonist is forced to go on a walk with the antagonists: one of the men grabs her neck and tells her to keep moving in an inappropriate manner (1:29:26-1:29:32).
Las Mil Y Una (Movie)
A teenage girl talks about being in a relationship with a 40 year old woman. No sex between them is shown on screen.
The Last Czars (TV Show)
In one scene an adult man seduces a teenage girl. S1E2: it is mentioned that a characters was raped and had a child. It is not dicussed in details. S1E3: an adult man inappropriately touches a teenage girl while she in unconscious. The series also discusses the way Rasputin takes advantage of women who come to him seeking "spiritual guidance", creating a sex cult.
A mother passionately kisses her adult son. Cousins kiss and later are implied to have sex. A man who is acting and treated as a dog suddenly begins humping two different women at different times. Everyone treats this as a mere annoyance. It is later implied that he is a sexual threat to a young woman.
A young woman licks the face of another young woman while she's sleeping. A man touches a young woman's back and arm in a couple of scenes and she pulls away and tells him to "stop touching me."
Near the end of the film, the protagonist explains that he had always dreamt of raping someone.
A woman continues to touch a man while he looks visibility uncomfortable, when she tries to kiss him he gets up and walks away.
This is a comedy and includes jokes about rape. At the 29-minute mark, a fight breaks out regarding a mask. One of the characters refers to the mask having been metaphorically "raped." Around the midway point, a man asks one of his friends if he had been molested. This prompts a further exchange in which rape is mentioned and referred to repeatedly.
The Last Man (Movie)
One of the boss's henchmen tells the main character that he could do "all kinds of things" to his girlfriend and describes a few. The scene occcurs about halfway through the movie in the main character's bunker. Then the audio is replayed to the boss in his office towards the end of the film.
A woman is kidnapped and forced to marry a man.
There is occasional verbal sexual harassment of teen girl characters by older men. There are recurring themes of historical homophobia.
Last Shift (Movie)
A cult leader says “I will rape your humanity” during a police interrogation. The line is repeated once more later in the film.
A main character is tied to a tree and accidentally makes the tree alive. He is trapped with his face in the tree’s bust and the tree touches his face with leaves and flowers. The tree also makes several moaning sounds that can easily be seen as sexual when it is first awakened. He does not want this and calls another main character for help. The scene is designed to be a joke, is played for laughs, and is not mentioned again for the whole movie.
Among the many ambiguous scenarios proposed by the plot throughout the film (mainly a discussion between a man and a woman), one possibility is that he raped her. There are some some hints in the dialogues and two scenes illustrate this idea: one where the man touches the woman's breast and she says no; and another one where he enters her room and she seems frightened.
A man mentions that he tells his teenage sisters when he masturbates. A therapist is caught in a compromising position with one of his clients.
The titular devil character makes a sexually explicit joke involving two characters, who in turn look visibly uncomfortable. There are mentions of children being bred into a cult for human sacrifice It unclear whether the mothers in the cult have consented.
Women are briefly shown being strangled: the aftermath is only suggested or mentioned.
One of the victims is accused of being a rapist. Some of the main male characters are shown hitting on a female protagonist. One of the main victims is shown handing over a business card to a waitress, to which his friend tells him that the waitress is way younger than him. Later on, while waiting for the waitress to arrive, it is established that he wants to manipulate her into having sex in order for her to get the job. The killer, at one point, slaps a woman's ass without her consent. At the end of the movie, the killer is implied to mutilate a man's penis. There is also many parts that may seem to lead up to sexual assault, but which do not.
The protagonist's friend enters a relationship with an adult man and becomes pregnant as a result. The friend gets an abortion.
L'Avventura (Movie)
In the first part of the movie, the male protagonist forcefully kisses the female protagonist while they are alone in a boat: she flees. Later, he stalks and grabs her in a train despite her protests but eventually leaves her alone. After that, in the last part of the movie - when the two are now lovers - she resists him when he tries to engage sex: he stops. At some point, the female protagonist ends up alone in the street, surrounded by a large crowd of men silently staring at her: nothing happens.
The Law of Ueki (TV Show)
S1E5: a guy uses his power to lift up the skirt of the female protagonist. S1E7: a girl gets harassed by three men. She is saved by the protagonist. S1E9: a guy hugs the female protagonist from behind and touches her body in several places. A kid tries to help a guy who saved him. He wants to wash his clothes and tries to undress him. The guy screams and runs away.
Layer Cake (Movie)
Near the beginning of the film, there is a line where a character says that drugs get you more time in prison than rape. Worthy of note: there is also a brief brothel scene.
Lazarus (TV Show)
S1E4: a wealthy nightclub owner selects women to a private section of the club. He spikes the drinks of all the women allowing him and multiple other men to rape them and with a guarantee the cops would not arrive (13:30-14:53). No such assault happens on screen as a lead woman character is not effected by the drug and attacks the owner, also causing the other men to stop. However the scene and the episode implies this owner to be a sleeze and could imply he has done with multiple other women. The dialogue could be triggering for some - 'let me tell you, the only females who show up at my parties, are gold diggers like these. And that's why i give them what they deserve with the special punch bowl. All right, boys, do whatever you want with them! I'm going to help myself to this one right here.' SPOILERS: While he is arrested at the end of the episode, this drugging crime is not brought up in what he gets charged for.
Le Boucher (Movie)
Half siblings are lovers before finding out they are siblings: they do separate after finding out.
It is explained that a woman is sold into slavery. A very brief mention by this character of a "client" suggests that she was forced into prostitution.
Le Jeu (Movie)
A man asks a woman if she is wearing panties and she does not want to tell him. so he attempts to pull her skirt up.
A son inappropriately touches his mother late in the movie.
A man taking pictures of a woman (with her consent) insists on photographing her while she takes a shower, despite her refusal.
In the beginning of the movie, it is strongly implied that the love interest of the protagonist (a waitress) is forced to have sex with her employer. The latter is shown making inappropriate comments at her and asking her to go to his room and wait for him.
A mother explaining her story tells of how her ex boyfriend broke into her apartment and raped her. (24:40-24:50): she is pregnant with his child. There are no other details.
A male character gropes a woman's rear without her consent (1:18:00).
In one scene, the team's chaperone is grabbed and forcefully kissed without her consent by the team's manage). Later, he slaps her on the rear without her consent. Both instances are played for laughs and the assaults are not addressed.
Season 1: men sexually harass women throughout. S1E8: a woman kisses another woman without her permission. Worthy of note: women are beaten by cops for being gay.
A teenage boy takes pictures of a woman in a bikini without her knowing and without her consent. He is later seen masturbating under a blanket in bed while looking at the photos.
Leaving Lenin (Movie)
A teenage boy tries to pressure his girlfriend into having sex with him. When she is clearly not interested, he eventually backs off and nothing happens. He then insults her for this, and later lies about the ordeal, telling his friends they did actually have sex.
Lebanon (Movie)
There is a scene where a young woman is stripped by a soldier, as she stumbles round a waste ground.
L'Eclisse (Movie)
The female lead is grabbed and kissed by men several times throughout the film, but she rebuffs them. The first time (in the opening sequence), it is the man with whom she just broke up with. About halfway into the movie, it is her new lover.
A teenager is attacked and left in the woods by a teacher with whom she had sexual relations.
The premise of this book is the experience of a human man on a planet where the people are neither male nor female and who go into a type of "heat" once a month. Incestuous relationships between siblings are acceptable unless a child is produced from their union, after which they are forbidden to continue their relationship. These types of relationships are explored as tales within the larger narrative of the book and as a practice one of the main characters participated in in the past. We are invited to assume that the relationship between that main character and their sibling was one of love and to also feel sorry for the siblings for being forced apart after they had a child together. It is not directly stated but implied that both siblings may have eventually commit suicide in grief at their separation.
Legacies (TV Show)
S1E8: a character wakes up with no memories but is pregnant, it is slightly implied she might have been sexually assaulted. S2E8: a teenager girl has sex with an old vampire, who has the appearance of a teenage boy. The main character's boyfriend kisses her whilst she is asleep. This is displayed as romantic. An agelesse creature lies about who he is and repeatedly has sex with the main character who believes he is her boyfriend. A friend of the protagonist makes a golem which thinks he is the main character's boyfriend: they have sex.
Sexual assault is not discussed in detail, it is only mentioned: two of the subjects of the documentary are a father and grandfather of a twelve-year-old girl who got murdered with suspected sexual assault.
The film contains sexually harassment throughout and the protagonist gets catcalled several times. The main character's boss attempts to forcefully kiss her and fires her when she refuses his advances. The protagonist is offered a promotion, but only if she accepts her professor's sexual advances. He places a hand on her knee and insinuates that she has no chance to be a real lawyer if she does not sleep with him. The protagonist immediately stands up, voices her objection, and leaves the room. A fellow intern sees this scene (before the protagonist's objection) and assumes that the protagonist is just sleeping her way to the top. Another character does believe the protagonist and helps her. A character admits to requiring her pool boy to wear a revealing swimsuit so she can see his behind when he bends over. This character is accused of sleeping with her pool boy, but that turns out not to be true.
S1E40: a man tells another man how he took a woman by his authority, and with violence. The next scene, the woman is naked in bed.
S1E5: Over the course of the episode, the main character harasses a boy she likes to admit to having feelings for her despite the fact that he denies her multiple times. When he finally admits that he does have feelings for her, but is in a complicated situation because he has equally strong feelings for his girlfriend, she interrupts him by kissing him. S2E6: one of the main characters is involved in filming a moving picture and becomes convinced that his female co-star is in love with him, not being able to tell the difference between her and her character's attraction to his character. During one scene, where her character is thoroughly tied up and unable to escape, he deviates from the script by forcefully kissing her. Her discomfort is clearly shown. When chastised by the director, he says it just 'felt right'. Afterwards, he tells his co-star that it seemed like she liked the kiss and must have feelings for him, to which she responds with disgust. He goes on to treat other love interests poorly, even bargaining with an ex-girlfriend to help her find her missing family only if she promises to take him back when they're done. He continually makes comments throughout the search about how his actions are him 'winning her back.'
A man hits on a woman and does not leave her alone until several of her male friends confront him. Later he tracks down where their group is camping with plans to beat them up, but does not harass the women any further.
Characters talk about potentially "servicing" the main female character (who then escapes).
This show contains lots of talk about brothels throughout and purchasing women. S1E2- beastiality jokes are made (about a "goat groper" and a chicken). S2E12: while fighting the main enemy, two protagonists go into the enemies' anus to attack from inside.
When the player goes to Great Fairies fountains to obtain an upgrade, he/she is forced to be kissed or to be taken into the fountain by giant female characters (what happens exactly is hidden with a fade to black): the protagonist is visibly distressed and scared.
It is heavily implied that the Great Fairies kiss the protagonist when upgrading his armor, and he is shown to not want it. It is mostly handled as a joke, since it lasts less than ten seconds and we do not see or hear anything about it afterwards. This could be upsetting to some viewers because they were forced into a kiss and/or seen someone going through the same thing.
A succubus character is repeatedly sexually harassed by a man who ignores her requests for him to leave her alone. He uses the fact that she is a succubus to assume she is willing to date and have sex with anyone.
A female antagonist attempts to kiss the male protagonist multiple times, despite his clear disinterest. It is not explained in the movie, but her kiss is lethal: her desire to kiss him is not due to an attraction to him.
Lemebel (Movie)
Lemming (Movie)
Leo the Lion (Movie)
A gazelle and a lion force a mother zebra to flip over on her back so the hungry lion can drink her milk. They do not ask her nor does she consent to it. Its framing is extremely uncomfortable and she keeps saying no repeatedly. A subplot involves the main antagonist attempteing to force a protagonist into marriage: she is shown as extremely uncomfortable with it.
The film, set in occupied France, contains one scene with a very pushy and almost threatening American soldier asking a woman to sleep with him. Another soldier tells him to let her go after she rebuffs him several times and he finally leaves.
The precise nature of the relationship between the two protaganists (a grown man and a twelve year old girl who came into his care) is ambiguous - potential interpretation of romantic feelings between the two are never acted on. Girl tells hotel manager that the man is not her father but is her lover (this is a lie intended to shock the manager.) Twelve year old girl repeatedly emphasises how much she loves the man, sometimes in sexual terms.
Leprechaun (Movie)
The leprechaun caresses a woman’s legs without her consent. Later on, while running, he stares at the woman’s ass. He also kisses the woman without her consent. A man has his genitalia groped.
Leprechaun 2 (Movie)
A leprechaun attempts to force a woman into marriage with him by is stopped by the woman’s dad. Later on he forces another woman into marriage and kisses her without her consent. A man aggressively insists on hooking up with a woman even when she constantly rejects him. He calls her a "bitch" after she leaves.
The film centers around a romance between a man named and his maid, who he cheats on with his wife. The maid is shown in an idealized and exoticised way for the presumed male viewer. In the middle of the film, the maid is sexually harassed by a chef. The male protagonist tells him to leave, but he is angry at his maid. In a following scene, he watches her taking a shower while she is unaware.
S1E1: a man kisses the female protagonist at a bar. He has alcohol in his mouth, and spits it into her mouth during the kiss: she does not drink and pushes him away.
Rape is mentioned two times throughout the film. A man watches a woman undressing/bathing naked two times without her consent. Two policemen pursue and grab a woman to arrest her, but the action looks like an attempted rape. A woman puts a blindfolded man's hand on her breast without his consent. A man harasses a fleeing woman (trying to grab her). The film contains frequents homophobic, racist and sexist remarks and jokes (to discredit characters saying it).
Les Harkis (Movie)
A man is tortured naked with electricity: the cables are placed on his testicles. A man mentions that soldiers raped a 13 year-old girl.
The female lead is seventeen for the first segment of the movie, which includes her sleeping with a 20 year old boyfriend.
Les Rascals (Movie)
Worthy of note: a joke is made about liking a young men and keeping children in their basement.
Les Ripoux (Movie)
Early in the film, an old policeman tries to "teach a lesson" to a younger colleague by asking him to take the deposition of a paedophile. There is no further mention of his crimes. Just after that scene, the same old policeman sets up the same colleague: he hires a prostitute to pretend having been repeatedly raped and harassed by a man on the phone. The first man voluntarily dismisses her claims as compulsive lies. The whole sequence is played for laughs.
In the movie's opening sequence, a bunch of men start chasing after a woman shown dancing topless onstage.
In the first part of the movie, the female protagonist tries twice to seduce the male protagonist despite his clear and stated disinterest: she jumps on him, starts undressing him and kisses him both time. Near the end of the movie, the female protagonist states that she was abused by men her whole life.
The plot revolve around an older women who hunts and kidnaps younger women to remove their faces. It is mentioned that a dead woman was found naked and the police suspects that somebody took her clothes off after her death.
At a party, a character tries to flirt with the protagonist in a way that is racially fetishizing: she punches him in the face.
To Leslie (Movie)
A man places his hand on a woman’s thigh and aggressively kisses her while she protests and then pushes him away.
There is discussion of how the objectification of nature led to the objectification of women. There is mention of how women around the world do not have control of their bodies and how many children they will have.
Let Him Go (Movie)
Four men force themselves into an hotel where an old couple sleeps. One grabs the elder woman by her hand and says something in the line of: "I will keep her company but eventually give her enough reason to stay" in a sexual manner. Nothing happened as the husband grabs a gun. Worthy of note: the film shows multiple physical abuses of a woman by her husband (no sexual content).
This book takes place during the Civil Rights Movement in the United States. There are passing mentions of how women in the movement risk sexual harassment or worse from racists.
Let Me In (Movie)
The whole movie is about a sexual relationship between an adult woman and her teenage stepson. The boy often pressures the woman into sexual acts into which she "gives in". She implies having been raped as her first sexual experience. All times but once her husband and the mentioned boy essentially just use her body, finish, and thats the end of sex (there is also no communication or her doing anything, she just lies there while they do things to her, even when in the one scene she gets head and then orgasms from penetration). When he confesses to their relationship, she accuses him of lying, and he is not believed. He later threatens to accuse her of raping him. A woman works as a lawyer representing underage victims of sexual assault: in one scene she discusses details of a teenage girl's sex life with the girl, who is clearly distressed from having been recently assaulted.
Lethal Weapon (Movie)
A man receives a threatening note that his kidnapped daughter “looks pretty naked”. The note is shown briefly and this aspect of the kidnapping is not discussed. A man restrains a woman. It is implied that the woman will be sexually assaulted, but the man is stopped before anything happens.
There is a questionable scene, in which the male character asks a female character to have dinner with him. She repeatedly politely and unambiguously declines, but he continues to demand, grabs her shopping baskets and dumps it out, and eventually grabs her arm and leads her out of the supermarket. However, once being led out of the store the female character appears to be laughing off the male character's action. The characters later have consensual sex, and there are no further problematic scenes.
A character physically restrains the protagonist on a bed with his body weight while she is appearing to have a panic attack. Nothing sexual happens, but the imagery can be alarming. Worthy of note: A man (non-forcefully) tries to kiss a woman he has recently met and she says no. He then kisses her a few minutes later, which she reciprocates, but then she tells they should not rush things.
There are a couple of spanks and straddling between friends at a slumber party, as well as someone licking another person's ear: consent is not explicit, but they stop when asked to.
A demon licks the leg of the female protagonist. Later on, he appears in the bathtub while she is taking a bath. The demon acts somewhat like a child and there is no sexual intent in his actions. A different demon smacks her butt after she does not follow all the steps. There does not seem to be any sexual intent, but it might upset some viewers.
Letterkenny (TV Show)
S2E7: there is talk about roofies and drugging in order to force sex between two dogs. S9E2: a woman's butt is grabbed offscreen by an underage girl who receives a long lecture from a group of people including "what happens in jail" and several references to "molestation" etc. S12E3: a man briefly mentions raping and pillaging.
Level 16 (Movie)
L'Evenement (Movie)
Leverage (TV Show)
S1E5: sexual harassment.
S2E11: a serial rapist's crimes are the subject of the episode. Many stories of sexual assault are shared, highlighting issues in the justice system which prevent victims from receiving justice.
A male crewmember catcalls a female crewmember.
Lez Bomb (Movie)
Liar Liar (Movie)
There are a few non-consensual kisses in this film. A man talks about having sex with a woman for a promotion. A woman jokes about a man being molested in jail.
The Librarians (TV Show)
S2E7: a woman mentions that she was constantly belittled, harassed, and touched inappropriately by army men. She is later sexually harassed by a man in person.
The entire plot centers on a romantic relationship between a 25 year old woman and a 15 year old boy. No sexual physical contact is shown but characters with this age gap (presumably) end up getting married at the end. During one of the first scenes, the female protagonist is given a non-consensual slap on the bottom by one of her bosses. At some point, the protagonists argue because the woman does not want to show her breast to the boy: she ends up doing it anyway. Later, when they are both lying on a bed and the woman is asleep, the boy almost touches her breast while she is sleeping, but eventually renounces doing it. In the latter part of the film, one man pretends to help the woman drive a truck as a pretext to get really close to her, flirt with her and almost kiss her: she is visibly distressed.
L.I.E. (2001) (Movie)
The main plot of the movie follows the relationship between a pedophile and the main character. While they do not have sex there is no ambiguity of the real nature of their connection. He makes multiple suggestive comments to him, introduces him to pornographic material, smells a fabric he left behind creepily, etc., all while posing as a mentor figure to him. The protagonist also has a friend who is his same age,: it is suggested once or twice that he does sexual things for other men in exchange for cash. One of the main character's friend brags a few times aboutt how he has sex with his sister and sees no issue with the whole being her brother thing. This same friend lays down on the floor and looks up the skirt of a woman walking by.
The main character is an orphan who is saved with a group of orphans, and the man who took them in claims that it he did not rescue them, they would have been sold into sexual slavery. This is referenced multiple times. Additionally, 'whores' are referenced frequently, and there is a chapter describing how these women grew tired of being harmed during sex and unionised.
A male character touches another character’s behind while standing for a wedding photo. He continues to do it again even though she tells him to stop. It is played for laughs. A teenage boy enters a sexual relationship with his female teacher.
Life of Brian (Movie)
A woman mentions rape in regards to the conception of her son.
The Life List (Movie)
Sexual harassment (about 30 minutes in).
Two separate mentions of rape are included while recounting events that caused families in this documentary to seek asylum (at 07:00 and 25:00).
Life Partners (Movie)
Several jokes are made about a character being a sex offender. A character is said to work on the show 'To Catch a Predator', and paedophiles are mentioned.
In the last episode, there are indications that a man and a woman were attracted to each other when she was just under 18 and he was in his late 20s.
Worthy of note: A 17 year-old woman and an 80 year-old man enter into a relationship. She consents enthusiastically and is treated as an adult, though young, within her society. The explicitly shown aspects of their relationship are more platonic than sexual.
There are no explicit discussions of rape or sexual assault in this film. However, the entire undertone of the plot is that there is a drastic 'shortage' of females in the world, and they need to pretend to be male to avoid being hunted.
Light Sleeper (Movie)
Early on in the film, a supporting character mentions that he had sex with an underage girl.
Some sex scenes are intermixed with scenes of violence and several scenes imply the possibility or a threat of rape. One of the two male protagonists fondles a naked woman who is presumed dead, but who is quickly revealed to be a living mermaid.
During an era of witch trials, a pregnant woman is assaulted by a town official. The perpetrator is cursed by a witch for his actions and falls ill. The victim of the assault is later accused as a witch and is arrested.
A man approaches a woman from behind and begins invasive physical contact: she pushes him away and turns towards him. He places her on the kitchen cabinet and kisses her, caresses her and grabs her by force. She grabs the coffee pot and hits him over the head. She regains power and threatens him if he tries anything again. Tension builds very quickly, but is released just as quickly by the reversal of the situation.
Lili Marleen (Movie)
Lilies (Movie)
Two boys tie a third boy's hands behind a tree, and one of the boys forces a kiss onto him (15:30).
Lillyhammer (TV Show)
Lilo & Stitch (Movie)
One of the titular characters (an alien monster) kisses an old woman without her consent: it is played for laughs.
Limbo (2020) (Movie)
S1E9: a main character tells of a law professor who tried to rape her. S2E1-2: the professor is mentioned again, and confronted.
In this movie about a cruising spot for men, there is a running-gag about a man masturbating while watching men having sex. Most of them are not bothered by it, even if they sometimes ask him to go away. At some point, he grabs a walking man's crotch, who gently rebuffs him without being distressed.
Lingui (Movie)
Link Click (TV Show)
S1E1: a man swaps bodies with a woman and almost touches her breasts. He is stopped by another man. A woman is sexually harassed by her boss and coerced into almost kissing him. S1E8: a man tells a woman he can arrange an internship for her if she agrees to be in a relationship with him. He later on tries to drug her after being rejected. She fights him back in time and nothing ends up happening. S1E12: there is a flashback of the sexual harassment of S1E1. S2E1: a man is seen taken pictures under a girls skirt. He is caught and taken away by police. Another girl is forced to scam men by talking to them. If she does not comply, she gets beaten up.
The film opens with a torture sequence: one soldier fondles a woman and threatens to rape her because she is the sister of one of the prisoners. The protagonist and titular character is violent towards women throughout the movie. He sexually harasses some of them and beats up several of them, including his wife, up to the point of putting a gun in her mouth. Other women (prostitutes) are also beaten off-screen.
The a List (TV Show)
Several characters in the show are mind controlled and kiss/make out while under said mind control, even when they previously had no interest in doing so. One pair of characters is mind controlled into believing they are a couple against their will, and the main villain uses mind control to make a love interest return her affections. Nothing is shown going beyond kissing though.
Little Evil (Movie)
The female lead mentions being in a cult and conceiving a child while blacked out in a ritual (37:37).
Little Gandhi (Movie)
There is a very brief mention of women who were raped by the Assad regime.
An adult male makes sexual advances - comments, spanking, non-consensual touching - towards a 13 year old girl. Other characters, including police officers, make reference to knowing he likes "pretty little girls".
Part 1, chapter 3: non-graphic mention of a past rape. Part 4, chapter 25: discussion of a past sexual encounter. The ages are unclear but one person is mentioned to be a teenager and the other seems to have been an adult Part 4, chapter 27: a man threatens a woman but he leaves after seeing that she is armed and nothing further happens Part 4, chapter 29: brief mention of past rape.
Little Italy (Movie)
A female police officer searches the male main character, grabs him and says something sexual.
Little Man (Movie)
The movie is about a man with dwarfism who is prettending to be a baby. He harasses women troughout the film (touching, grabbing, pushing a women's head down to his private parts, etc.). All is played for laughs.
A sexual relationship between an adult and a minor is discussed in a positive light from one of the characters (Grandpa), he mentions "jailbait". At the end of the movie, there is a children beauty pageant scene. The dad sits next to a guy who is there alone. There are not a lot of men in the room and those who are there seem to be with a wife, but not this guy. This character asks the dad "is it your first time here?" It is implied he is there by himself to watch the children. In the same beauty pageant scene, one of the main characters, a 7 year old child, performs a sexually suggestive choreography that her grandpa taught her. It is not shown in a sexual light and conveys endearment.
The opening of the film features intense arguing between the main character and his (soon to be ex-) girlfriend (7:56-10:23). The main character inadvertently exposes his five-year-old nephew to his ex-girlfriend and another man having sex. The main character then says that his ex-girlfriend has a "slutty vagina" in the presence of his nephew (16:52-17:07). The main character masturbates to a photograph of the main female character, a teacher (50:40-52:05). Later in the scene it is revealed that this photograph is actually a class portrait of the teacher with her kindergarten class which had previously been zoomed in.
Little Odessa (Movie)
About halfway through the movie, a man mentions that his mother had to consent to a sexual act with a guard to escape Russia in her youth.
A pedophile looks at a little girl’s underwear when she bends over. At one point, his zipper opens on its own and a hand comes out, symbolizing an erection. The little girl later flirts with him to trick him into following her toward a trap.
Little Woods (Movie)
A man implies that a woman would need to have sex with him in order to obtain a healthcard. He grabs her arm but nothing violent comes of this because she runs away.
Liv and Maddie (TV Show)
Over the whole series, the father of one of the titular character is being a overprotective patriarch as if he owns her. Pretty much anything her boyfriend says he can interpret it in a weird way. This trope is used for comedy. In season 1, a girl wears a costume and flirts with her brother to give him more self esteem. He then develops a crush on this "mystery girl". This is presented as a funny situation. S1E16: a girl keeps hitting on a boy which is clearly (in several episodes) not interested in her. She hugs him even if he does not want to. He runs away from her as soon as he sees her but she does not accept his rejection. Another female character gets continious unwanted attention even though it is obvious that she is not interested and that she is uncomfortable to be bothered.
A woman consents to have sex for the first time, although she does this after the main character uses her faith to deceive her into thinking she cannot refuse. The film does not treat this as problematic. As this female character's powers of divination are tied to her virginity, another male character's previous intentions to "take them away" are revealed to be rape threats. His anger towards her sexuality is a recurrent theme throughout the film.
The main character's sister, who is 21, ends up involved in an abusive and controlling relationship with a man who's strongly implied to be much older than her. The boyfriend coerces the woman into filming a sex tape and then attempts to sell the tape online without her consent. He's stopped, but the experience is highly traumatic for the woman and she ends up having to go into counselling.
About halfway through the film, a scene shows that the protagonist's sister is forced into prostitution by her husband. She states that she does not like her work at all and the characters discuss the fact that only her brother can buy her out of this position. Near the end of the movie, the male protagonist runs after his wife and tries to strangle her. The scene is played for laughs.
The protagonist's mother is a lawyer on behalf of survivors of sexual assault. The mother has age-appropriate conversations with the protagonist about consent and puberty. After a sex ed class, a group of boys surrounds a group of girls to rub inflated condoms on them and yell dirty jokes at them. The protagonist notices the girls'
The Lobster (Movie)
A hotel staff physically grinds on the protagonist's crotch. One conversation mentions violent sexual acts. Rape is simulated in a skit that is shown to the main character.
Lockwood & Co (TV Show)
A ghost was killed by her lover in what is implied to have been an abusive relationship. A male teen main character develops a close, quasi-romantic relationship with a much older woman (in her 40s). Nothing sexual happens but the romantic overtones are strong. The woman ultimately seriously endangers him in pursuit of her own agenda.
A teenage boy looks at a woman showering without her consent.
A man kisses his girlfriend despite her clear discomfort. Worthy of note: The film is about a serial killer who targets young blonde women, but a possible sexual element of the crimes is never brought up or discussed.
The Lodgers (Movie)
Logan (Movie)
There is a short scene that can easily be mistaken for an assault in a bathroom stall It is in fact an old man being helped onto a toilet. It is mentioned that Latino women were impregnated with mutant genes for an unethical experiment (seemingly without their consent). They are said to have been killed after giving birth. Worthy of note: there are many scenes and talk of children being abused (non sexually).
Logan's Run (Movie)
A female citizen is brought to the quarters of a police officer: sex is discussed and she asks if she is able to refuse (28:47). She is told that she is. The same two characters are swimming naked and sex is discussed again (1:16:40). The female character again asks if she can refuse and is told that she can. A woman and two men run through a sex club full of naked customers (50:10). The woman is grabbed by two naked men and carried off. Both of the men are grabbed by an assortment of naked men and women and held for a few moments. The woman and men manage to break free and leave the club.
Sexual harassment played for jokes.
LOL (2012) (Movie)
One character has a crush on another character and the feelings are not shared: the character is quite touchy and trying, but this is played off as a joke. A teenaged girl walks into a bathroom with her mother and younger sister who are sharing a bath. She undresses and walks into a shower and her mother asks if she got a Brazilian wax and why she is acting like a porn star. A female high school student makes multiple advances toward her teacher which he declines and is visibly uncomfortable with. Later, as the teacher is tutoring a male student, who is the female student’s love interest, her name and an image of her breasts in a bra pop up on the teenage boy’s cellphone. The teacher sees it and immediately flips the phone over. The teacher later tells the girl to make her boyfriend change his contact photo of her on his phone. The girl is embarrassed and no longer harasses the teacher. An older woman is half passed out on a bed laughing. It is unclear if she was drunk or drugged by her granddaughter’s friends. She wakes up the next morning not remembering anything.
Lola (1961) (Movie)
In one of the first scenes of the movie, a man lustfully watches a 14 year old girl on the street. she sticks her tongue out at him. Later, the same girl hangs out with another adult man: she and her mother suggest that this could be misinterpreted.
Lola (1981) (Movie)
A great part of the movie takes place in a brothel and thus many scenes show women in degrading positions.
Lola Montez (Movie)
The main protagonist escapes an arranged marriage at young age. At the end of the film, we see a queue of men who paid to kiss the hand of the main protagonist, who became a circus attraction.
The main character and a woman escape a burning ship into a river, and come ashore. The man forcefully tears the woman’s clothes off, and she thinks he is going to rape her, but he reveals that he is doing it so they can dry off and warm up.
During the final scene, a man asks a woman if he can kiss her. She says he can kiss her cheek, but he kisses her mouth and begins grabbing her. They kiss for a moment, then she pushes him away and he leaves.
S1E2: a group of boys talk sexually about several girls and plan to make use of their skill to make the girls obey them and do everything they want. It is heavily implied they are planning on using it to sexually assault/harass the girls. They get find out before anything happens. This anime sexualizes several female underage characters.
Lonesome (Movie)
This film contains strong sexual content and plotline, some stretching of consensual barriers, with potential implications that one character is not fully enjoying the sexual activity.
The Long Shadow (TV Show)
A woman starts sex work during an economic crisis because her family cannot make ends meet. S1E1: the scene depicting her first encounter starts at 34:00. It is depicted as being traumatic for her and she somewhat disassociates. Overall the series handles depictions of sex work with sensitivity.
Long Time No See (TV Show)
There is a flashback of a character being bullied for being gay (he is peed on).
In passing, it is mentioned that, as a joke, a male character hacked his male co-worker's computer and filled it with nude images of himself which made the co-worker extremely upset. This anecdote is meant to be funny.
A man mentions having a formative sexual experience with one of his cousins.
Longlegs (Movie)
Little girls are targeted throughout the movie, but there is no implied sexual reason, motivation, or actions for this. The serial killer hogties one of his potential victims at one point. She is fully clothed and the scene ends before anything further happens. There is no implied sexual content. A character reads a letter in which the writer makes a threat to cut off the character's mother's 'tits' if the character reveals information to the FBI.
Look Away (Movie)
A girl grabs a boy’s crotch without consent and whispers provocative comments in his ear, then licks it. Without her knowledge or consent, a boy follows a girl into the locker room with the implied intention of either watching her shower or assaulting her. A girl makes explicit comments to a boy, and moves her hands up his legs and crotch despite him repeatedly saying stop. He becomes more enthusiastic and they then have sex. Later on the same girl continues to kiss this boy while he repeatedly says stop. Also worthy of note: while not strictly non-consensual, the film contains multiple sexualised scenes with a 17-year old female character, including her masturbating, her breasts being seen in the bath and naked shower scenes, as well as multiple sex scenes, and her rubbing paper over her vagina while in class and passing it to someone to smell. There are also some sexualised overtones between this girl and her father, including she and him watching a sex scene together at the cinema, her kissing his neck. There is also extended full-frontal nudity when this girl removes all of her clothes in front of her father.
This documentary about the genocide in Indonesia contains several testimonies about the use of torture, and it mentions several times the example of man whose penis was cut off by two men with a machete.
There is a joke in the very beginning about marital rape of an unconscious woman.
S1E1: a female character mentions being non-consensually groped by a male friend. She laughs it off and does not seem very upset.
A priest corners and gropes a woman in his church.
There is an implied relationship between two vampire siblings.
The protagonist kisses an enslaved girl while she is unconscious.
One subplot involves a royal advisor who has become sexually infatuated with his king's much younger niece. The man becomes much forward with her after her brother, who was protecting her, is banished: he corners her in her bedroom and tries to kiss her. She is disgusted and frightened but nothing further happens.
Lord of War (Movie)
Brutal acts of violence are shown against women and children in war-torn countries, and although never directly shown sexual violence is strongly implied. Worthy of note: sex workers are sent to sleep with a man by his enemies. They know that the women have AIDs and hope that the women will infect him.
The protagonist denies allegations that rapes were committed by a group of rebels.
A boy who has just won a trophy, unconsensually kisses a woman presenter. The same character later makes inappropriate comments to elderly women while passing by them in a car. A girl engages sex with a boy, who does not want it because her brother is close-by: she gets pushy so he eventually leaves.
A man spies on a woman undressing with his binoculars. A woman is alone with a strange man in the woods. The man threatens the woman with a pair of scissors to make her take off her clothes. When she tries to run, he chases her and she is knocked unconscious. He drags her, takes off her clothes, then leaves her unconscious in the woods.
Loser (Movie)
A male teacher and an underage female student take part in a sexual relationship. The same girl is roofied at a party that the male teacher invites her to. At the end of the movie, he ends up in jail.
A guy grabs a woman wanting to dance with her a couple of times and she pushes him away each time. Later, the same guy grabs the same woman in an act of sexual teasing that she does not want.
Lost (TV Show)
S1E13: a step brother and step sister are shown having sex. S2E9: part of one character’s backstory includes a step father who has known her since she was a child making sexual comments about her while drunk. Someone else later implies he was sexually abusing her as teen/child, and she denies that ever happened, but as she is a character that tends to lie for her own safety, it could be interpreted otherwise.
The Lost Boys (Movie)
At the beginning of the movie, a gang harasses a woman on a carousel: anoter man pushes them away.
Page 115: it is mentioned that interrogators in a political prison had been found to be sexually abusing female prisoners. Page 136: there is a discussion of the ways in which the Khmer Rouge organisation sought to control the sexual lives of those living under it. It is mentioned that one member of the organisation was 'purged' for the crime of rape. Page 206: discussion of violence in refugee camps, including domestic violence and rape. There is a description of a situation in which a woman was killed by her partner for having been seen talking to another man.
There are several mentions of domestic violence throughout the book. There is a murder of a woman by her abusive, alcoholic husband (chapter 19). A female character enters a prison as a cleaner and there is catcalling, flashing, and she very briefly thinks of rape as a possibility (chapter 24).
The story implies that the female protagonist is a victim of past assaults and portrays Captain Hook as her assailant.
The titular character is subject to sexual harassment in various forms throughout the movie, including invasive questions about her sex life from police authorities (one when she first meets an investigator directly asking if she had sex with a male suspect), obscene phone calls, and unwanted pornographic junk mail.
A female character is heavily implied to be in an abusive relationship with her boyfriend. In one scene, the player can talk to her and get her to question her boyfriend's behavior.Later in the same scene, her boyfriend arrives and attempts to kiss her. Depending on the player's choices, she will be visibly uncomfortable and pull away, but she stops trying as he continues to force himself onto her. Her boyfriend's abuse is later stated outright, with the woman's little sister saying he hit the former and "it wasn't the first time". This can culminate in her leaving him near the end of the game.
The Lost Tomb (TV Show)
The show contains one crudely worded line to a female character in a dangerous profession about what could happen to her if something goes wrong (i.e. rape, murder).
S1E12: after a character is rescued from a kidnapping, his friend jokes that he hopes he was not raped.
Between the 22:30 and 22:40-marks C.K. jokes that 'maybe he wants to [sleep with]' an attractive child. He speaks about this until the 23: 15-minute mark, escalating to joking about sleeping with a dead child (he argues that this is better because nobody would actually get hurt).
This episode covers inmates at San Quentin prison, including some convicted of sexually violent crimes. Nothing is shown on screen but some sexually violent crimes are discussed. One inmate, a transgender woman incarcerated in a men's prison, mentions that she feels at risk of sexual assault by other inmates.
Louis Theroux interviews a variety of in-patients at a mental health hospital, including one man who was committed after sexually assaulting a female family member. This crime is discussed in some detail, including with the victim.
Louis Theroux interviews a variety of in-patients at a mental health hospital, including one man who was committed after sexually assaulting a female family member. This crime is discussed in some detail, including with the victim.
Sexual assault is mentioned in general terms as a common theme in the personal histories of addicts. A man and a woman are apprehended by the police, and are revealed to be in a romantic relationship despite being siblings.
The topic of this documentary is sex trafficking. Nothing is shown on-screen, but the title does feature prolonged discussions of coerced sex and rape, sexual violence, and other related topics, including in relation to young teenagers and with individuals for whom their experience of these issues is not yet in the past. At one point, a convicted offender is interviewed and discusses his actions without remorse.
This episode is focused largely on sexual offenders who have been released from prison and are trying to reintegrate into society. Discussions of their various crimes (including child sexual abuse) and related behaviours are featured throughout, although nothing is shown on-screen.
It is mentioned that some inmates are in danger of being raped during their incarceration. Rape is mentioned in passing as one inmate describes the motivation for his crime. It is revealed that some inmates will masturbate publicly in an attempt to harass and disrespect female guards. Some men are seen partially off-screen and it is noted that this is what they are doing.
Rape is mentioned in passing when discussing an inmate’s charge.
The topic of this documentary is paedophiles who are currently serving time in a mental institution following their convictions. Discussions of their offences and impulses (as well as the strategies being used to treat or manage their behaviour) occur throughout the episode, although nothing is shown on-screen.
At circa 1 hour into the documentary, it is alleged by the subject of the show that he was molested by his older brother as a child. The brother in question is then interviewed and dismisses the accusation. It is discussed that the subject of the show entered into two relationships with different men, both of whom were 19 years of age when they met him.
Love (2015) (Movie)
Worthy of note: the movie is technically pornography, as the majority of the graphic sex acts are real rather than simulated, and as such it is difficult to discern the potential aspects of coercion in the making of the movie or the permanent preservation of the sex acts the actors participated in.
Love Actually (Movie)
One man makes unwanted sexual advances towards a woman, who feels unable to respond as she might like to due to his position of power. They are interrupted when another man enters the room. The woman is visibly uncomfortable throughout.
Twice, a man pressures a woman into staying with him in his hotel room despite her continually rejecting his advances. The first time he does he follows as she tries to leave and gets up close to her, almost pinning her against the door, before ultimately letting her leave. This woman later develops an attraction to this man and starts a relationship with him. Notably, he is a playboy who is at least double her age.
The show centers on a love triangle between a possessive male lead, a gentle male lead, and a female lead who becomes emotionally entangled with both of them. The possessive lead often acts in a forceful and even threatening manner towards the female lead. Twice (S1E1-2 + 11-13) the female lead and possessive male lead kiss and swap bodies. This creates awkward situations around touch, bathing, etc. The first time it was an accident and they were both unhappy about it. The second time the female lead initiates it, and the possessive-male-in-her-body repeatedly attacks/assaults the female-in-his-body in an attempt to control her behavior and/or swap back. They wrestle and attempt/evade kisses, clothes-on, with no particularly sexualized touching. S1E12: the possessive male lead drags female lead into a tight embrace and forces a kiss while glaring at the other man she loves. It is a moment of startling violence in what had become an increasingly loving dynamic. Prominent secondary situation: an antagonist character is obsessively devoted to his former teacher and (implied) lover. He gaslights her severely and makes choices that keep her in intense psychological pain, rather than allow her to die… even when she asks him outright to let her go.
Love to Hate You (TV Show)
The topic of harassment (adults and children) comes up a few times troughout the series. Nothing graphic, but it's spoken about, since the protagonist is an attorny and seeks justice. S1E4: the protagonist thinks her client is paying a minor for sex: it turns out to not be true though she tells the story of an old man being creepy towards children (00:43-00:45). S1E5: a man takes drugs in a club an harrases the protagonist's friend.
The female lead kisses the male lead abruptly when they do not know each other. She does ask for permission first, but mistakes his grunt for a "yes." He points out he could report her for this, and she agrees he would be within his rights to do so, but he ends up deciding not to. The verbal sexual assault is insensitively used as a plot device to break the main couple up. The dialogue here is particularly intense.
Love Jones (Movie)
The movie involves a relatively dysfunctional romantic relationship. It gets off to a rough start where the man recites a poem in public to the woman he literally just met, expressing his lusty desires for her, which she finds embarrassing. Afterwards, he stalks her after getting her address and phone number off of a check she left for someone else. In addition, the poem the man recites has this verse in it: "Who am I? 'll be whoever you say But right now I'm the sight raped hunter Blindly pursuing you as my prey" He says "raped" but not in the context of what he desires of her. But does follow it with "pursuing you as my prey."
There is domestic violence off-screen with wounds shown on-screen. Sex is exchanged for employment. A woman is blackmailed by another woman and has sex with her (off camera) to keep her quiet. While it is not framed as being forced, it does feel like coercion.
Love Me (TV Show)
S1E3: a joke about Harvey Weinstein is made.
One of the characters speaks about how she had previously been married at sixteen to a man in his 70's. One of the songs in the movie has a remark in it about wanting to have a kid with a woman (that the singer had just met): she is disgusted by this and runs off. The person who sang it then tells this woman he loves her despite having just met her. There is some innuendo dialogue that the characters perceive as sexual harassment. One of the women characters says she sometimes thinks about schoolboys. A guy kisses a woman while she is sleeping.
The main character mentions being on the receiving end of verbal harassment, both in person and online.
Love (TV) (TV Show)
S1E1: in the last minutes of the episode, two girls start to have a three way with the main protagonist before it is revealed that the two are sisters. Everything stops and the protagonist is upset by it before they leave.
Love, Victor (TV Show)
S2E2: a character mentions that his father brought him to a strip dance and made someone give him an unsolicited lap dance to prove that he was straight.
The Lovebirds (Movie)
Worthy of note: the main characters come across a group of frat boys, and assume that they are probably date rapists. They say that their gathering appears to be a "Roofie Factory" and they refer to one of the men as "Little Brett Kavanaugh" and "Date Rape McGee." There is never any instance of any of it on-screen.
One character is the descendant of an enslaved woman and her slave master. In one chapter, a black female character is catcalled by a group of white men. They are frightened off by a dog.
The Loveless (Movie)
A man kisses a woman without her permission. After she does a striptease, a man steals a woman's dress to prevent her from putting it back on. A woman implies that she has been sexually assaulted by her father.
An adult woman begins a relationship with her 17 year old co-worker. She is reported to the police by the teenage boy's mother and is threatened with charges of statutory rape.
Lovesong (Movie)
Loving (Movie)
Early in the film, when the female protagonist is in jail, a police officer says that he should put another man in the cell for the night alone with her, as a threat. Seconds later, he in fact lets her go on bail.
The main theme of the movie is the relationship between a 17-year-old main character and her female teacher. There is an on-screen sex scene between them, initiated by the 17-year-old. The teacher is later arrested for statutory rape (or similar).
The film contains rape jokes throughout. A teacher tells student they are dressing like they want to be raped by a basketball star. Another teacher reads a book to children that includes mention of a dog raping a cat. A kid jokes about being sodomized for lunch money.
Lucas (Movie)
A group of school bullies make fun of a younger student for the size of his genitals, then proceed to pick him up while he is naked and rub him with hot sauce. They then throw him outside of the locker room while he is naked for everyone to see.
Luce (Movie)
A young woman discusses her sexual assault.
Lucky (2017) (Movie)
Whilst there is no explicit rape in this film, it is implied to have happened to the protagonist, as well as multiple other female characters, portrayed through the metaphor of a man hunting them down and trying to kill them (1:03:57). The entire film is a metaphor for the main character coping with trauma.
Lucky (2020) (Movie)
A police officer tells the lead that the person breaking in was probably after more than just robbing since he came into the bedroom.
Lucky Hank (TV Show)
S1E4: Jeffrey Epstein and his "attacks" on women are briefly discussed without much detail.
It is briefly mentioned that a minor character spent time in jail for “forcing himself” upon a minor.
Lucky Strike (Movie)
We learn that one of the characters has killed a man who was accused of rape. It is said that a man also touches a woman's leg to see her tattoo. Worthy of note: we learn that a woman gets beaten by her husband.
Lucy (Movie)
A man gropes a woman's chest while she is cuffed to the wall (24:05-24:23). She later lures a man with the promise of sex and then escapes.
Lucy Got Problems (Video Game)
The main character disguises herself as another character's best friend and has sex with her. Before this, the main character ties up the character she disguised herself as and hides her in a tree log.
S1E6: a young girl gropes another girl’s chest at a swim class aggressively and without consent. We can hear the harassment continuing off-screen, while boys stare at the two girls and comment on the situation.
Luna Nera (TV Show)
S1E2: a female teenager is stripped naked by a younger girl in a bath scene and they end up kissing. S1E4: a boy and girl kiss (26:30). It is ambiguous whether they are brother and sister or not. Worthy of note: women accused of witchcraft are tortured off-screen several times, but there is no implication of sexual violence.
Luna Park (TV Show)
S1E2: around 8:50 a woman is forcibly held within a guy's arms and she tells him and another man to leave her alone. She gets rescued by another man. This is a very dramatic recreation of a western movie within the series; they are all actors. S1E6: two actors have to recreate a scene in which a guy assaults a woman (whether it is sexual or not it is not clear). The scene becomes a little too realistic and the guy is very violent towards the actress and starts chocking her. She manages to free herself.
The plot centers around a very young woman who is being held captive and forced to marry an abusive man much older than her. A man walks into a room where a drugged woman is passed out. He leers at her and briefly holds her hand in his, but nothing further happens. The patron of a pub inappropriately propositions his waitress, but she seems to find it funny rather than distressing.
The Lure (Movie)
A character discusses how he was tricked into assaulting a man: he was under the impression he was entering a CNC agreement, but was catfished. A man threatens to make a woman miserable by 'enjoying her daughter'.
Lux Aeterna (Movie)
In the first scene, one actress mentions being naked on a set to shoot a scene where she is burned as a witch, and having a crowd of men looking at her lustfully.
Lynn & Lucy (Movie)
A woman reads a magazine where the front cover talks about a rape case.
M (1951) (Movie)
Plot revolves around attempts to catch a serial killer who targets children. At one point, the murders are referred to as "sexual crimes," but the circumstances in which the children are killed and what specifically has been done to them are never mentioned.
A little more than 30 minutes in, a character talks about how a bunch of white men broke into his house and "had their way" with his mother.
It is implied a child is undressed by other children and forced into a dress off-screen. A group of children bully another child in a locker room and threaten to cut off their genitals. A woman forcibly kisses a man. A kid tries to forcibly kiss another kid.
Maboroshi (Movie)
MacGruber (Movie)
Machete Kills (Movie)
A woman tells another character that her dad used to come into her room after a night of drinking.
Made of Honor (Movie)
During the first minutes of the movie, a guy with a mask enters a woman's room at night, goes on her bed and hugs her from behind. He thinks it is his date that he wanted to sneak up to, but it is her roommate who is terrified when it happens. This scene is portrayed as funny, as she pepper sprays him. They later become close friends.
A woman is chased into an alley by a car, strangled until she blacks out, and wakes up naked on a bed with the man who strangled her on top of her. The implication is that he raped her while she was unconscious. He yells at her that she needs a pump to stay safe. During a job interview, a man asks a woman how much she wants the job, while caressing her hair and shoulders. After that, a loud yell is heard, and we see the man on the floor holding his crotch. After a man helps a woman, she asks him where he wants to "do this", implying that she will repay his kindness with sex: he declines the offer. A man approaches a woman at a party and makes a comment about her being sexy. When she threatens him, he translates that as a sexual proposition. A man talks about a woman having been raped by football players.
The female protagonist meets a man to counterfeit her ID. He tells her that he is attracted to her and acts a bit threateningly/strangely: she stays because she needs the ID but nothing further happens.
Madeo (Movie)
A woman breaks into a man's house and ends up hiding in a closet, where she spies on him having sex with a teenage girl.
Mafia (Movie)
Early in the game, a mission (titled 'Sarah') consists in protecting a woman from street gangsters as she is walking home at night. They harass her (grabbing her against her will and threatening to rape her) before the protagonist beats them up. In several following missions, it is mentioned that these characters were rapists.
Mafia II (Movie)
Early in the game, the protagonist goes to jail. When he enters the prison, he mentions child molesters. After a while, he is assaulted by three men in the shower, attempting to rape him: he successfully fights them off. After his release, his friends make prison rape jokes. A long scene takes place in a brothel, where the protagonist and two partners spend the night and get drunk.
Mafia III (Movie)
This series has a bunch of scenes where a little boy goes into brothels, and gropes random womens’ chest’s. In a lot of these brothel scenes, one of the other main character thinks he is going to get a pretty lady but a big muscular unattractive caricature of a women comes out and it cuts to him being roughed up with kiss marks and clothing ripped. This is portrayed as a joke.
Magic (Movie)
The puppet makes a lot of crude remarks to/about women.
Magic Magic (Movie)
Magnum Force (Movie)
A pimp pushes his way into a taxi which is carrying a female prostitute. He then forcibly searches the woman for money, including reaching into her cleavage and her crotch. He then murders the woman on the back seat (41:00-43:30). Although the murder is not sexual in any way, it is filmed in an overtly sexual manner (with the woman's flailing legs and crotch filling the shot) so it may resemble a violent sexual assault.
Major! (Movie)
Several interviews of the documentary discuss being raped, specifically at the hands of law enforcement officers and correctional officers. They do not go into detail.
S1E4: during a visit, a worried father mentions sexual harassment as one of the dangers in the job of a geiko. The scene takes place when he is having a conversation with mothers.
Make Me Up (Movie)
A scene features written messages of rape, mutilation, murder, and general misogyny.
The author discusses sexual violence at the hands of police; sexual harassment that women, particularly queer women, experienced in the Black Lives Matter movement; sexual violence among Black Lives Matter activists and how restorative justice practices were used to try to resolve it; and intimate partner violence.
The male main character/love interest is a "fish out of water" and is thought of as a child at first by the female protagonist until he unwittingly undresses himself in front of her and a shop clerk. This is played for laughs. The male protagonist (a clone) kisses the female protagonist, she is repulsed until she quickly recognizes the man's true identity and kisses him back.
Malcolm X (Movie)
It is mentioned that women were raped.
A man forces a kiss on a woman that she was clearly not expecting while also putting his hands on her cheeks.
Mammals (TV Show)
S1E2: a husband goes through his cheating wife's phone and finds a sex tape. He watches it without her consent.
The plot turns on attempting to end an arguably incestuous marriage.
One main character attempts to provoke another by suggesting his mother had sex with multiple men under financial/political coercion; it is implied that this is true.
S1E5: attempted sexual assault and sexual harassment of the main female character during a job interview. It occurs in the final scenes of the episode. S4E6: a character tells about the rape she endured when she was a minor (~ 25 minutes into the episiode).
Man Like Mobeen (TV Show)
In season 3, a special needs character (adult) references having had sex with his school nurse as a teenager. The same character previously mentioned kissing his 73 year old nurse at their school prom in S2E1, when he was 15/16. This is presented as comedic rather than problematic. S3E5: a man chases another man around the yard while demanding that he remove his clothes. The fleeing man repeatedly yells "no" as he flees from the man who is trying to rip his clothing off. Two bystanders discuss the possibility that the fleeing man may be raped.
S1E1: a woman is offered new shifts if she will sleep with her boss.
An adult man and teenage girl have a very intimate relationship. At one point, the girl makes sexual advances toward the man, including touching him, despite his objections.
It is falsely implied that a character abused a minor prior to the events of the film.
One of the main characters (an adult man) hates his mother (one of the antagonists) for several reasons, but a scene near the end of the movie implies incestuous past abuses: she kisses him on the lips while he is hypnotized. In the book it is adapted from, the incest is part of the plot. Worthy of note: the above-mentioned character ends up killing his wife.
Mandibules (Movie)
One man briefly puts his hand on the thigh of a woman in a pool: she casually asks him to put it away and he immediately complies and acts as if he did not do it on purpose (it is not shown on screen). It is worth mentioning that the actor playing this character was accused of sexual harassment. A bit later, a mentally ill woman tells a man to stop flirting with her and to stop looking at her breast: since the man is not at all doing it, it is played for laughs.
Maniac (2012) (Movie)
Worthy of note: this film is about a serial killer of women.
Maniac (TV) (TV Show)
S1E6: a mother kisses her (adult) son on the lips in a way that is more intense than what could be considered normal. The nature of their dysfonctional relationship is addressed several times. S1E10: sexual assault is discussed throughout most of the entire episode and a security cam video of a man groping a woman is shown. It is implied that the man forced her to urinate on him: this revelation concerns the trial mentioned in most of the series episodes.
A woman attempts to frame a man for sexual assault. Worthy of note: A woman must tie a string around her husband without saying anything: he interprets this as a sexual advance and protests while she continues. This is presented comedically. A woman believes a man is sexually harassing her due to a miscommunication. This scene is also portrayed comedically.
The Manor (Movie)
A male creature sneaks into the women's rooms and watches them sleep and there are accusations implied against a male nurse.
A little girl ends up in a cult, where it is implied that she will be a sex slave. Worthy of note: the antagonist repeatedly slaps his tied-up wife until her cheeks are bloodied.
Mar Adentro (Movie)
A very brief scene shows a man trying to kiss a woman in a back alley. She rebuffs him and he leaves.
S10+11: the male protagonist has a flashback, implying that his step sister sexually assaulted him (he was 17 and she was 21(. The step sister is also romantically involved with a man who is 42 years old. He calls her a stalker who has been bothering him for years. It is not clear when their relationship started. The male protagonist starts developing feelings for a 14 year old girl when he is 18 years old. He met her when she was 13. In the manga, he kisses her when she is 15 years old and he is 19 years old.
A good portion of the plot revolves around the villain's schemes to force a much younger woman to marry him. The woman clearly hates and is disgusted by him, and is not coy about this. Around the climax of the film, the villain begins carrying the young woman away as she screams and cries and tries to get away. She is quickly rescued, and nothing further happens.
Mare of Easttown (TV Show)
S1E1: the episode opens with a young woman screaming because a man is watching her from outside her house while she is undressing. This is addressed again in the beginning of the episode. The episode closes with a shot of the corpse of a young woman undressed. S1E2: the episode closes with a girl saying that she thinks that an adult had a child with a teenage girl. S1E3: in the opening of the episode, detectives ask a coroner if the deceased girl has been raped: the answer is negative. They briefly discuss potential sexual assault immediately after that. Potential sexual relationships between the victim and male adults are mentioned several times throughout the episode. S1E4: a young prostitute in a car with a client gets assaulted early in the episode, (the scene cuts after she starts undressing) and it is revealed in the last scene of the episode that she was kidnapped and locked up in a basement. It is also revealed that a priest was accused of sexual assault on a teenager girl. S1E5: two women are locked up in a man’s basement. One woman who has been there for a year before the second is captured says that there was another woman locked up with her before: rape is implied. The potential rape/sexual assault of a teenager girl by a priest if mentioned again. S1E6+7: an incestuous sexual relationship between an adult man and his teenage niece is revealed.
Marebito (Movie)
In the opening of the movie, the protagonist finds an unresponsive, naked, pale girl with a chain around her ankle; he takes her home (to help her) and ends up keeping her as a pet.
The main theme of the movie is an incestuous relationship between a brother and a sister.
Marihuana (Movie)
A man tries to pressure his girlfriend into having sex with him in a car: she consistently resists and eventually leaves the car.
Marius (Movie)
A 18 year old girl tries to make her lover jealous by accepting to be courted by a 50 year old man who wants to marry her. When her lover asks her if she thought about what would happen once she is alone with her potential husband, she seems very distressed. Furthermore, a very brief scene shows the woman being groped by a group of men as she tries to enter a building.
Marmalade (Movie)
The female lead implies that she was sexually abused by a foster father as a kid: there are no graphic details (37:27-37:49). SPOILER: Later on, the man she described is arrested for the abuse of his many foster kids.
Worthy of note: a married couple is not attracted to each other but have sex to have a baby. The main character expresses having to shut her eyes and imagine someone/thing else happening.
Marry My Husband (TV Show)
The female protagonist has an abusive boyfriend who sometimes grabs her forcefully when she is cornered alone which can be triggering for some. The boyfriend wants sex while she does not (although as plan she was to pretend to like it), but the scene stops once the he is naked and gets interupted by delivery man at their door The female protagonist experience lot of stalking behavior from men but it is framed as romantic.
The Marshes (Movie)
In a discussion about a popular song (about 14 minutes in), the true story underlying the lyrics is revealed to be about the rape of a farmer's wife (no name given). Stigma around sexual assault is discussed a little as well but is historicized in a not entirely correct manner. A young male character makes several comments about wanting to avoid being raped by a male antagonist and the character he tells these too also treats it as a joke.
There is a recurring joke that the father of one of the main characters finds her sexually attractive.
Several scenes feature grown men either catcalling or discussing the beauty of 16 year old girls. There is a short discussion about clothing a comatose woman because keeping her unclothed is sexual harassment.
Marty (1955) (Movie)
People are tortured, but there is no sexual abuse. A detective says that a tortured girl was not raped; this is the only mention of rape or anything else sexual in the movie.
There are a variety of non-sexual, non-romantic abuse dynamics past and present. Consent (its honoring or violation) is a general theme (mostly around the use of magic). In one early scene, a character's emotionally abusive ex-boyfriend deliberately humiliates him with commentary on their sex life in front of a stranger.
S1E1: when the titular character gets bailed out by another woman, she asks her if he got "chick raped". S1E3: characters casually speculate on wheter a person is a rapist. S4E1: a character uses a rape joke to insult someone. S4E2: a character states "Frankie Borden should be raped by a zebra" after he finished a comedy set (~37:00). S4E3: two pedophiles are mentioned. S5E2: sexual harassment takes place at a workplace. A man impersonating Winston Churchhill who then pulls down his pants in public is mentioned. S5E3-4: a woman's boss continuously asks her out. S5E5: a woman is sexually harassed in a way that seems on the road to assault, when she is defended by the main character, who then gets arrested because she lost a man's coat. A good discussion of why a female coworker who sleeps with her boss is denigrated, with the man praised happens.
There is discussion of sexual harassment in Gamergate and sexually exploitative images of women in some games.
A young woman breaks off a "flirtationship" with a man, who reacts very poorly. He refuses to leave her alone or respect her rejection, and there is an ominous, threatening tone in how be speaks to her; he starts waiting for her outside her place of work and following her around, and she is disturbed and uncomfortable. This does not escalate further.
A woman tells a horrific story of how a woman, when she was caught with a man who was not her husband, was raped and killed.
Mary and Max (Movie)
It is mentioned several times throughout the film that the main male protagonist (who is autistic) feels very uncomfortable with a woman (member of his overeater anonymous group) who keeps kissing him without his consent (he is unable to protest).
Mary Shelley (Movie)
A male acquaintance suddenly kisses or tries to kiss the titular protagonist without her permission (52:50-54:30): she clearly does not like it.
One male protagonist marries a woman who was adopted by his family and raised as his sister.
The Mask (Movie)
During some scenes in the movie, the main character kisses people on the mouth without their consent. In one scene in particular, a woman screams upon seeing him in his mask: as a response, he grabs and forcefully kisses her on the mouth. There is a scene where the main character suggests being intimate with the female lead, in a supposedly funny innuendo: she kicks him and runs away at first, but ends up staying with him. Another scene depicts a group of men chasing the same woman.
During a fight sequence, a woman is forced to kiss her attacker, who then undresses her with his weapon. This is played off as harmless flirtation.
A woman is forced to have a bath.
Mastemah (Movie)
A man approaches the protagonist in a bar and makes a lewd comment, grabbing his groin (8:50). The protagonist is in bed and a hooded man climbs on top of her (19:00). She fights him off and runs downstairs, but it all turns out to be a dream. She dreams again that the man covers her mouth, then wakes up for real. A man picks something out of the protagonist's hair while standing close to her (38:00). The protagonist is unconscious in a car with a man (1:31:00). He leans in and smells her, then adjusts her coat over her chest.
Master of None (TV Show)
S1E7: this episode revolves around the different struggles women face in the world compared to men. A woman is ominously followed home from a bar by a creepy man at night. He follows her to her apartment and harasses her from outside the door while she calls the police. The issues of sexual harassment are well handled, but the aforementioned scene could be upsetting.
S1E8: a boyfriend tries to force his ex girlfriend to go with him after she breaks up. She is saved by the female protagonist. S1E 9: at the end of the episode, a woman explains how the female protagonist saved her from a man who was sexually harassing her on the train.
Rape is mentioned a couple of times when the protagonists evoke crimes committed during the Sri Lanka Civil War.
Matewan (Movie)
Two men who work for a coal company act really creepy towards a woman they encounter and she clearly does not like it.
Chapter 10: mention of an elderly woman sexually harassing a male nurse. Chapter 13: a woman is unknowingly sold by her brother to the mob to pay off a debt. Chapter 23: mention of a human trafficking ring in the city.
The premise is that a werewolf and a woman whose family hunts werewolves fall in love. The werewolf stalks the woman at her job for a month because he believes they are fated to be together. This behavior is very lightly chastised in-text because the woman is very much aware of what he is doing, and she ends up feeling the same way eventually. There are sex encounters, but they do not feel coerced because they are either initiated or verbally requested by the woman. Still, the stalking part could be triggering to some. The werewolf mentions that the only humans he hunts are rapists.
Matlock (2024) (TV Show)
S1E2: this episode mentions a man that people Creepy Jimmy for checking out teenage girls. S2E3: this episode features victim blaming. It also mentions #metoo. The case is about sexual harassment.
The Matrix (Movie)
At some point, a man gets on top of an unconscious woman and talks about how attractive she is.
Matt and Mara (Movie)
A woman is kissed without her consent when time is frozen: on the movie's logic, it might not have actually happened.
A man pins a woman to the bed and says that he is going to rape her, but then it turns out that he is just acting out a scene that he is trying to write: he still fondles her breasts and puts his hands all over her.
Maurice (Movie)
Mauvais Sang (Movie)
The male protagonist (in his twenties) has a love affair with a 15 year-old girl. At some point, he follows a woman in deserted streets at night and accelerates when she starts running to loose him. He eventually loose sight of her. Later, he kisses a woman while she is unconscious. A peeping tom spies on the main female character. She explains that he does so regularly.
Early in the film, a young girl trying to hitchhike gets a ride from an older man: he tries to run his hand up her leg. She takes it off first, then when he does it again, she says "do something like that again and you won't have your arm".
S1E2: an older man touches a woman on her leg without her consent and continues to do so after she told to stop: she is seemingly uncomfortable (51:17-51:58). He makes sexual harassment a condition in an offer to get her a lawyer position in his company. Later, the same character grabs her shoulder and leg: she hits him and one colleague hits him until she asks him to stop (52:31).
Mayday (2019) (Movie)
A man continues to hit on and touch his wife to try and convince her to join the mile high club, even as she continues to tell him no.
There are no females in the book until one woman is mentioned to be unconscious when she arrives: one of the boys (they are all teens) says: „I got dibs“. The chapter ends with a note in her hand, saying „She‘s the last one. Ever.“
Several scenes feature men sneaking into a women’s bathhouse to peep on women. A couple mecha in the show have breasts, and are attacked/groped by other mecha. One scene involve three old scientists physically clinging to a teenage girl and demanding she take her clothes off.
Mean Girls (Movie)
A teacher has sexual relationships with multiple teenage girls. A character offhandedly reveals that her cousin is a 'good kisser.'
Mean Spirited (Movie)
A woman, while possessed by a demon, has sex with one of the men in their friend group. Soon after she reveals that she recorded it without his permission but the video is not shown.
Mean Streets (Movie)
There is a scene where a drunk man attacks a woman at a party, but he is quickly stopped by a group of people. The intentions of the man are unclear, so the scene may be upsetting to some viewers.
Meatballs (Movie)
A man begins to harass his co-worker once their boss leaves the room. This includes looking down her blouse, aggressively wrestling her, and burying his face in her behind while she is pinned down, all while she screams “no!” In terror. When she begins to scream for help, he flips her over to be on top of him, screams along with her, and deceives her and their boss into thinking that she was the one attacking him. This scene occurs at the 23:30 minute mark.
The Mechanic (Movie)
Worthy of note: The protege seduces a pedophilic target with his youthful looks, in a sequence that includes roofies, excessive drinking, and gets as far as foreplay in the bedroom before the protege finally attempts to assassinate the target. It plays out like a date rape scene. Shortly after, we are told a boss sexually abuses his very young female employees.
A woman works with an organization that helps people who were trafficked so it is mentioned several times. One of the targets of the movie is a man who trafficked underage girls. The information file of a case shows a man marked as a sexual predator.
Medici (TV Show)
A twelve year old girl is married off by her notoriously abusive father. A wife is repeatedly emotionally abused and screenplay suggests an abusive sexual relationship as well. There are intermittent mentions of rape and scenes of sexual harassment.
The author references the following throughout the book: rape, sexual assault, and sexual harassment in the abstract, including statistics; rape against slaves, rape that took place during the Chicago race riots, sexual assault allegations against the comedian Jamie Kilstein, sexual assault allegations by Anita Hill against Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, sexual harassment experienced by women staffers in the Bernie Sanders' presidential campaign, the racist idea that black men's sexuality is out of control and will lead them to rape white women, the use of sensationalised stories of rape in the press to discourage white women from joining the workforce during the Great Depression, and sexual harassment that the author experienced herself.
A possessed woman forces her uncle to grab her breast and shoves her hand in his mouth after fingering herself. The same woman is revealed to have had an incestuous relationship with her brother.
Medusa (Movie)
Meet Cute (Movie)
Megaconda (Movie)
When they are discovered to be having an affair, a woman lies and says that the man was planning on raping her.
Megalo Box (TV Show)
S2E4: a man suggests he and a young teenage boy go to the bathroom together. The boy threatens him and tells him not to get the wrong idea. Nothing else happens. S2E6: a man grabs a young teenage girl by her arm and tells her to keep him company. She is immediately saved by someone and nothing else happens.
Megalopolis (Movie)
Worthy of note: A plot point involves a rumor/allegation that a main character has had a sexual relationship with a minor.
S1E4: a man is found in his underwear in a girl’s room. He had to do it in order to get answers from the female protagonist as she tends to tease him. He is later tied to a bed and called a creep by the other characters. S1E12: a man takes a girl hostage. The girl tells him not to grope her and calls him a perv after freeing herself.
One female protagonist frequently gropes another, and attempts to blackmail other characters by framing them for groping her and taking pictures.
At the beginning of the book, the main character is a young girl who is sold to an okiya (geisha house) by her impoverished family. Later in the book, upon having been trained to become a geisha herself, it is proposed that her virginity be sold to one of her clients. She repeatedly encounters the man who would like to buy this and is distressed by these experiences. In one scene, a man invites her into a building on her own and forcibly undresses her. Following this incident, she is chastised by her elders for her 'inappropriate' behaviour.
A man has a relationship with a teenage girl. She later accuses him of taking advantage of her and her family files a police report. The man, however, denies it and says it was consensual.
There is an attempted non-consensual kissing and non-consensual touching in a locker room (43:00-58:00).
There is a mention of people having sex with animals. Women die because of a dangerous and unconsensual cesarean section (scientific experiment).
The Menu (Movie)
A female character describes how a man, her boss, persistently made sexual advances towards her despite her rejections and then ignored her for a prolonged period in response. Another female character (a sex worker or escort) reveals that an older male character in the vicinity had previously paid her to watch him pleasure himself, asking her to refer to himself as his daughter as he did so. It is implied that the female character physically resembles his own biological daughter. Sex workers are referred to in a negative manner.
Early in the movie, one character mentions a male boss who likes female interns "a little bit too much". At some point, two characters discuss the use of GHB (date-rape drug) and joke about it.
A side character is implied to have been assaulted in the distant past.
The book takes place in a severely patriarchal and misogynistic fictional society. The protagonist and many others like her are considered impure based on the in-world religion, and people use that impure status as a justification to harass and assault them. These so-called impure people are all teen girls and the people targeting them are mostly adult men.
In the opening sequence of the movie, a prison guard tries to committ suicide because he has been accused of raping a prisoner. The fact is further mentioned a bit later, and it is said that the victim could be assaulted again by other prisoners. Finally, when the guard commits a ritual suicide, it is hinted that the sexual relation was consensual and that the two were lovers. Worthy of note: the film centers on a homoerotic fixation of a Japanese captain towards a British officer in a WWII prisoner of war camp and thus features an asymmetrical relation of power. Additionnally, in a flashback scene, a hunchbacked child is mocked by his schoolmates during a fresher initiation. His shirt is ripped.
The romantic leads are a tattoo artist and a university student. The tattoo artist hires the student, already knowing that he was attracted to her. They begin a sexual relationship while she is still his employee. Prior to the events of the book, the tattoo artist's mother started a relationship with his father when she was 15 and he was 27. The father was abusive to her and to their children.
A young boy intentionally bumps into a young girl because he was experiencing one of his first erections. Throughout the film, he tries to flirt with girls by caressing them without asking for their consent, encouraged by older boys who told him that woman either agree or do not protest about being touched. In the last minutes of the film, he even grabs the breast of one of his friends but quickly stops after she says no.
The author discusses the #MeToo movement, as well as sexual violence that place during slavery, the Holocaust, various race riots, and the Nakba. There are no detailed descriptions of sexual violence.
A man pressures a woman to unzip the side of his waistcoat, which she eventually agrees to (28:50-30:30). She then wishes him goodnight in a clear attempt to end the encounter. However he then grabs her, saying "you don't just unzip a man a say goodnight", and pulls her towards him. He hold her and strokes her hair. Although she does not attempt to break free, she is clearly uncomfortable. After a few moments, he strokes her hair, and lets go of her, telling her that they are both tired. He then says "goodnight", kisses her hands, and leaves.
Metamorphosis (Movie)
A father makes a sexual comment toward his daughter (33:13).
Meteor Garden (TV Show)
This show contains frequent sexual harassment including kissing against female lead's will.
The story focuses on the relationship between a 16 years-old girl and a 19 years-old boy. At some point, the female protagonist is touched by a man while she is waiting for her boyfriend. She rebuffs him and her boyfriend finally arrives.
Metro Exodus (Video Game)
The player can fight groups of bandits. When the player is hiding from bandits who are actively searching for them, the bandits will occasionally call out threats to rape the player. No event ever occurs, even if the player is discovered.
A woman talks about a man masturbating in front of her nonconsensually when she was a teenager.
Miami Vice (Movie)
It is implied that several women in the beginning of the film are being trafficked into sex work.
The first five minutes of this stand-up special is a long monologue about otters raping baby seals, dogs raping each other and animals deserving to be raped. The comedian mimes holding a seal down as it is raped.
Stand-up routine makes jokes about rape whistles, Bill Cosby and the role of women. As such, there may be mention of distressing themes with the intention of provoking a comedic reaction.
The Mick (TV Show)
This show features a sexual relationship between a grown man and a 17 year old which is encouraged by the other characters. One episode features sexual harassment/revenge porn - a man sends a naked photo of his girlfriend to several other men and some 13 year old boys who are in his football club.
Mickey 17 (Movie)
The protagonist's love interest pressures him into having a threesome with his clone. He show clear disinterest and distress. The scene is interrupted before any sex can happen between the three of them.
Mid 90S (Movie)
The main characters jokingly discuss the idea of raping their own parents. During a house party, the protagonist (a boy around 11-13) does sexual acts with a teenage girl older than him (around 16-17) off-screen. The encounter is commented afterwards. Worthy of note: the main character is frequently beaten up by his older brother throughout the film (eg. being pinned to the floor whilst screaming and punched).
Middle Men (Movie)
This film is about the beginning of the porn industry on the internet. At some point, two characters learn that the website they created features teenage actresses (16-17 year old). This is then a recurring theme of the movie. Early in the film, an antagonist is shown acting threateningly towards a female prostitute.
The female lead is continually sexually harassed at her job.
S1E2: a TV scene is shown where the sexist comedian grabbs the behind of a nurse without consent. The scene is portrayed as funny as she is not reacting to it seriously. The comedian then continues by making distasteful request towards the nurse (to make love with him) because he is about to die.
There is a brief sexual harassment (groping and leering) of an older-teen girl by adult men.
In the first half of the movie, the main character persuades a woman to remove her shirt, put her hair down, and try to charm her way past a guard by acting like a "slut". The same woman is forced to sit in a man's lap at gun point while he says he wanted to have sex with someone with her name and puts his gun between her breasts. The woman later refers to him as "rapey". One man touches another and the man says, "bad touch, get off!" Later, the woman tells a man that another man grabbed her chest and ripped her shirt. Pne man twists another man's nipple while he is tied up. The movie overall treats most of these instances lightheartedly.
Midnight Mass (TV Show)
SPOILERS: S1E7: throughout this episode, a male creature attacks a woman and feeds on her blood from her neck. While he is feeding, he moans in pleasure while she moans in pain. This is a lengthy and intense scene and is potentially triggering as it alludes to sexual assault and the loss of consent over the woman’s body.
A male lead tells another male lead to stop doing something during sexual intercourse, the female lead encourages the second male lead to continue, which he does.
Male employees and the male manager discuss a female applicant after she had an interview. They make sexual innuendos and look her up on a dating website, then decide to hire her based off of this.
Story 2: There is a mention of a man who is constantly hitting on a woman even after she keeps rejecting him. There are implications of a teenage girl being sexually abused within a book discussed in the story.
A woman walks into a house to find her husband bent over passionately kissing her adult daughter. Her daughter tells her mom that they have been in a relationship, even before her mother's marriage, implying a love affair with the step-daughter. One male character, after having a few to drink, gets a little handsy with a female character, harassing her by attempting to kiss and hold her in a way she does not want and he initially refuses to accept her rejection of his advances before he eventually leaves. Another female character is catcalled while working as a dancer in a club.
Milk & Serial (Movie)
A guy makes a joke about how a man with a white van must be a pedophile.
A woman is stuck in an abusive relationship. At one point, her abusive boyfriend keeps trying to take off her bra despite her repeated objections.
Miller's Girl (Movie)
The primary plot is between an 18-year-old high school student and her adult teacher. Though she does push for the relationship, he does also go along with it. This includes him kissing her and masturbating to a short story she wrote about the two of them based on his writing. There is also a second student who attempts to sleep with her teacher as well, with this leading to the primary plot of them movie.
A man is repeatedly harassed by another man for sex.
Minamata (Movie)
At some point, the male protagonist explains that one should not ask for the permission to photograph someone, because it would be like asking consent before kissing.
One protagonist encounters a man looking for her mother, who occasionally engages in sex work. When she says her mother is not there, he tries to assault her, and she defends herself. Another protagonist beats up his longtime partner while they are in a car together. There are not really consequences for his actions. Multiple main characters in this book are telepaths, and they can influence non-telepaths to do things they normally wouldn't, including sex. In general, this series involves a lot of incest.
Mindhunters (Movie)
At 01:05:00, one of the characters mentions a victim of a serial killer who was sexually assaulted several times.
Mindkiller (Movie)
The premise is that a man gains psychic abilities/hypnosis and uses the power to manipulate women into wanting to have sex with him. The women are consenting but it is implied that without the hypnosis they would not be interested.
Mine Games (Movie)
When their van breaks down, a group of people discusses splitting up, which leads to a suggestion of rape.
A character wonders aloud if another character had been raped during the Khmer Rouge regime, which the former escaped.
The movie is about a man trying to get a woman to love him despite her clear disinterest (he eventually succeeds and they marry at the end). Throughout the film, the female protagonist is repeatedly beaten, threatened, harassed, kissed, grabbed and groped against her will by different men. Most of it is played for laughs.
When a character thinks another character can read minds and detect misdeeds, he says "All that stuff you see between me and my female cousin is just thoughts! Just thoughts!" A character briefly describes being in prison and alludes to sexual abuse by a large prisoner who called him "Nancy." Nothing graphic is described. In a political advertisement, featuring victims of crimes that were prevented, a woman says "he was gonna rape me" (15:20). When discussing a fictional technology, a detective asks why it cannot foresee rapes (23:20). A young boy is abducted from a swimming pool. The event is referenced throughout the movie. Although the boy's parents never find out what happened to him, it is strongly implied that he was abducted and killed, potentially by a paedophile (01:14:00-01:15:30).
There's some cat-calling throughout the film and during a speech, a woman mentions that «american white men rape the black men's daughters and wives» (00:19:50-00:20:10).
When they are both their superhero persona, the main female character is frequently harassed by the main male character (who she only sees as a friend) for dates, despite her constant objections. This is romanticized and the two are portrayed as 'soulmates'. The main female character (this time in her civilian form) shows stalker tendencies towards the main male character (also in his civilian form) by having pictures of him in her room (though these are taken from magazines as the boy is a model) and knowing his schedule off by heart. Their classmates know about and encourage this behavior. Two female antagonists often cling to the main male character despite his visible discomfort. The main male character has an abusive father (he is extrememly neglectful and manipulative) and he seems to display some of these traits on occasion (such as manipulating the being that gives him superpowers in order to be told a secret he did not need to know). One of the protagonist's cousin backs the female protagonist into the wall in order to try to kiss her without her consent. She pushes him away. The main male protagonist (in superhero form) tries to kiss the main female protagonist (also in superhero form) on several occasions. Every time this happens she rejects the kiss, and despite the male protagonist knowing, he keeps on trying to kiss her. In a certain episode, the main female protagonist (in civilian form) enters a wax museum with the main male protagonist (also in civilian form). The male protagonist pretends to be a wax statue. The female protagonist nearly kisses him, thinking she is kissing a statue of him, but he quickly pulls away as he did not want to kiss her. SPOILER: The father also happens to be the main villain and actively manipulates both those around him and those he does not know for his own gain.
Miranda (TV Show)
S2E3: a man comes to a woman's flat (she does not want him there) and gets naked.
Mirrors (Movie)
One of the female characters goes to bed and the TV is on, giving the evening news. One of the news reports describes a graphic sexual assault (34:10).
Misanthrope (Movie)
An actress gets sexually harrassed by an actor, who puts his hand near her bottom: she seems suprised and turns around.
The main female protagonist gets spanked by a stranger in a bar, but a friend of her immediately intervenes to stop the man.
Discussion of rape and sexual harrassment twice within film. Once in relation to politics (acts that prevent violence against women) and a second time in more detail relating to the singer's personal experience (55:26-57:17). Photo of the moment is shown on screen and the trial against the man is highlighted. Words such as sexual harrasment and rape are used to describe the event multiple times.
Miss Bala (Movie)
A woman has her buttocks groped by a man at a nightclub. A man forces a woman to undress at gunpoint.
Sexual assault between student and professor briefly/vaguely discussed and an early scene where a man slaps the rear of his female co-worker in a public setting without her consent. Various sexual innuendos/comments (i.e. 'nice apples' in reference to a woman's breasts).
A bully character makes advances towards one of the protagonists: she defends herself and gets away.
A woman flashes a bartender.
A woman is briefly cat called, but does not seem to notice.
The protagonist forcibly strips another woman (without her consent), shoves her onto a bed, and gets on top of her to "search" her (38:53-39:48). Later in the film we find out a woman was coerced by her husband to sleep with another man. She is then degraded by him for it, and the man with whom she slept accuses her of being a sex worker by offering her money saying she had earned it.
Non-consensual kiss (01:12:06-01:12:12).
A woman is sent to get back with her ex as a part of the mission and she is reluctant to do so. It is implied multiple times that they have sex, even though she does not want to and would not under any other circumstances. Her ex forces her to undress in front of him and later comments to someone else about enjoying her while he has her.
The protagonist is pursued, literally and figuratively, by men who want to take her from her partner.
In a sacred ritual, the protagonist has sex with a man she does not know (54:00). She is afraid at first, but they have consensual sex. Unbeknownst to both characters at the time, they are brother and sister.
A boy slaps the bottom of an adult woman, presumably because he saw her male colleagues do the same previously. Later on, the same boy peeps on the woman while she is posing naked for an artist. The boy's love interest asks him insistently to show her his genitals because she has just showed him her breast. He refuses and goes away.
Mob Psycho 100 (TV Show)
S2E4: a girl is possessed by a demon who says that her dad hired people who were touching her inappropriately. It was in fact not the case since he is saying that to make the girl's father look bad by having people think that he is lying about the girl being possessed. S3E8: a middle school boy eats something that aliens gave him and runs around naked. He wakes up with kiss marks all over his body. It is unclear whether anyone took advantage of him. S3E12: a gust of wind exposes the underwear of a girl.
S1E4: several men in a bathhouse discuss peeping in on women in another bathhouse, but nothing comes of it.
Though no actions are shown or implied, it is strongly verbally implied the main villain is a pedophile.
S1E5: the teenaged female main character is sunbathing in a swimsuit, and the show includes multiple lingering closeups on her body. Several adult men ogle her as well. S1E9: the main character finds herself in a mansion where it is strongly implied multiple women are being kept as sex workers against their will.
S1E17: an adult woman presses her breasts into a male teenager’s face to convince him to do a favor for her; he finds this off-putting. S1E42: in more scenes played for comedy, the same woman presses her breasts into a teenage boy’s face; the boy still does not like this.
A character reports on how he was groomed as a teenager to have sexual relationships with rich adults. He also reports that some of them were involved in incest.
Modern Family (TV Show)
A son-in-law makes weird sexual remarks and odd reactions to his step-mother in law: his wife knows about it and sometimes has to stop him.
Modern Times (Movie)
A character chases after a woman to tighten the bolts (buttons) that are strategically placed on the front of her jacket, with wrenches in his hands.
In the beginning scene, the protagonists go to talk to an old man to help them on their mission. The old man insists on talking to the young woman protagonists, and speaks lewdly to her about wanting to hold her hand. He takes her hand and touches it, making her uncomfortable. Nothing else happens.
Mokke (TV Show)
S1E8: an older woman touches the behind, chest and face of a young girl. She starts laughing and says that kids feel great. It is later on revealed that the woman did this to get rid of the demons who were possessing the child. Later, she also smacks the behind of the child to tease her. There is no sexual intent, but the child does feel very uncomfortable. S1E12: a small demon says sexual things to a young boy. The demon later convinces the boy to buy a bikini magazine that has a girl on it who resembles his crush.
Molly's Game (Movie)
The film contains several occurrences of sexual harassment (mostly verbal) from men towards the female protagonist. At some point, a mobster enter the female protagonist's apartment and beats her up, in addition to putting a gun into her mouth. The lawyer of the female protagonist explains that she could end up in jail and mentions that prison guards would likely rape her.
Moloch (2022) (Movie)
A folk tale is orated in which a servant is raped by her lord (55:00-58:30): no sexual violence is shown on-screen.
Mommy (Movie)
It is stated that a student and a male professor had a sexual relationship. While this is consensual, there is definitely a power dynamic between her and the professor. It is mentioned during the dancing in the wedding scenes. A woman's fiancé kisses another character without her consent.
Monday (Movie)
Worthy of note: in one scene, a man tries to prevent a woman from leaving a room when she clearly wants to do so.
Money Monster (Movie)
Monica (Movie)
The Monitor (Movie)
A social worker forces himself into an apartment and makes unwanted advances on a mother. His threats are mainly verbal, though he invades her personal space.
Monk (TV Show)
S3E14: a man catcalls a woman serving drinks "hot pants". S4E11: the main character gets amnesia and a woman lies about being his wife. Throughout the episode, the woman talks about being intimate in the bedroom. At around 33:50 they kiss for the first time. Fortunately, the main character has a memory about his late wife and stops before anything could get too serious. S6E6: a teenager hits on an adult woman several times and gets rejected by him several times. The woman is uncomfortable.
The Monkey (Movie)
There is a minor, light, bullying sequence featuring de-pantsing.
Mononoke (TV Show)
S1E5: a brother and a sister confess their romantic feelings for each other. The brother later on says that he never loved her. S1E12: a man and a woman are in a physical fight which results in the exposure of the woman's chest and underwear. The man also stands between her legs when he tries to kill her.
Monos (Movie)
A female teenager who is holding a woman hostage begins to kiss her. After a few seconds, the hostage rebuffs her and the girls laughs.
Monster House (Movie)
A woman (implicitly teenaged) is distracted by a man with a scary story before he tries to non-consensually grab and touch her. Much of this is obscured but the woman reprimands the man and is blatantly distressed. The man calls her a prude for her distress. While his age is unconfirmed, the man in question is seen carrying and consuming beer and is known to have been in a band for some time, so he is almost certainly an adult. A father tells his son that he used to spy on twin girls with binoculars, excusing his son spying on an old man across the street. A police officer makes a prison rape joke to/about a child: “theyre gonna love you downtown”.
Monster Party (Movie)
Two teenage guys sexually harrass teenage girls.
The protagonists blackmail a girl with photographs that were accidentally taken of her.
One of the protagonist assaults a woman by kissing her suddenly without consent. It is portrayed as acceptable behaviour and the man faces no repercussions for it.
A woman and a man are in a car together: the woman makes affectionate advances (implied to be sexual) towards the man, even though he protests and says he is not ready. She does not go through with any sexual advances due to being interrupted by an outside event. Worthy of note: while no sexual assault is involved, the protagonist is forcibly dressed in a different outfit while she is unconscious, and it is clear that she was dressed by someone else.
Moon Lovers (TV Show)
A man watch a woman changing for a very brief moment it is treated as something unsignificant by the makers of the show as he is represented as a childish and innocent person through out the series.
Moonrise (Movie)
A character recalls a man convicted of rape, describing him in a euphemistic fashion as being convicted for "the crime of making love to a woman who didn't want it." Another character has trouble respecting a woman's physical boundaries, touching and grabbing her when she doesn't want it and refusing to accept it.
Moonstruck (Movie)
A man violently grabs a woman who is alone with him and kisses her without her consent. However, she then realizes she enjoys it and kisses him back.
A contributor to the book mentions in passing that she has PTSD from being sexually assaulted.
S1E1: a man tortures and murders multiple children (off-screen). When the protagonist catches him, he asks him whether he likes his meat young. It is unclear whether he meant sexual assault. S1E5: a man distributes opium to rich young men so they can take part in evil pleasures. It is unclear what these evil pleasures are as it is not shown on screen. S1E6: it is mentioned how a man has committed a lot of crimes including rape. S1E9: it is mentioned how a man repeatedly molested women around him. S2E4: a woman, who disguises as a man in order to hide her identity, walks into a men's dressing room. She announces that she will be using it just like the other men. A naked man objects as he is aware that she is a woman. The other men have no problem with it. S2E7: a woman is harassed by a man. She is immediately saved by a bartender and protagonist.
Two characters discover that they are siblings and continue their relationship anyway. A man humps the leg of another man who is chained to a chair and is visibly uncomfortable (26:35).
One of the main male characters repeatedly and aggressively sexually harasses one of the few female characters, including making suggestive comments and questions.
A man thinks he hears two women having sex so he walks in as an attempt to join them. A woman squeezes a man's penis as means of torture.
Mortuary (Movie)
A man kidnaps, drugs, and undresses a woman before rubbing her down with some liquid.
There are several instances of characters making lewd comments at one another, sometimes for the specific purpose of irritating one another. In the fifth season, a character believes he's cheated on his boyfriend when he wakes up in bed with another man after a night of drinking. However, towards the end of the season, it's revealed they didn't actually have sex, the other man specifically pointing out that the character was way too drunk to give consent.
Mosul (Movie)
Rape is briefly discussed around the 1hr27min mark.
A witch licks the dead body of a woman.
One of the main characters keeps pressuring another character to have sex with a guy in a festival that is known to be an event for girls to take it as chance to sleep with other people. Worth mentioning: in S1E3, teenagers are encouraged by adults to have sex as a part of a ritual, but all participants that do so seem voluntary.
Near the end of the movie, the main antagonist delivers a long speech about how he raped the main female character's mother.
One of the main male characters makes comments about getting his girlfriend drunk to have sex with her. However, his girlfriend makes advances on him while sober. Later the other main characters comment how locking up women is in character for him.
Twice, the male protagonist has to rebuff a woman who (tries to) kiss him: it is assumed that she is not the woman he previously hit on, but that she was transformed into something/someone else.
Moving On (Movie)
The plot centers around a woman getting revenge against a man who sexually assaulted her. Towards the end of the film she describes details of the assault briefly when confronting him.
Mr. Brooks (Movie)
Mr. Iglesias (TV Show)
There is a lot of sexual harassment in this show that gets played for laughs. A male student tells a female student that she should wear more revealing clothing in order to hang out with him. A teacher confronts him about this. Another male student constantly makes comments about the female principal's body and clothing choices. In these instances, either there is no reaction, or she appears to be flattered but conflicted. The main character's best friend consistently flirts with and tries to ask out a female coworker, despite the fact that she always says she is uninterested. At one point, the two mention a situation where he invited her to a party but did not tell her that no one else would be there. The female principal repeatedly discusses her dating and sex life among her coworkers. In an effort to encourage the main character to date, she hires a guidance counselor with the requirement that she be single.
Mr. Inbetween (TV Show)
S2E9: the protagonist's niece is abducted. It is hinted/implied throughout the episode that they were abducted by a sexual predator. Later we learn that the abductor is a human trafficker (not a predator) and the girl is rescued before anything nefarious occurs. S3E1: the main character is locked up for punching someone in front of a cop. He jokes with his cell mate however that he is actually in for being a rapist (23:30-24:30). He reveals that this is just a joke quickly after. S3E6: a young girl enters the house of a known male drug dealer and performs oral sex, presumably as payment for the drugs (20:30-21:20). The girls age is unknown, though its implied they are a teenager.
S1E1 mentions a pedophile. S1E2 involves sex acts that are sort of coercive and designed to be able to drug someone. S1E3 mentions child molestation.
Mr. Thank You (Movie)
One of the character's, a teenage girl, is discussed as being on the way to be sold into prostitution due to her family's economic situation (this is discussed as being a social trend at the time the movie was made) , this ultimately does not happen to her. This same teenage girl is also consistently eyed creepily by a guy on the bus.
Mrs. Davis (TV Show)
S1E1: a group of women are called whores.
Mujô (Movie)
A young man who falls in love with his sister and gets her pregnant.
The Mule (Movie)
About 28 minutes into the movie, two DEA agents make prison rape threats to a man under custody.
A man smacks a woman on the buttock.
A man attempts to force a woman into being with him.
A man attempts to force a woman into being with him.
Towards the beginning, the male protagonist kisses the female protagonist without her consent. At the beginning of the film, a character commits suicide, with the implication that this decision was a result of nonconsensual sex with another character (21:16) Later in the film, the villain kisses the female protagonist while she's asleep (20:22). At another point, the male protagonist forcefully kisses the female protagonist without her consent (1:21:27). The antagonist tries to make the female protagonist his wife. The female protagonist is attempting to purchase the male protagonist, and the man selling him feels her up. Towards the end of the film, the female protagonist is held captive by the antagonist. She is on her back, handcuffed to a large stone slab with enemies surrounding her. There' i a mummy next to her, and a ghost slithers its way on top of her before moving past her to the mummy.
At the end of the movie, the protagonist (male) grabs the mummy (female) by her arms and pins her to the ground. He then places his mouth over hers in an aggressive, open mouth, forced kiss (supposedly to suck the magic out). This happens with the protagonist on top of her, on the ground, while she is kicking and screaming the entire time. It lasts for about a solid minute.
A man attempts to force a woman into being with him.
A man attempts to force a woman into being his bride.
A man attempts to force a woman into being with him.
A man forces a woman to be with him.
Misogyny is directed toward main characters. There is sexual harassment offscreen toward a minor character.
Murdercycle (Movie)
A woman reading a man's mind sees that he has thoughts of raping and killing her.
The Mutilator (Movie)
This book contains passing reference to sexual harassment in workplaces.
My 600-Lb Life (TV Show)
Many of the people on the show mention being sexually assaulted in their past.
The film opens with a couple having sex but both parties are asleep. The man wakes up and realises that the woman is asleep and stops. A man has a sexual fantasy about his own mother.
The book takes place in the late 80s, so what would be considered rape now is not treated as such. It is mentioned that a character's brother drugs girls and rapes them. He faces no consequences for his actions even when caught because he "comes from a good family". A coach lectures female students that they should not get drunk because they put themselves at risk, and states they are responsible for protecting themselves by protecting "their most valuable gift". It is implied that multiple girls have been raped while drunk and that it is their fault. A twelfth grade boy is only attracted to girls that are younger than him and sniffs his little sisters underwear.
The film contains a scene of consensual sex turning into swift sexual violence and murder.
A couple is recorded having sex without their consent.
The main character's love interest kisses her twice while she appears to be asleep. While she is in fact awake, there is no indication to the man when he initiates the kisses that this is the case.
S1E18: two female characters are in a bathhouse, and one of them rips the towel off of her friend and touches her without permission, despite her friend protesting the whole time. There are a lot of boys on the other side of the wall and they are all very leery and gross. Later, a different woman touches another woman in the bath, who shrinks away from it. S1E19: school-age kids get drunk and a female character sits on top of a male character and intends to have sex with him. A male character jumps onto the back of a female character and grabs her chest - she tries to get him off of her and yells but it takes a while for him to be shaken off. S1E26: a female character is captured by a notorious bad guy and he repeatedly mentions his intentions to rape her throughout the episode. He also roofies her so she cannot move or hear.
My Brother (Movie)
A brief scene where a boy continuously tries to get a girl's attention by professing his love (21:02-21:40). She is clearly not interested and ignores him the entire scene, until he takes her book where she calls him a 'jerk.'
When the two main protagonists arrive in a prison cell, they talk about having to become "sex slaves." When their lawyer arrives, one of them thinks he is going to have to have sex with him: there is a misunderstanding fueled by innuendo including phrases like: "you're getting fucked either way" and "it's your ass not mine...you should be grateful...you should be down on your knees."
The younger sister of the main character is a siscon. She is obsessed with her sister and makes comments (sometimes sexual) that make her sister uncomfortable.
My Dog Stupid (Movie)
A recurring theme of the film is the main character's dog sexually assaulting men and raping other dogs. His owner explains that he takes pride of it and uses it against the people he dislikes.
S1E11: one of the characters briefly mentions a tradition of family members marrying each other to preserve their bloodline for his house / clan.
My Hero Academia (TV Show)
Throughout the series, one character's perverted behavior is largely normalized: it is never genuinely called out as wrong and used for laughs. One character during the first season gropes a female character inappropriately. While she responds negatively, the scene is largely presented as comedic. Later in the show, the first character and another boy trick the girls in their class into putting on cheerleader uniforms. The father of another character, who was in a very high position of power, was abusive to his wife, who in turn harmed their son during a mental breakdown. It is heavily implied that sexual assault was involved between the father and the mother. S7E17: a 17 year old girl appears naked on the screen. She also appears semi naked in further episodes.
There is a character whose main trait is being a pervert, and two background characters who harass a couple of girls but are dealt with quickly.
A character's whole personality is centered around being a pervert, often making jokes and being rude to female characters, with another character often egging him on.
The manga is an autobiography about the author's own experience with her burgeoning sexuality, and the complications that come with being a lesbian, while also being touch-starved and sexually repressed. The author discusses being aroused by small interactions with her mother (like touching her mom's breasts, finding enjoyment when her mom briefly checks her pants or other private areas, watching her mom shower, to name a few examples), but she realizes it is not necessarily real attraction to her mother - rather, she craves touch and affection from another person, and she is trying to break free from an unhealthy, codependent relationship with her parents. Later, she hires an escort to help her lose her virginity. While both parties are fully consenting, the author feels largely uncomfortable during most of it, due to her rushing into having sex and using her time with an escort to find the affection she craved.
S1E1: a high school student threatens to rape his classmate. He often grabbed her violently.
The show's premise focuses on a high-school age older brother and middle-school age younger sister who have strong sexual and romantic tension while negotiating other girls interested in the brother. Both siblings are heavily involved with eroge (Japanese erotic/sex games/visual novels).
The author discusses her abusive first marriage, and how sex with him was rape. They met when he was 25 and she was 17.
My Mad Fat Diary (TV Show)
A man kisses a woman while she protests in two scenes; she is being held captive through most of the movie.
This is a "reverse harem" anime, meaning the female protagonist is surrounded by others (in this case both male and female) who are in love with her. The overall tone is sweet and light. However, several men and occasionally, women, are aggressive in their pursuit once the characters become young adults. The protagonist's fiancee is a repeat offender, from frequently stepping into her personal space; making suggestive comments to pinning her and kissing her without permission (season 2). There is one scene in early season two (while she is kidnapped) that looks like it is headed toward rape, but is interrupted. One character is a distant blood relative of her, formally adopted as her brother when they are both children. He is in love with her, which feels borderline incestuous because of their adopted sibling relationship. Late in season two he pins her to a bed to warn her not to be alone with men who could do anything to her. This scene comes as a particular shock because he is usually sweet and gentle. Two siblings (who are part of the harem) can be interpreted to be in love, since in the lore of the show, the little sister was supposed to a rival for her brother's affections.
The main character is a homeless teen hustler who has sexual encounters with older men and women. He is a child of incest, which is mentioned severel times in the film.
My Suicide (Movie)
During this movie, an underage girl goes to a party and gets black out drunk. While she is passed out, boys surround her, and touch her breast in a nonconsensual way.
S1E2: a model describes being forced to post nude when she was on a shoot.
An older man has a younger woman kidnapped and when she is brought to him he says to give him a kiss or else she will be thrown in jail or made to walk the plank. A man attacks her while she is in the jail cell and the other men see and walk away, but it is revealed that it's her friend.
Mystery Team (Movie)
Mystery Train (Movie)
The film consists in three segments. In the second one, a woman in a restaurant is harassed by a man who comes sitting at her table and starts talking to her. She listens and gives him 20 dollars to make him leave. He then touches her hand but she quickly removes it, causing the man to quit the place. However, he waits for her outside of the restaurant with another man (it is nightime and the streets are empty): again, he verbally harassed her and both men follow her as she is escaping to a nearby hotel. She is visibly distressed and then asks another female customer to share her room because she does not feel secure.
Mystic Pizza (Movie)
A married adult man has an affair with his babysitter (a young adult, early college-age but it does not specify exactly how old she is). A woman wants to have sex with her boyfriend and continues trying, even though he repeatedly says he does not want to and is uncomfortable. Her parents then walk in and he leaves.
Mythic Quest (TV Show)
In this show, women are often sexually harassed. S1E3: pedophiles are mentioned. S3E1: a story is told of an old man leaving pornographic magazines on his desk at work (which is depicted in earlier seasons). S3E2+3: harassment is used for comedy. S3E5: a joke about pedophilia is made. S4E10: pedophile joke. Worthy of note: a main side character (an old man) is shown being creepy through out the show (as one of his character traits). The show alludes to him having a sketchy past in regards to women and having creepy tendencies towards women in the present. This is shown for laughs and the rest of the show's characters are in agreement that he is a creepy old man that they avoid.
In the middle of the movie, a woman undresses in front of a man. Another man appears and she is embarrassed and quickly redresses. Later in the movie he says that he cannot imagine anything else than seeing her naked. Towards the end of the movie, a woman is grabbed by a man and she is told that he will find ways to make her pay for escaping him; the implication being she would pay sexually. Nothing comes of this.
A character reveals in a short story that a man raped a woman.
Nacho Libre (Movie)
The Naked Gun (Movie)
In the opening scene, the main character drives a cop car through a women's showers. Towelled and naked women are shown screaming and running away. Later, the same character looks up a woman's skirt when she climbs up a ladder. He also climbs along a roof and grabs a woman's breasts, then accidentally breaks off a roof statue's penis. He falls through the window of her apartment and charges at her with the penis. At some point, he frisks baseball players looking for weapons and touches their crotches.
There are multiple rape jokes regarding prison throughout, but nothing happens on screen. There are also multiple occurrences of people being forcefully kissed.
During a trial, it is briefly mentioned how an interrogator had grabbed the protagonists genitals as a torture method during interrogation.
S1E1 features a teenager having a sexual relationship with a grown man.
Nanny (Movie)
Narcos Mexico (TV Show)
S3E7: a person is captured by the military. In an interrogation, soldiers threaten to rape him. S3E8: rape is implied. We see a person lying on a bed without moving, and an intruder putting his pants on. S3E10: a rapist and murderer detains a victim but is captured by police. There are talks about implied rape.
Naruto (TV Show)
A male character frequently spies on women and makes derogatory comments. This is played for laughs. Worthy of note: a 12-years old character transforms into a semi-naked woman to get the attention of his godfather.
Narvalo (Movie)
S1E1: one character mentions that he was sitting in a courtroom when and that a man who talked to him was there because he was charged with sexually assaulting teenagers. S1E2: the main female character tells how she gave birth to her child. In a flashback, we see how a doctor asked multiple interns to examine her without her consent: she seems visibly distressed and her partner does nothing about it. This is played for laughs. S1E3: a man mentions that a woman asked him what he would like her to do to him sexually, and that he jokingly told her to lick his anus, which she did. This is played for laughs. S1E4: this whole episode is about a man explaining how a man attempted to rape him by inviting him to his home and making him drink and smoke. The man is ridiculed by his friends and all of it is played for laughs. The rape of another man is mentioned, once again for comedic purposes. S1E5: the episode opens with a telephone conversation hinting that someone is sexually harassed at his/her job. Shortly after, one female character explains that she does not remember if she had sex with the man she came home with the night before, because both were drunk. This is played for laughs.
Nashville (Movie)
During one of her performances in a club, a female character is pressured into doing a strip tease, that she does not want to do, for all the men in the club to get them to stop booing her and improve her chances of getting a record deal. Catcalling also ensues during the strip tease. She is also catcalled during a separate club performance she gives earlier in the film.
A man jokingly tells a woman he wants to "bend her over" after she upsets him. This comment clearly makes her uncomfortable.
Native Son (Movie)
A man discusses the fact that he will be accused of rape after being accused of murder.
S1E3: a lot of demons attack the male protagonist. He tells them to stop sexually harassing him (they are not). S1E8: a female demon hovers over the male protagonist holding his hand when he is sleeping. He wakes up and tells her he is not who she thinks he is: she lets him go S1E12: a female demon thinks the male protagonist is someone she knows. She starts hugging and touching his face. She only finds out that he is not because he does npt have breasts. S2E12: a female demon asks the male protagonist to strip down. He hits her, but it turns out that she wanted to write a protection charm on his heart. S2E13: a group of children mistake the male protagonist as a stalker who has been stalking their friend. They chase him away and call him a pervert. S5E5: it is slightly implied that a demon developed a crush on an underage girl. The demon himself is not aware of what the feeling meant (no relationship develops). S5OVA2: the female demon touches the face of the male protagonist: he pushes her away. She later on asks if she can visit him in his bed: it is unclear whether she means it in a sexual way. S6E7: a female demon is locked up by two male demons as they fight who gets to marry her: she is saved by someone.
Natty Knocks (Movie)
A man watches a teenager get undressed through her bedroom window.
Naz & Maalik (Movie)
There is a discussion of rape, relating to the story of Sodom and Gomorrah. An adult man lures one of the teenage protagonists up to his apartment with clearly predatory intentions, and even asks for the boy's phone number, but no sexual encounter occurs. A character who is presumably homeless and mentally ill shouts nonsensical things, including sexual statements, at strangers.
Near Dark (Movie)
In the beginning of the film, the main character meets a woman on the street and flirts with her, following which she asks him to give her a ride home. He agrees, but while they are on the way he stops the car and tells her he won't drive her the rest of the way unless she kisses him. She kisses him and then bites him to turn him into a vampire. The relevant scenes occur between the 10:29-12:05 minute marks and the two characters are portrayed as love interests throughout the film. When the vampires are in a bar, one of them grabs the waitress as if to forcefully kiss her and makes her sit on his lap as a ruse to slit her throat (between the 45:01-45:26 minute marks).
Nebraska (Movie)
An old woman mentions that her husband's cousin groped her when they were younger. Another old woman mentions that her nephews are doing "community service on account of rape". Her mother corrects her by saying that it was not rape but sexual assault.
Nekopara (TV Show)
This could be described as a lolicon show.
Nell (Movie)
The main character, Nell, was born from her mother's rape. She is also sexually harassed in a bar.
An adult kisses a teenage boy, nothing else happens between them. A teenage girl tries to have sex with an adult man, but the man rejects her.
A character masturbates over a comatose girl’s body. Later, an adult kisses a teenage boy with the implication that she will have sex with him.
Football players have a few scenes near the beginning where they sexually harass characters. Also in the beginning, the antagonist behaves extremely sexually towards a protagonist who very clearly does not want to be involved. Later, he comes into her bathroom while she is bathing and joins her while she protests: by this point at least, it is clear that she is into the idea and this is a sexual fantasy for her.
Chapter 5: non-graphic discussion by the princess in regards to her marriage (him abusing her), and how he insists on having guards in the room while they have sex which makes her uncomfortable.
The main character, a security consultant/ bodyguard, notices a character described as an adolescent (no exact age given) secretly meeting with man claiming to be her age but is at least 12 years older who is clearly attempting to lure her away from her family and friends to private locations and potentially attempting to drug and/or rape her. The main character prevents this from happening and the whole incident is only mentioned in passing as a point of tension between the main character and the adolescent.
S1E5: one of the male protagonists tells a group of men they can buy a girl if they win. However, he is very sure they cannot win. S1E6: a man grabs a girl from behind and she struggles to get loose. Nothing else happens. S1E11: a man tells a teenage girl she looks good in a maid outfit. He tells her he is gonna take a picture, but she tells him no. S1E20: a man compares women to furniture. At the beginning of the episode he asks two women to serve as a table for him. This is played for laughs. S1E24: there is a short scene where the man from S1E20 is trying to use a woman as a table. This is also played for laughs
S1E6: a teenage boy is lonely and decides to meet someone from Reddit to watch the football game at a pizza place. The person from Reddit is a 50 year old man who tells him to blow “slower” on the pizza slice and stares at him as he does it (12:46). S3E8: someone makes a joke about a teacher molesting a student. The same teenager (now 18) is continued to be objectified by adult women S3E10: someone makes a joke about a college student losing their boyfriend to a college professor. S4E5: a man is pushy towards a woman at a party. She is 'saved' by her ex-boyfriend, who minimizes it. Worthy of note: there are at least two adult female characters who make flirtatious and sexual comments to and about a teenage male character who is considered extremely attractive. These scenes are played for laughs. A different male teenager meets someone he knows from the Internet, thinking that this person is a fellow teenager, but who actually turns out to be a pedophile.
A teenage girl reveals that many of her sexual encounters have not been consensual. A young girl is pressured and manipulated by an older man into a sexual situation for money. A man masturbates while alone in a subway car with two young women. Worthy of note: an abortion is performed on screen.
Chapter 21: the female main character discusses how the man she was previously set to marry harassed her, and snuck into her bedroom at night and touched her. It does not explicitly say that it was sexual touching but he would taunt her with explicit threats of what he would do to her when she they were married. This is mentioned briefly in previous chapters as she had been afraid of him and tried to get out of the marriage. Chapter 41: the female character is kidnapped by the man noted above. He threatens her with assault and forcibly kisses her. After she is rescued, her husband is concerned that she was raped, but there was no assault aside from the kiss.
Neverlake (Movie)
Repeated impregnation through rape is implied.
New Blood (TV Show)
S1E1: a protagonist is groped by an antagonist while he is working undercover as his employee. S1E3: the assault from S1E1 is referenced in a conversation about the antagonist's various crimes. S2E1: a man grabs a woman's arm and speaks to her in a threatening and demeaning way. S3E1: a man tries to cut another man's penis off in order to scare him away from investigating a crime (the man escapes before this can happen and nothing is shown).
It is implied that creatures mind control and then "breed" with teenage girls.
New Girl (TV Show)
S1E12: a man and a woman are making out (with consent) in a parking lot. Because it looks like an assault, the police comes and arrests the man. Later, a joke is made about a man in a white van trying to pick up a little girl. S2E8: a man kisses another man against his will. S3E4: a woman is tricked into performing a sexual act she is not into with her boyfriend, who also does not like it. It is implied that he was too scared to say anything, stating that he feels 'very real fear'. S6E14: the main character and her then-boyfriend go on a camping trip together and realize that they are distant cousins. They immediately break up as a result.
New Tricks (TV Show)
The series overall has an intentional general atmosphere of casual and commonplace 1990’s sexist banter and workplace misogyny, with men (including the male main characters) leering at women when they cannot be seen, calling their boss "sweetheart," saying things like “nice tits” behind their backs, etc. Rape is mentioned casually and in passing in many episodes, in the context of discussing autopsy reports (eg, whether or not there was any sign that a murder victim was sexually assaulted), or officers saying they did not focus on something because they were too busy investigating a rape case, etc. The sex trade is frequently alluded to, with characters working in it occasionally being side characters, questioned as witnesses, etc. Pilot episode: a male character looking through job applications with a woman says of one of the applicants, "don't leave him alone with your kids." S1E1: a man steals women's underwear for a fetish, stalking young blonde women. S1E2: a police officer talks about a previous case in which a 14 year old girl claimed to have been raped, and it's heavily implied that her accusation was false. S1E4: a flasher is discussed as having been victim of a false accusation. This episode contains rape mentions because a serial rapist was convicted on DNA evidence obtained as an afterthought. S2E1: this episode delves a lot into the sex trade, with one of the male main characters clearly seeing no issue with soliciting prostituted women and implying that he has frequented many, which is treated as a joke. At the end of the episode, all of the main characters collaboratively enable a cover-up to prevent a woman in the sex trade's "list of clients" becoming public, specifically because this would embarrass men in law enforcement professions. S2E3: a young woman/girl falls in love with her kidnapper and has his baby - this is treated as romantic. The 'happy ending' of the episode is when he goes without any punishment. S3E1: the episode revolves around a man in the sex trade who takes compromising photographs of his female clients and circulates them without consent, online for money, sometimes resulting in blackmail. S3E5: male characters are spiked with an aphrodisiac drink without knowing it, and pleasantly surprise their wives with the results. A female character is revealed at the end of the episode to have been sexually abused when she was younger. The abusive man was murdered by other women in retaliation for this. S3E8: about 57-58 minutes in, a woman is grabbed by a male colleague and kissed against her will, to which she reacts in disgust. S4E1: the murder victim of this episode turns out to have been a paedophile who had historically worked with and abused children, including his own son, who committed suicide as a result. No sexual abuse or detailed descriptions of the abuse are given onscreen, but there is some discussion about the psychological impact of abuse. S4E2: an officer lies to a nurse that one of her patients is unwell in order to get her onto a dance floor, where he starts forcefully dancing with her until she acquiesces. S4E7: a man runs an illicit sperm bank, lying to his female customers (including one woman whose capacity to consent is somewhat doubtful) that the sperm is collected from male models, but in fact it is his own. This is not illegal and he faces no punishment. Instead, a main character concludes that “ignorance is bliss,” and the victims are never told. S5E3: a woman recounts being sexually harassed and groped by her former boss (who has since died). Old records show that the same man had likely also committed statutory rape of a 15-yr old girl. Male characters victim-blame both victims. It is suggested that there may have been other statutory rapes of young fans (groupies) by radio stars. One woman was 14 when she was raped by a character and calls herself stupid when she reflects on it. She thinks the perpetrator had also done it to other girls. None of the harrassment/assaults are onscreen, only described by characters. S5E5: a woman is told that her father used to patronise women in the sex trade, and it’s implied that he used his position as an officer to hit on or sexually prey on women. This is also the episode with incest - two characters feature who are adult siblings. It turns out that years ago, the sister had an abortion, the father of the pregnancy having been her brother. S5E7: a 15 year girl had slept with an older teenage boy, and her family had allowed it. She narrowly escaped sex trafficking. Domestic violence towards women in the sex trade is briefly mentioned. S6E4: in this episode, a Hollywood director was pressuring young actresses to star in porn films. A clip of video with a woman being slapped in the face by a colleague is shown repeatedly. BDSM footage is watched by characters as evidence, and they mention the possibility that it could be an extract from a snuff film. At one point, characters walk in on a couple making out and it becomes apparent that the man has paid for sex. The same woman talks about having been sexually assaulted before. A woman has killed a man in self-defence when he sexually assaulted her. S6E5: a woman used to be in the sex trade; she wasn’t trafficked but forced into it through financial desperation, and it is clear that it was a traumatic experience for her. S7E3: a paedophile is the prime suspect in the disappearance of a five year old. His crimes are not described but he was a teacher for ten years before apprehended, and “inappropriate behaviour towards young boys” is mentioned. In the end the reason for the child’s disappearance turn out not to be sex-crime related. S7E4: a serial stranger-rapist who has gotten away with it for decades is investigated. The episode includes interviews with visibly distressed victims who describe what happened. There is also a sub-plot where one woman, a genuine victim, makes a false accusation by accidentally mis-identifying the wrong man. The real rapist is apprehended at the end of the episode. S8E1: a tasteless joke about marital rape is made.
A serial killer picks up women in order to kill them. In one scene, a woman offers to have sex with him in order to convince him no to kill her; he ignores this suggestion.
A woman is sexually harassed by another woman's ex boyfriend.
The male protagonist is very pushy with the female protagonist in the first scene, which may have uncomfortable implications for the rest of the plot.
There is a tense sequence in which a young girl is pursued by a group of men who want to purchase her for sex trafficking and/or to rape her. They are all killed by the male protagonist and they never lay hand on the girl.
Next Friday (Movie)
About 1/3 of the way into the movie, the main female character sneaks out of the school. Five men who have previously harassed her chase her and one of them yells menacingly. She manages to escape. A bit later at a gas station, a man grabs the main female character and raises his eyebrows suggestively at her. Her guardian has to beat him up until he lets her go.
Towards the end, a woman is restrained on a bed by a man. It is not really clear whether he is trying to kiss her or slobber on her or bite her.
Throughout the first season a male character repeatedly verbally harrasses a female character, and this behaviour is romanticised with the female character portrayed as snobbish for refusing his advances.
The Nice Guys (Movie)
It is implied that a 13 year old girl is having relationship with a man three times her age. Worthy of note : there is a scene in which a young teenager watches a porn movie with an adult woman.
At one point, it is implied that a character (incorrectly) believes she has been kidnapped and that her kidnappers plan to rape her.
Nickel Boys (Movie)
It is implied that a boy is sexually assaulted.
This is a fictional retelling of abuses that occurred at the Dozier Academy, a reform school for teenage boys in Florida. The systemic abuse includes rape, which is referenced throughout (sometimes using the word rape, sometimes using references to “Lover’s Leap.”). There is one character for whom rape is a central part of his arc, which is recounted on pages 148-49. Given the history this book is based on, the sexual violence was handled carefully and non-graphically.
There is mention of slaveholders raping enslaved women. There is a scene where the protagonist kisses a boy and he starts trying to go beyond kissing. He does stop or slow down when asked, though.
The male protagonist grabs the female protagonist into a standing embrace and kisses her (there is no action or implication of anything more): she objects and tries to resist his kiss, but he persists (1:11:20-1:12:00).
The Night Agent (TV Show)
S1E3: a man in a bar pretends to be picking up a college girl, and very graphically describes sexual things he would do to her. He then tries to physically assault her because her father is a politician he disagrees with. There is a possible flirtatious relationship between a college professor and a college student. S1E4: the professor who is flirting with the student has ulterior motives for flirting. An unsolicited dick pic is mentioned. S1E5: the professor has the student over to their house for a sexual rendezvous. During foreplay another guy is watching. Then she is kidnapped violently in her underwear, but it not sexually assaulted, other than the professor was in on it. But he did not want her harmed and felt bad about lying to her.
The main male character gets kissed by the female lead and looks very uncomfortable with it.
A character fondles his partners and attempts to pressure them into sex, using their previous relationship with someone else as evidence of their sexual availability. They do not force them but punish them for refusing.
Physical violence towards women is a major theme of the movie (discussed and depicted on-screen). SPOILERS: It is revealed in the last part of the movie that the protagonist's late husband had no choice but to profile women that looked like his wife and bring them to a secluded house to kill them (in order to 'trick death' and not kill his own wife). The film shows several of these scenes, as well as a statue representing a woman tied up and impaled on sticks (one of them entering in her vagina). In one of the final scenes of the film, the protagonist embraces an invisible presence whom she thinks is her late husband's "ghost": it fondles her before revealing that it is not her late husband but a maleficent force.
The former reverend tells of his dismissal from the clergy due to an incident with a "very young" Sunday school teacher. In another scene, an underage girl sneaks into the same reverand's room and he allows her to kiss and almost sleep with him before being interrupted (the actress was, in real life, about 17-18 during filming, and the character is supposed to be younger). She is also featured dancing provocatively in front of adult men while wearing short shorts.
A teenager has sex with a bunch of girls throughout the film, but ends up having sex with a woman around the age of 25-35.
S1E1: a woman is shown with bruises from her partner. Later in the episode, she is found dead. S1E2: the protagonist enters an abandoned house where a couple is having sex and goes next to them to get them out. S1E4: a male antagonist briefly and ironically mimicks trying to give a blowjob to the protagonist to mock him. S1E5: one of the main female characters explains that she does not feel well being the only woman in a military camp in the midst of the desert. Her husband then slaps her because he suspects her of spying on him. S1E6: a man instructs his bodyguard to torture his partner (on-screen).
In the fourth sequence (Rome) of the movie, a cab driver explains to a priest that he practiced zoophilia in his youth with a goat.
Night Ride (Movie)
Two men harass a trans woman on a bus, making sexual comments and at one point pushing her face into one of their crotches.
A college-aged girl is non-consensually groped at a bar.
Comedy segments by Michelle Wolf and Hasan Minaj contain several references to sexual assault.
Mentions of rape as a weapon of war, with the longest mention from a woman who is explaining her admiration for a man who prevented the soldiers who killed her father from raping her.
A man sexuall harrasses his male and female coworkers: he grinds his crotch on a sleeping man and tries to rub his crotch on a woman butt when she is bent over. A woman says "if you have your pants down again I'm reporting it" when she thinks he is nearby. He attempts to steal parts from a corpse to sell to fetish websites.
Nightbeast (Movie)
A man goes to his ex's house with the intention of having sex with her. He crawls over her while she is in bed and pins her down briefly. While arguing, he grabs her shirt and when he throws her down it rips her shirt open. Later while he is fighting with a female deputy her shirt is also ripped open.
Nightbreed (Movie)
A sexual assault is hinted for a second, but nothing happens.
During his first encounter with a woman, the male protagonist takes a bath and does not hide while he is undressing, which visibly surprises the woman. After that, she grabs his penis while he is in the tub without asking for consent. He is visibly shocked but then complies when she starts masturbating him: they kiss. When the protagonist is about to have sex with his girlfriend, she implies that she has been raped. In one of the final scene of the movie, an antagonist, who has been said to have forced his wife to miscarry (which caused her death), reveals that he 'hurt' multiple women while trying to replace her, impliying that he presumably raped and/or killed them. The protagonist tries to kill his mistress who betrayed him by strangling her with a phone cable, lying on top of her on a desk: he is stopped by security agents. Worthy of note: the main character arc implies that he was abused as a child by his father.
'Mashit': while possessing someone, a demon grabs a woman and grinds their bodies together.
The villain puts his glove between a girl’s leg in a suggestive manner. Later on, he also licks the girls without her consent and tells her “I’m your boyfriend now”. It is also implied that he might havee also been a pedophile in one scene as the girls mom refers to him as a “filthy child murderer”. A couple is loud during sex to the point a friend has trouble sleeping.
A man's clothes are stripped off by ghostly forces.
In a dream sequence, the villain disguises himself as an adult female nurse in a mental institution and kisses a male teenager who has a crush on her. It is revealed that the villain was conceived after his mother was raped by multiple men. This information is given verbally without flashbacks but contains many very upsetting details.
The villain kills a girl by “sucking face” without her consent. A boy tells a girl " your sucking on the wrong nozzle" to antagonize her. The villain kills a teenage boy by transforming himself into a nude woman before going back to normal and killing the boy.
A doctor drugs female patients, picks them up and moves them around while they are passed out.
Worthy of note: the plot revolves around an escort girl service and the murder of two prostitutes.
The show contains a lot of "subtle" non-consensual touching, like grabbing someone's shoulders and rubbing them to assert dominance.
The author references the following: the rape and murder of Mia Zapata, Anita Hill's sexual assault allegations against Clarence Thomas, Tupac Shakur's conviction for rape, Harvey Weinstein's conviction for rape, the #MeToo Movement, Mike Tyson's conviction for rape, politicians' sexual relationships with interns (particularly, the Monica Lewinsky scandal), and the movie American Beauty's protagonist's obsession with his teenage daughter's best friend.
Ninja Kamui (TV Show)
S1E2: a cop touches a woman's bottom without her consent. There is a male character that makes lots of sexual comments when he talks about fighting.
A man sets up a hidden camera in order to film a sexual relationship but the woman finds it before they can have sex.
The main characters sometimes talk about rape and child sex abuse in insensitive ways. This is played for laughs, with them and their ignorance as the butt of the joke. One of the main characters makes a short film about killing pedophiles. It is poorly made and insensitive, and this is played for laughs.
While talking with the female antagonist, a male character mentions that she was sexually abused as a child and was married by force.
A husband and wife talk on the couch while they watch television. Jokingly, the man says 'keep running your mouth like that and I'll take you in the back and screw ya.' Could be perceived negatively.
No Doubt in Us (TV Show)
S2E23: purchase of women and "enjoying them daily" is joked about. Rebels "abusing" concubines are referenced.
No Exit (Movie)
Two guys kidnap a girl and the main character call them “child molesters” (which they are not). One of them kiss the main character without her consent and pass his hand on her breast.
No Good Deed (TV Show)
S1E1+3: minor rape jokes.
The main female protagonist makes sexual advances towards the male protagonist which makes him uncomfortable. He then pepper sprays her. She asks him why he does not just carry “a rape whistle”. After a party, the main male protagonist is ready to have sex with the female protagonist but she says she does not want to have sex with him because he is drunk and not in the right state of mind.
The theme of this movie is two brothers taking advantage of female-only tenants to tie them up and sacrifice them in a basement. A male character puts his finger forcefully inside a female character's mouth and puts a bottle of wine down her throat (50:00-52:00).
No Man's Land (Movie)
Rape is briefly mentioned (as a war weapon) by a soldier.
There are frequent but non-graphic references to rape and sexual assault allegations against Trump and other politicians, as well as references to Trump’s labeling of Mexican immigrants as rapists.
A man lies ontop of and kisses a woman who he has tied up. A man humps a dead woman's body.
A teenager character is bound and ball-gagged in a chair. An adult makes uncomfortable remarks, but it does not go futher than this.
A male character unknowing films female characters as they change clothes. Another male character tears off a female character's shirt when she refuses to take it off during a game of strip blackjack.
A teacher has a sexual relationship with a teenage student. All sexual activity between them occurs off screen and claim that it happened "with her consent."
The male protagonist has been kidnapping and drugging women to take them to a cabin and assault them sexually. No scenes are shown on screen, but it is implied.
Many people ask the protagonist invasive questions about her body because she has cybernetic parts.
Nope (Movie)
Early in the film, "anal probing" by aliens is mentioned.
Noragami (TV Show)
S1E5: a young teen boy attempts to touch the breast of a sleeping young teen girl (10:30). He is stopped by another character before anything happens. He later confesses to the girl what he tried to do and apologizes.
Normal People (TV Show)
S1E3: the main female protagonist is groped by a stranger at a nightclub (~4:00). Most of her friends are dismissive of the situation but two of them look after her. S1E7-9: the same character engages in a couple of relationships with men that involve a consensual sub/dom dynamic. In episode 9 (~16:30), her partner encourages her to be photographed naked and tied up, but as the shoot progresses she becomes distressed and leaves. S1E11: the same character is affected by domestic abuse. She reveals in episode 3 that her late father was violent towards her mother, and a subplot of ongoing abuse from her brother escalates to violence (~20:12).
Normale (Movie)
The opening sequence mentions a rapist/serial killer (played for laughs). The love interest of the protagonist (a teenage girl) asks her to give him oral sex in public in order to prove that he is not gay (he does not act threateningly but rather awkwardly). She first declines, then accepts (in exchange of his help for something else), but it ends up not happening.
North of North (TV Show)
A grown woman kisses a man who later turns out to be her dad. Neither of them knew.
A woman says that a man put his hands on her in the car (58:30).
North & South (TV Show)
In S1E1, the main protagonist gets cornered on a staircase by a large crowd of men who catcall at her, invading her personal space and trying to take her scarf. She is visibly distraught. In S1E1-2, the protagonist rejects two different marriage proposals. In both cases, the men involved react to her rejection with anger and attempts to make her feel obliged or guilty.
The North Water (TV Show)
A Nos Amours (Movie)
The protagonist (a 16 year-old girl) and a boy kiss laying in a field: when she stops him from going further, he blames her for it. Shortly after, she has sex with a stranger: afterwards, she says that she did not know what she was doing, but does not regret it. Later, she tells her friends that she made a dream where her ex-boyfriend grabbed her in a subway station and threatened to rape her before she woke up. Throughout the film, the protagonist is beaten up by her brother for being promiscuous. At some point, the latter jokingly tries to touch a woman's cleavage: she rebuffs him.
In the beginning of the film, the titular antagonist tries to suck the blood of the protagonist after he accidentally cuts his thumb. The antagonist later enters the appartement of a woman, hoping to seduce her. Not frightened, she drives him away. After that, the same woman decided to kill the antagonist by letting him drink her blood. Before doing so, he lifts up her robe and she gently stops him. Finally, as he bites her neck, he also grabs her breast.
A girl spends the entire movie trying to have sex with her brother (the male protagonist) and assaults him in one scene. Himself also harasses another girl throughout the entire movie. Three boys spy on girls in the locker room through the vents and spend the entire movie trying to find women, sexualizing every woman they get the chance to. There is no official relationship between a student and a teacher, but at one point, towards the very beginning, a (presumed) teacher hits on some of the girls that he calls “slutty.” This is all in the name of parody and comedy.
Not Dead Yet (TV Show)
The show0s workplace is full of sexual harassment as jokes. S1E6: a ghost watches someone pee without their consent.
The film is about a teacher having an affair with a student.
A man talks about getting a woman drunk in order to get her to have sex with him. A black woman is eyed in an objectifying fashion by white men. We are shown this from the perspective of the white men, signifying a potential interest by them in assaulting her. Though they ultimately do not.
This documentary mentions child sex abuse at the hands of the Catholic church. It also mentions the Magdalene Launderette, an institution known for punishing women who had been raped.
Notting Hill (Movie)
A group of men speak in demeaning and sexual terms about a woman, unaware that she is listening. They apologise when she confronts them. Another subplot involves a woman of whom sexual videos and photographs have been publicly released without her permission.
A woman working in a factory is sexually harassed by her supervisor. He tries to kiss her when they are alone in her office. She escapes, cries, and seems visibly distressed by the aggression. The man repeats his attempt later in the movie. At some point, the father of that woman tries to marry her to a man against her will. Finally, it does not happen.
Now and Then (Movie)
A group of girls spy on a group of boys swimming naked in the river. A girl comments on how a strange man could be a 'sex fiend'.
A character continually asks another character out, despite the fact that she has made it clear that she is not interested in dating him. He considers her to be "playing hard to get." There is later discussion of this harasser character having broken the arm of a previous girlfriend and getting away with it because his family is influential. Later, the harasser character forces a kiss on the character above while she is drunk at a party. The protagonist, her friend, punches him. The next day, the harasser character makes a non-apology that could be considered gaslighting, saying that they both had a lot to drink and there were "mixed signals." The climax of the book entails the harasser character bringing a gun to school to attack the character who rejected him. He corners her and calls her a cocktease. She is saved and no one dies. Presumably, the harasser character ends up in police custody because the protagonist records and broadcasts his threats to frame her in the shooting.
Nurse Jackie (TV Show)
S1E5 (and subsequent episodes): a doctor has a nervous compulsion and grabs women's breasts. This is played for laughs.
A man sexually harasses a nurse by touching her (1:18:20).
The protagonist (an awkward university professor) uses a serum to turn into a charming man and to court one of his female students. He is particularly insistent despite her clear disaffection with him, to the point of leading her to a secluded place to make out with her: he insists but after she rebuffs him, he eventually adopts a less threatening attitude and is forced to leave. He nevertheless kisses her later on, and they end up having a romantic relationship (after his real identity is revealed). In the final scene of the movie, one character slaps the bottom of his wife, whom he is talking to with a very humilliating tone, in front of a classroom: she seems embarassed.
The OA (TV Show)
Worthy of note: two characters discuss a rescue plan that involves claiming the captors molested another character.
The OA (TV) (TV Show)
One disturbing scene has strong implications of a threatened sexual assault with one character pressing a knife threateningly to a woman's neck and then ripping at her dress exposing her breast. There is also minor nudity and sex on screen and graphically displayed and talked about.
There are multiple flashbacks to a period of deeply inhumane war, and some of them either state or imply that soldiers (including a specific named antagonist) were raping and pillaging in the aftermath of conquest. Sexual violence is never shown onscreen or implied for any specific named character.
A caste of people called breeders must bear children with whoever authorities tell them to have sex with.
A character mentions frat parties often have sexual assault. Another character mentions a main character could have been raped, but they have not.
The main character, a man trying to reconquer his ex-wife, grabs her by the arm when she is leaving the restaurant where he intended to meet her by surprise.
Octopath Traveler II (Video Game)
During the Winter bloom arc, the female character is repeatedly harassed. She is outnumbered at one point and told that three men were going to "have their way with her" after harassing her.
One female character is pushed into an arranged marriage she does not want. Her interactions with her betrothed do not contain sexual harassment or anything like it.
Odd Thomas (Movie)
In the first 5 minutes: one character's murder is lightly implied to have been of sexual nature, although nothing is said. The female victime has a ripped shirt and blood on her thighs though. It seems this way especially if the viewer reads the book beforehand.
Oddity (Movie)
There is a brief mention of sexual assault: nothing too graphic, but the context is very violent.
The Odds (Movie)
Relevant content includes somebody who is incapacitated and unable to consent being touched suggestively. A character is victim-blamed for past encounters, during which she is implied to have been too intoxicated to consent.
OddTaxi (TV Show)
S1E5: it is mentioned that a criminal has committed several illegal acts, including sexual assault. A man (who is over 40 years old) knowingly engages in a relationship with someone who is 18 years old. He proposes to her on their first date.
Oedipus Rex (Movie)
The main character unknowingly marries and sleeps with his own mother.
The Offer (TV Show)
S1E8: a man (an actor) makes inappropriate comments to a female assistant (asking for a foot massage, to turn around. etc.) Later, while acting in a scene where he is slapping a woman, he really hits her (off-screen: we only see the bruised and distressed actress). The producers then asks another actor to beat him (for real) up during a scene as relatation.
Office Space (Movie)
Mention of prison rape.
The Office (UK) (TV Show)
S1E1: a man makes an inappropriate comment to his female employee. A man makes inappropriate comments about a woman over the phone, unaware that he is on speakerphone and she can hear him. A man makes a pun alluding to child molestation. S1E2: a number of men publicly make sexual remarks about a woman who is new to the office; she appears uncomfortable. A crude sexual email about a man is circulated around the office. A group of men make inappropriate and derogatory sexual remarks towards their female boss; she is angry and upset. S1E3: a man makes inappropriate sexual comments about a woman. S1E4: mention of rape. S1E5: men harass women in a nightclub. S2E3: men make inappropriate sexual comments towards a woman, who is obviously uncomfortable. S2E5: a man makes inappropriate sexual comments and gestures towards a woman, who is obviously uncomfortable. A group of men forcibly take off another man's trousers and expose him publicly. A man forcibly kisses another man, who tries to physically resist him.
The Office (US) (TV Show)
Sexual harassment and misconduct are generally presented in a critical (although lighthearted, given the genre) light throughout the duration of the show. S1E1: a woman's boss comments that 'if you think she's cute now, you should have seen her a couple of years ago.' A man makes a number of crude remarks about a woman over the phone, unaware that he is on speakerphone and that she is in the room listening. S1E2: a (white) man suggests that everybody in the office should say a race which they are sexually attracted to as part of a pro-diversity training session. One man complies with this suggestion, and the woman he is sitting next to (the only woman in the office belonging to one of the ethnicities he named) appears uncomfortable. S1E5: a woman's boss makes derogatory and sexually objectifying remarks about her to her fiancee and a group of men, without her present. He continues to make derogatory remarks regarding the appearances of women who work for him through the duration of the episode, often in their presence. S1E6: the episode revolves around a woman visiting the office who many of the men are attracted to. This results in them (especially the manager) treating her strangely, and some make inappropriate comments about her appearance while not in her presence. S2E1: the manager gives out a 'hottest in the office' award to an obviously uncomfortable employee, slapping his rear as he leaves without his consent. He makes a number of other inappropriate comments over the course of the episode. S2E2: the title of this episode is 'Sexual Harassment.' Its plot revolves around one HR employee administering a seminar on sexual harassment, while the manager and his chauvinistic friend try to 'prove' that such seminars are not necessary (and, in doing so, prove the opposite). S2E6: a man and a woman are play-fighting. It appears that they are both enjoying this until the woman becomes nervous and upset and demands to be let go of; the man complies immediately. S2E7: a man and his boss engage in sexual contact while drunk. The next morning, she is clearly regretful and asks him whether he intentionally got her drunk or 'slipped her something.' This marks the beginning of their on-and-off romantic relationship, which is often highly one-sided. S2E10: a drunken woman spontaneously kisses a man who is not expecting it, and who reacts negatively. Another drunken woman reveals her breasts to another man, who also reacts negatively. S2E13: a woman's manager tells her that she should wear her hair one way rather than another because it's 'sexier.' S2E14: some male characters make a number of objectifying comments about a female coworker. S2E15: a man discovers a sex doll with his own face taped to it in the company warehouse. S2E18: a grown man makes a comment which implies that a middle school-age girl is sexually attractive. The same girl tries to flirt with a different grown man, although he does not reciprocate. S3E1: a man forces a hug and a kiss on a man who he has forcibly outed as gay in order to 'prove' that he is not a homophobe. The man who he is hugging and kissing is visibly distressed and resistant, and is eventually offered a financial settlement from the company to stop him pressing charges over the incident. S3E3: a woman is made to feel uncomfortable by a man openly ogling her at work. S3E6: verbal sexual harassment. S3E9: verbal sexual harassment of a breastfeeding woman. A man says that one of his employees is a 'convicted rapist' - this is untrue. A man alludes to rape in prisons (intended to deter criminal behaviour). S3E11: a revealing photo of a woman is circulated among her employees and coworkers without her permission. S3E13: sexual harassment/impropriety in the workplace. S3E14: a man suggests that he will remove his employee's bra without her permission. When she refuses, he has a male employee wear a bra and pretend to be her. In the run-up to a woman's wedding, a man suggests that he is claiming 'prima nocta,' the right to 'deflower' a bride on her wedding night. A man leers at and makes derogatory comments about a woman. A man orders strippers to perform at bachelor and bachelorette parties, both hosted in an office where a number of people are uncomfortable with the situation. He does this despite acknowledging that doing so could qualify as sexual harassment. Men in the office make a number of derogatory remarks about the female stripper and treat her in ways which, at times, seem to make her feel uncomfortable. A man makes another man come to a sex shop with him, despite the other man's obvious discomfort. A man volunteers to receive a lap dance and swiftly becomes uncomfortable when it happens. S3E16: a man talks about a teacher who 'hooked up' with a number of his students when they were in the eighth grade. Mention of 'sex predators' in passing. S3E17: a man makes repeated inappropriate comments about his partner in a public setting, and she is obviously uncomfortable. A woman makes persistent sexual advances towards a man, despite his repeated statements that he does not want to have sex. S3E18: a woman tells a man she kissed another man a month before they were supposed to get married. The man gets angry, yells at her and throws an object that breaks glass. She walks out. S3E19: a man makes a derogatory sexual comment about a woman he works with. S3E20: an adult man realises that his 'girlfriend' is a high school student. He says that they 'didn't do anything illegal,' but it is unclear whether or not this is true. S3E21: a woman asks her boyfriend to come to her house and have sex, offering to pay him money to do so despite his saying that this proposition makes him uncomfortable. A man exposes himself to a woman in the office parking lot (off-screen: this is only discussed). The office manager makes derogatory comments about the woman who was targeted and performs a crude impression of the perpetrator. Another man encourages the women in the office to dress conservatively and stop wearing makeup in order to avoid being targeted. A man mentions how his girlfriend 'pretended she didn't hear' him say their safe word the last time they had sex. S3E23: a woman calls her coworker's haircut 'sexy hot,' which makes him obviously uncomfortable. A man makes inappropriate comments about the physical appearance of two women he works with. S4E1: a woman knocks on a door and the man inside says that she can come in. When she enters, he is partially nude; it seems as though the man was embarassed by this and did not have sexual intentions. A man pulls down another man's trousers. S4E8: an incident in which a revealing photo of a woman was circulated without her permission is referenced and discussed. S4E11: it is mentioned that a website's social media function was 'infiltrated by sexual predators.' This is briefly discussed. S4E12: a man makes inappropriate sexual comments about a woman wearing glasses. Another man makes an inappropriate comment about the same woman, while not in her presence. S5E1: a man makes an inappropriate comment about his employee's appearance. A man tries to kiss a woman without her permission. S5E5: a woman is crying and a man asks her if another man 'touched her.' S5E6: a woman falsely claims to have been raped in an attempt to get out of trouble. S538: mention of child sexual abuse in passing. Discussion of sexual harassment: two characters plan to get one of their coworkers fired for sexual assault when he has committed none. They attempt to trick him into hugging and kissing a woman in the office 'no matter how hard she struggles.' S5E9: a man tricks a woman into marrying him without her knowledge. S5E13: an incident where a revealing photograph of a woman was shared without her permission is mentioned. S5E21: a man makes an inappropriate comment regarding his coworker's physical appearance. S5E26: mention of an incident when a man groped a woman without her permission. S6E1: mention of a 'Monica Lewinski incident,' in which a boss mentioned Monica Lewinski to his interns so often that the intern scheme at the company was shut down. A man makes inappropriate comments about a woman's body in relation to her pregnancy. S6E2: mention/accusations of sexual harassment. S6E6: a man pretends that his employee is his employee's wife and mimes groping his chest. S6E9: a character working in the office shows the receptionist nude photos of their coworker while asking if she has ever been photographed. She is not asked if she wanted to see this type of image. S6E12: a man dresses up as Santa and makes numerous comments with sexual overtones regarding people sitting on his lap. S6E13: replays of numerous scenes from past episodes involving sexual harassment and inappropriate sexual comments in the workplace. S6E15: mention of sexual harassment, in passing. Mention of metaphorical 'molestation.' S6E20: man sexually harasses his coworker (regarding the fact that she has recently given birth). S6E23: mention of rape at the end of the episode. S6E26: mention of paedophilia at the beginning of the episode (before title sequence). S7E2: a man accuses his coworker of wanting to 'molest' him; there is no evidence that this is true. A man talks about being 'probed' by aliens and a puppet. It is strongly implied that this never happened. S7E17: it is mentioned that a character in an amateur movie was a 'convicted animal rapist;' this is not elaborated upon further. S8E7: a man repeatedly gropes another man's crotch without his permission (non-sexual). S8E10: mention of sexual assault in passing. S8E17: multiple mentions of a man being a 'sexual predator,' alongside a suggestion that he should make advances towards teenage girls (this does not happen). S8E22: mention of rape (not graphic or descriptive). S8E24: a man kisses a woman. At first she resists him, but she quickly begins to reciprocate. S9E1: a woman tells one of her coworkers to 'sit on her face.' He is visibly uncomfortable. S9E7: a woman mentions that another woman allegedly had an affair with her 17-year-old assistant. Later, a man tries to use this history in order to get the woman to buy paper from him, bringing a young (22-year-old) sales associate to a meeting in order to seduce her. S9E13: a man makes a sexually suggestive comment to a man in the office and he seems uncomfortable. a woman makes an ambiguous comment which seems as though it could suggest that she ‘dated’ a now-grown man when he was an infant or child. S9E17: a man makes inappropriate comments regarding a woman’s body. S9E18: people in the office become uncomfortable when a woman becomes openly aroused by listening to an erotic audiobook. A woman flashes her breasts at everyone in the office. S9E21: a man mentions hypothetical sexual assault and then attempts to grope the crotch of one of his coworkers.
Okami (Video Game)
The titular character has a sidekick who sexually harassed women. Also, many of the female characters are rendered in sexualized and revealing ways.
Okaruto (Movie)
When a woman does not get involved in a conversation, a man pesters her about not joining in with the rest of the group. He argues with her and begins to make snide comments about her personal dating life, and then calls her gendered slurs after she is gone. Later, the same man asks if she i's going on a date when she says she has plans elsewhere.
Oklahoma! (Movie)
A male character inappropriately grabs a female character a couple of times.
Old Enough (Movie)
The Old Ones (Movie)
There are mentions of men giving their wives to the old ones to mate with.
Old People (Movie)
A man attacks a couple while they are having sex. He gets on top of the woman and drools on her face (possibly attempting to kiss her).
Old School (Movie)
The story plays out in an empire in which women are valued only as dutiful wives, mothers, and religious sacrifices. Misogyny is a constant backdrop via concern about women's purity and proper place, and threats of violent execution. One secondary female character is forced into an arranged marriage with the cruel emperor in exchange for her tributary state's safety. Multiple scenes from the emperor's POV involve him fantasizing about torturing and murdering his wife and his (main character) sister.
Some of dogs repeatedly cat-call other dogs.
Omori (Video Game)
An adult character finds an underage boy attractive and it is implied that she wants to have sex with him. When he rejects her she puts him and his friends in a dungeon. Three adult women corner the underage protagonists. They comment on who each of them 'like', and say things such as one of them being 'too pretty to sell', and that one would be a 'great pet'. The scene stops when they battle the women.
The protagonist’s cousin tells a story of their uncle taking her to a lodge when she was younger and raping her. It is implied that the protagonist and another cousin were also sexually abused by him.
The author discusses the rape of enslaved Black women by white men and white women falsely accusing Black women of rape.
On My Block (TV Show)
An adult says he would have sex with three teenage girls. Two of them are disgusted and one is flattered. S4E5: a gangster makes a kissy face at a girl while he is holding her and her boyfriend at gunpoint.
Early in the movie, two friends go to see prostitutes. At some point, they dunkenly try to take off the pants of one of the man against his will. He protests and they eventually stops. Later, a man engages sex with a woman who says that he is hurting her by going too strong. He immediately slows down and they have consensual sex. After receiving 'mixed messages' from a woman he met on the train, the male protagonist follows her home, and insists on speaking with her despite her apparent uncomfort. They eventually engage in a relationship.
On the Rocks (Movie)
The main male protagonist briefly mentions a cult where women force kidnapped men to have sex. He also mentions several times are men are subjeted to their sexual desires.
On the Town (Movie)
There is an entire musical number where a female character acts rather aggressive towards a male character in wanting him to go with her to her place despite his pleas of no. She places her legs on him despite him not wanting it and eventually stops the cab to chase him.
Worthy of note: a male character says that he needs to get a female character home, his reasoning being that there are too many men around with 'only one thing on their minds.'
Once Bitten (Movie)
At the beginning of the movie, a teen guy pressures a teen girl into having sex (they do not). During a shower scene with 3 men, two of them grab the last one with the intention of seeing if he has bite marks on his upper thigh, but he does not know their aim. After that, the two men talk about how they were "enacting a prison rape scene". There are also various scenes throughout the movie where the main character is made to pass out by the vampire while she sucks his blood, and a lot of sexual coercion by the vampire.
Love potions and spells to force characters to fall in love are used, but no characters are depicted as having sex while "under the influence." The main character is an older teen, and one of her love interests is an immortal creature who is centuries old. The main character is kissed and touched against her will, and is also ordered to kiss other people under the influence of a magical contract.
Women are sexually harassed (grabbed, cat-called and even kidnapped) several times throughout the film.
A character and her obnoxious, sexist coworker discuss an offscreen incident where he told her she 'looked hot,' and she responded by pointing out that they were at work and his comment was inappropriate. He asks if such a comment would be appropriate outside of work, and she coolly tells him 'no.' A character talks about being stalked and catcalled by men while out with their significant other. S1E2: sexual harassment in the work place is discussed. S3E2: sexual harassment/assault against women are the main theme of the episode. A teenager reveals they were harassed in public and catcalled to kiss their partner. Another character reveals her mentor sexually harassed her as well. This is all handled sensitively.
The film opens with six brutal murders (stabbing and suffocating), including three women, one of which is gropped by one assassin while tied up and gagged, and the other slapped several times before being tied up. It is hinted, halfway through the movie, that the female protagonist (a Black woman in her twenties) got pregnant from a relationship with the protagonist (a racist middle-aged cop). She starts talking about it at approximately 01:10:00 into the movie, and their relationship is then discussed at length.
An adult man talks about having had sexual relations with a teenager. This character was charged with having committed statutory rape, among other things, and decided to get himself transferred from prison to a mental institution in order to live out his sentence in greater comfort.
There is a passing mention of the kinds of sexual harassment that occur on public transit.
The protagonist goes to visit his best friend, and she kisses him unexpectedly, misinterpreting his verbal appreciation of her as attraction. She asks him to leave when he does not reciprocate her feelings because she felt he was leading her on. The friends do make up later when the protagonist realizes he is gay. There is passing mention of a relative being raped and executed during the Armenian genocide. The love interest character discusses having dated a college student while in high school. The college student was only 17 from having skipped a few years, though, so their age difference was only 2 years.
One Mississippi (TV Show)
S1E3: a character briefly states that she was molested as a child (18:55-19:07). S1E4: a character and her stepfather (not the perpetrator) have an argument relating to the abuse she has endured - he demonstrates a lack of understanding (22:38-23:04). S1E5: a talks to her family about the effects her childhood abuse still has on her and recalls the day that it came to her mother's attention (17:00-20:49). S1E6: in an imagined sequence in a cemetery, several women share their experiences in a faux light-hearted way (05:40-07:30). Later, a character remembers her mother's support after she found out about her abuse (19:45-20:30). Lastly, the character's stepfather apologizes for his failure to understand her situation and emotions (23:18-23:45). S2E1: several characters share stories regarding a spectrum of child abuse experiences (13:10-18:30, 21:10-22:15). S2E5: workplace sexual harassment - a producer masturbates in front of a female character in a meeting, without her permission. S2E6: in the wake of the above incident, two female characters talk about sexual abuse and one shares the story of her abuse as a child on air.
Many characters are considered to be perverts, though their actions are almost always punished for what they are doing. These include (but are not limited to): - Sanji: often tries to look at women without their consent. He is always head over heels for any woman. *Spoiler* He is also forced to marry a 16-year-old when he is 21 as part of a political game in the Whole Cake Island Arc. - Brook: his most common joke is to politely ask women to see their panties. - Absalom: has the ability to become invisible and uses it to look at women without their consent. While invisible, he snuck into another character showering, restaining her as he does. He also restrained another character, whom he licked. While shei is unconscious, he tries to marry her, with him trying to kiss her. - Lola: is constantly chasing Absalom in an attempt to marry and kiss him. - Vander Decken IX: is obsessed with a 16-year-old since she was 10, constantly asking her to marry him and attempting to kill her when she says no - Kin'emon: expresses perversion towards women when it comes to what they are wearing, sexualizing the character who is wearing a bikini top. - Momonosuke: despite being 8, often puts his face into female characters breasts with it being shown he is doing it with the intention of sexualizing them - Ginny: is captured and is stated to have been forced to become a wife to a celestial dragon. Though it is not explicitly shown or stated, it can be implied that she was raped and fell pregnant with her daughter. There are also often jokes about looking at women, mostly the characters Nami or Robin, while they are in the bath, to which Nami often hits them for it.
One Punch Man (TV Show)
S2E5 (specials): one prisoner kisses another prisoner without his consent. He also threatens to French kiss other prisoners if they do not listen to him or the guards. It is implied that he has actually done this to others.
A character is rumored to have released sex tapes of girls without their consent.
A character receives rape threats and is sexually harassed online.
Ongaku (Movie)
The male protagonist grabs a girl's behind: she punches him in the face (37:00-38:00).
Onibaba (Movie)
A merchant offers a woman more millet if she sleeps with him, she refuses and does not get as much millet as she wanted as a result. A man grabs a woman on her breast and starts to forcibly disrobe, causing her to slap him. Afterwards, they have consensual sex at various points in the movie.
A woman is catcalled by a pair of men, but she does not notice. These men then follow her, which she does notice. Though they ultimately do not do anything to her.
In the opening of the film, a woman has sex with a man she is visiting for work. He does not seem to be into it at all. Spoilers: a man discovers the body of a dead woman. He hides her and lives with her for a few days before dumping her (and himself) in a hole. A man vists a young woman whom he believes has been flirting with him online. In fact, he has been victim of a scam. He tries to approach her but when the woman rejects him and kicks him, he flees.
Boys harass girls at school upon learning that they are experiencing periods for the first time by flipping up their skirts and peeking under them.
At some point, two men hold a woman captive. When she is asleep, one of them touches her hair and is about to fondle her breast when she opens her eyes: he thus stops. The next morning, she tries to escape and is shot.
A character confesses to have lied about his age to someone he was dating, saying he was 18 when he was actually 17.
Open 24 Hours (Movie)
While working at her job, the main character is hit on and cat-called by a male customer.
Open Grave (Movie)
A woman is forcelly and non-consensually grabbed and kissed, whilst being physically overpowered and held down (1:03:30-1:05:05).
A violent man climbs into the bed of a woman who is asleep. When she wakes up and tries to flee, he straddles her and punch her unconscious. She awakes bound to a chair, with the man menacingly touching her and then torturing her.
Open Range (Movie)
It is briefly mentioned that a character’s mother was sexually assaulted.
A man hides a camera in the bathroom with the intent to film his girlfriend taking a shower but it dies before anything is recorded.
Opera (Movie)
A woman is repeatedly tied up by a killer, who often gropes her.
Oral Fixation (Movie)
A couple is secretly watched while having sex. A woman takes off her shirt and forcibly kisses a man, and derives audible pleasure from scenarios where he is upset or uncomfortable.
This book is an account of the author's escape from North Korea. Whilst crossing the border from North Korea to China, the author's mother is raped by a man who is helping them to cross. The uneven power dynamics between women seeking escape and the smugglers who assist them comes up repeatedly - it is mentioned that women are often offered help in crossing the border, only to be forced into sex work when they reach the other side.
The characters make occasional reference to a minor antagonist who groped a male waiter without permission. Two male secondary characters periodically harass the female lead character, pressuring her to break her monastic vows and have sex with them. She is unbothered and wholly capable of defending herself.
A brief scene shows the police asking a distressed teenager sexual questions, and pulling down her bra to reveal her chest.
Ore Monogatari!! (TV Show)
S1E1: a young girl is groped in the train until another man steps in.
Orfeu Negro (Movie)
The female romantic lead gets catcalled several times, but the comments are not explicitly sexual. Most of them are just calling her beautiful. There is a grocer who accepts kisses from women in lieu of payment. He does not stop people from paying with actual money, but when his character is introduced, he does appear to be forcing a kiss on one of the customers.
Organ Trail (Movie)
One of the female characters is remarked as being "owned" by the gang leader. The leader then emerges from the main building wearing nothing but a robe and boots, which could imply sexual assault or at least dubious consent. A female captive asks if she is going to be sold or forced into sex work. Towards the end of the film, a female character is tied outside to a post. A male character tells her that if she can survive the night then she will belong to him. He says this while touching her face and almost kissing her.
The Originals (TV Show)
S1E2-10: on multiple occasions, a vampire hypnotises a woman into forgetting that he is a vampire so she will not be afraid of him. However, his motives are not sexual/romantic in nature, and after discovering what he is doing, she eventually forgives him and decides to spend time with him of her own free will. S1E1-2: a woman is being held captive so she cannot abort a baby that was the result of a one night stand. When the father of the baby finds out she attempted to escape and abort it, he chokes her in a rage. She eventually changes her mind about aborting the baby and returns to the vampire family of her own volition. In S1E22, the birth is very traumatic and violent, as she is kidnapped by witches who want to sacrifice the baby. The plot of season 2 revolves around the antagonists possessing stranger's bodies so they can interact with and spy on other characters without them knowing who they are. There are elements of seduction in two relationships, and some scenes may seem coercive or menacing. However nothing sexual occurs while the antagonist's true identities are unknown, and that is not their primary goal. Although there is no incest textually onscreen, it is implied between a villainous brother-sister pair in season 3. The main characters all have very unhealthy, co-dependent relationships with their siblings. A main character's possessiveness towards his younger sister could be seen as having incestuous undertones/subtext. One of the main relationships is between two people who are technically aunt and nephew by way of unofficial adoption. The male character became the ward of his love interest's brother when he was 11. Whilst he considers her brother a father to him, obviously they do not see their relationship as familial, and no character ever mentions it. They are never seen to interact in any flashback of him as a child. Other pseudo-incestuous relationships such as multiple love triangles involving two family members competing for a third party, and a main character whose main love interest is his niece's mother. When his memory is wiped, he even calls himself out on the possibility that his feelings for her are primarily because her being the mother of his brother's baby. Regarding age gaps in vampire/human relationships: it is stated that vampires do not mature past the age they were turned at, but it is not clear how exactly old that is for the majority of characters. Two main relationships could be considered teen/adult; in one the female character is 17, and the male character is approximately 18-20 in human years, and around 1000 in vampire years. In the other, the female character is approximately 17-19 in human years and around 1000 in vampire years, and the male character is 30 in human years and around 200 in vampire years. In season 5 a guest character appears who had a one night stand with one of the main characters (when she was 17 in human years and 20-21 in vampire years, and he approximately 20-22 in human years and 1000+ in vampire years). In season 2, a main female character enters an arranged marriage. Despite initially assuring that he understands that the marriage is for practical purposes, and respects that the woman does not have feelings for him and does have feelings for another man, he continually guilt trips her about not returning his love and becoming involved with someone else. His behaviour is creepy, but it seems unintentionally so. He does not appear to coerce her into sex and their encounters appear consensual. In general, some scenes of vampires feeding on/killing humans may contain imagery reminiscent of sexual assault. Additionnally, supernatural means of deception and mind invasion/control happen frequently and dysfunctional, borderline/pseudo-incestuous dynamics between all the main characters are a constant theme.
Orphan (Movie)
A sex scene between two parents contains a lot of convincing in it, but is framed as consensual. There is also a scene where a daughter figure attempts to seduce her father figure.
S1E5+6: it is revealed that a woman printed out her dead wife. She does not tell the dead wife that she is a copy.
Osama Ranking (TV Show)
S1E22: a child who is approximately 12/13 years old declares he will marry an adult woman. She passed away a few years ago, but her spirit has been stuck in a mirror for multiple years. She spoke to the child through said mirror and the child has known her since he was a toddler. Her relationship to him is similar to that of a groomer and an underage child. S1E23: after the woman is revived back to a human, she accepts his marriage proposal. The child forgives her for her crimes and carries her.
Oshi No Ko (TV Show)
A young girl has a precocious crush on her doctor, an adult man - she sees him as her first love, but he turns her down (saying "I'll consider marrying you once you're 16", though he is not serious, as she is dying from cancer and he only wanted to gently rebuff her as he is an adult.) The doctor later becomes a fan of a teen pop idol that his patient also enjoyed; he fantasizes about being in a relationship with her despite the age gap. When his coworker calls him out for pedophilic fantasies, he does not deny it after further pressing from his coworker. The same teen idol comes to his practice while she is secretly pregnant, hoping to get treatment in a remote location so that she is not recognized in public. She deliberately keeps the father's identity a mystery, but there is an implication that the father may have been an adult. After the doctor is murdered and the young girl passes away, both are reborn as the idol's twin children but still retain their past life memories. The boy (formerly the doctor) still struggles to see the idol as his mother, and as a teenager, it is heavily implied he still views her in a romantic way; the girl still seems to have a precocious crush on the doctor, not knowing he is now her brother. Later, the boy makes friends who joke that he has a "sister complex" because of how attached and protective he is of his sister, but he is not shown to have any sort of romantic feelings for her.
While a man is arranging to have someone drive them to a city, the female driver kisses him after making him take a hit of a drug.
Osomatsu-San (TV Show)
S1E8: a news show playing in the background discusses a man exposing himself to a child.
A police captain makes a joke about a serial rapist being on the loose. He also gives a man a rape whistle as a joke.
In the beginning of a book, the protagonist is recruited to participate in a magical land. He accuses his recruiter of being a child predator in jest. A character surprises the protagonist with a kiss that he does not want. There are passing mentions of inbreeding in the British royal family. A main character also comes from a family with some inbreeding. While 16, the protagonist has a short relationship with a 20-year-old man.
A homeless boy wakes up and a dude stands over him mastrubating and asks if he wants to give him a blowjob for money.
A man briefly looks at a woman showering (48:59-49:15).
Our Father (TV Show)
S1E5: worthy of note: two side characters posing as married are actually brother and sister. S2E1: there is a scene where a woman makes romantic advances towards a man. It is implied that she is offering his friends a place to stay if he sleeps with her. He appears confused and uncomfortable at first but in a later scene indicates that he enjoys the relationship. S2E2: there is a scene, played for laughs, in which a character vents about his trauma relating to surviving at sea, when he had to go to extreme measures such as eating rats. As a joke, he says something about a "human puppet," implying that someone was sexually assaulted. S2 worthy of note: two characters are in a toxic relationship. It is addressed by the characters in the show, who acknowledge that it is toxic, and is shown in a negative light. Some of the scenes in which the characters physically harm each other may be upsetting to some, although they are not explicitly sexual in nature. S2E4: a female character sits on a male character's lap and aggressively kisses him, even as he verbally indicates that he is not consenting and does not want her to touch him. Later, she lies and says he gave her a "proper tonguing", at which point he has to say, "no, she kissed me", to make it clear that she instigated the kiss and he did not want it.
A man mentions that his sister once had a relationship with their cousin.
There is a passing mention of a man masturbating while the protagonists, two women, are kissing in a movie theater. There are a few other instances of the protagonists' relationship being fetishized or not being taken seriously by men who are attracted to them.
A man and woman kiss while she is sober and he is very obviously drunk (30:17-30:24).
Outer Banks (TV Show)
S1E3: two characters begin to get intimate and the woman consents to sex (about 23 minutes into the episode). However, she then says "no", stating that she is drunk. The boy gets really angry at her and starts shouting, making her feel bad for having changed her mind.
A detective kisses a woman he is investigating without her consent: she pulls away, referring to her marriage, but he kisses her again (chapter 13).
Outlaw Star (TV Show)
A man sexually harasses the male protagonist on multiple occasions asking him to sleep together, blowing in his ear, etc.
The Outlaws (TV Show)
S1E3: a guy justifies violence by saying he could be protecting a woman and child from getting raped. S1E5: a lawyer happily says they might have a client who is famous for child molestation. This is played for laughs. S2E5: a male lawyer hits on his lesbian client by saying "I know you say you're a lesbian, but would you ever try doing it with a bloke?"
The Outpost (Movie)
A man watches a woman in the shower through a security camera. A teenager's boyfriend continues to try to kiss and grab her several different times after she tells him to stop. S1E2: a woman asks a man what he has done to her and why she has half naked. He did not do anything except tens her wounds. A woman mentions that an older man is a pedophile. S1E6: a man threatens to remove a woman's clothes on the street. It is mentioned that a woman is killed for "refusing the advances" of a man, and rape is mentioned again later.
The Outpost (TV) (TV Show)
S1E8: it is mentioned that a man's young wife was raped. S1E9: women are rounded up during a raid and the men say they intend to rape them. One woman fights and they threaten her as well. Another woman is seen later in one of the men's bed, so it is implied that they made good on their threats. S3E2: a man grabs a woman at night and tells her to "serve him" and then tries to kiss her. He is stopped by another man. S3E6: a woman is sexually harassed and her clothes are forcibly changed off screen. S3E7: a group of men leer at and threaten a woman, remarking on her beautiful face. They later repeatedly sexually harass another woman. S3E8: a man forces a woman to sit in his lap and repeatedly sexually harasses her. He later uses his position of power to sexually harasses two other women.
In one of the early sequences of the movie (in a drive-in theater), several instances of sexual harassement are featured on-screen: - A woman angrily quits a car because her 'boyfriend' inapproriately groped her; - A very pushy man catcalls and harasses a woman (sniffing her hair, making inappropriate and unsollicited sexual comments, trying to kiss her) despite her repeated protests. He eventually leaves her alone; - Another man lifts up a woman's skirt to show her underwear; - A woman reluctantly joins her 'boyfriend' in order to avoid a fight with another man.
The Owl House (TV Show)
S2E15: in this flashback episode in which a character is a teenager, the beginnings of an unhealthy student-mentor relationship with them and an older woman are shown. Though not explicitly sexual, grooming is still portrayed and may be triggering to some viewers. S3E2: one character pins another one against the wall and begs her to stay with her. It is revealed that a third character was using magic to pose as the second one: the first character backs away.
At the beginning of the movie, a man tries to initiate sex with a woman while she lightly resists, but he stops eventually (16:57). At several points a man tries to non-consensually kiss the same womany. At one point he climbs on top of her on a bed while she resists his advances (01:08:30). He does not manage to kiss her. At the end of the movie, the latter man is locked inside a room with her twin who is in chains and it is implied he might try to rape her (01:22:20).
The protagonist is a teenage girl and a lesbian. Her mother thinks that if the right guy flirts with her, she will stop being a lesbian. To this end, when the protagonist has to go to a shop where she knows a particular adult man will sexually harass her, she asks her mom to go with her, but the mom refuses. The protagonist also recalls relatives making inappropriate comments about how puberty is affecting her body. We find out later in the book that the protagonist's grandma worked for her uncle when she was a teenager herself. This uncle attempted to kiss her and destroyed her reputation when she rebuffed him. We also find out that the parents of this uncle were first cousins who married to keep the wealth in the family.
Ozark (TV Show)
The male main character obsessively watches a secret video of his wife and her lover having sex throughout the series. His wife does not know about until later (to which she reveals feeling very uncomfortable). S1E6: the main character's teenage daughter has sex with a man over the age of 18. She admits that she is a minor before they have sex and it appears to be consensual but she exhibits uncomfortable facial expressions. In that same episode, the male main character has sex with his wife but does so in a way as to replicate the video of her having sex with her lover. He lightly spanks her and she appears uncomfortable with the encounter as she seems to piece together that this is what her and her lover did. An FBI agent sent to investigate the main character seemingly receives oral sex from a male prostitute. During the interaction he forces the man's head down and the man makes gagging and choking noises (although the encounter is consensual). The same FBI agent forms a fake bond with a closeted gay man with internalised homophobia in order to use him to get information. The gay man uses words such as 'faggot' to describe the FBI agent and they begin a rough but consensual sexual (and romantic) relationship. Overall, these scenes involve consensual sex but many of the interactions feel very tense and uncomfortable due to characters' facial expressions and the general atmosphere of the show. Many of the characters do not take into regard other's feelings during sexual encounters and there are multiple instances of physical fights and arguments in domestic settings. Additionnally, non-sexual torture is a recurring event in the series and a 21-year-old character develops a consensual, romantic relationship with a 68-year-old character.
P2 (Movie)
The main character is knocked out with a chloroform rag, and when she awakens she realizes the villain changed her clothes while she was passed out. The villain forces her to watch security camera footage of a man trying to drunkenly kiss her; the villain later describes this as the man trying to rape her. The main character sees footage of the villain touching her breasts while she is passed out.
An adult man stalks and impregnates a teenage girl. He then keeps tabs on her and her family for years after the fact under the auspices of protecting her. Many characters discuss how Korean women were raped during World War II, the Korean War, and under the totalitarian regime in North Korea.
Pacifiction (Movie)
It is revealed that female sex workers are regularly visiting a (secret) submarine and that the soldiers/sailors there are abusing them physically. The male protagonist asks the men's boss to calm things down because he fears that an "incident" will happen (meaning one of the women getting killed).
The Pact II (Movie)
There is a subplot involving trauma and abuse. While sexual assault is not depicted in graphic detail, its presence is implied through the backstories of a few characters throughout the movie.
While in a haunted house, a man falls over onto a girl and grabs at her thigh. After she pushes him off, he responds that she liked it.
S1E5: in a crowded room, one of the lead characters is touched without her consent and then when she pushes his hand off, he makes her touch his crotch. Later she finds out one of the younger women has slept with him because 'she had to' and was given a bracelet in return. It is applied that many of the women working for the company feel some expectation to sleep with the doctors they supply to.
A man tries to watch women changing but is caught by them, and the other men make a joke about how he would try to get into the girl's locker room while in high school.
Pale Flower (Movie)
It is not entirely clear whether a character is actually assaulted or not in an early scene, but what is clear is that there does appear to be unwanted touching initially at the least.
A woman tells a police officer that her husband is trying to molest her (though he is not). This same man later in the movie tries to forcibly kiss her despite her rejection.
Palm Royal (TV Show)
This series takes place in the 1969/70 time period: some men do hit on women by cat calling.
Pam & Tommy (Movie)
This series is about how a private sex tape of a couple was stolen and made public without their consent. S1E1: a man enters the house of the protagonists at night to steal from them, and he briefly watches them as they are sleeping naked. S1E2: the male protagonist stalks the female protagonist. S1E4: the female protagonist discovers that her sextape was stolen and commercialized. She mentions feeling violated and humiliated several times throughout the episode and appears visibly very distressed. People are shown watching the tape. S1E6: during a deposition scene, the female protagonist is forced to answer victim-blaming questions and forced to watch her leaked sextape in a room full of men (the purpose of clearly to humiliate her). S1E7: consent and victim-blaming is a major them of this episode. [Review in process]
Paper Moon (Movie)
It is revealed that a woman lost her job because her boss wanted her to have sex with his friends (referred to as "putting out") and she refused to do so.
The movie involves an airline pilot who is barred from working with all the major airlines because of his habitual sexual harassment.
The whole movie eventually centers around human trafficking, especially the trafficking of young girls. Nothing is ever shown or discussed in detail, but it is implied that the girls are forced into this life.
A man pretends to turn his camera off before having sex with his girlfriend. His girlfriend , laughing, calls him out on that. He tries to lie but she insists and they end up laughing about it.
Paranorman (Movie)
A character's butt is grabbed without her permission (off-screen).
A college student (aged around 20) engages in a romantic relationship with a female high school student (aged around 15) he is giving private English lessons to. Another college student in the movie states that he wishes to have an official relationship with her after she graduates highschool, and implies that any man his age would try to engage with her.
Parenthood (Movie)
A mother finds a pornographic DVD in her son’s room. She plays the tape and a woman is heard struggling and visually trying to fight a man off of her in the video. This scene is brief and barely addressed throughout the movie. A hole is poked into a contraceptive diaphragm without her partner’s knowledge. He confronts her about it. A man speaks to his sister in law and says “Susan, you look great! lf you weren´t my sister--…“ and then the subject is changed. Worthy of note: A little boy is seen completely naked. He is not sexualized in any matter.
Paris, Texas (Movie)
Rape is briefly discussed/mentioned by a woman working in a peep show. The relationship between the main character and his wife has a significant age difference: it began when she was 16-17. Worthy of note: SPOILERS The plot is centered around the main character stalking back the woman towards which he was previously abusive to after relapsing on alcoholism while she was experiencing post-partum depression, and reuniting her with her child that she said she is not able to be a parent for. He finds out her workplace after following her car. He frames some of his abusiveness as jealousy. It is mentioned that he tied her to a cowbell or to a stove to prevent her from escaping.
Parker (Movie)
The female lead is taken hostage and one of the kidnappers loosens her blouse and swips little around her chest. She spits on him which prompts him in making threats that he is going to rape her. Fortunately, she manage to shoot him dead before anything really happens.
The Parkers (TV Show)
Throughout the series, a woman stalks and harass a man who has no interest in her. She is constantly touching him, which makes him very uncomfortable. She breaks into his home often, and even tells people she is married or engaged to him.
One male character makes sexually inappropriate comments and sexually harrasses a female coworker multiple times throughout the show. At some point, another character suggests that the two date (which they do). During S2E6 a man appears unexpectedly and naked in front of a woman. This is played out for laughs but may be distressing for some viewers. S2E15: one character mentions non-consensual sexual relationships among horses. S2E8, S3E4, S5E9: a main character's ex-wife tries to convince him to have sex with her through the use of graphic verbal sexual imagery. This continues after he expresses that he does not want to have sex with her. This is shown in a comedic light, but could potentially be uncomfortable for some viewers. S3E15: a woman places her hand on a man's leg as a sexual advance. S4E1: a storyline follows a man sending a picture of his genitals in an attempt to harass his female coworkers. S4E2: a main character reveals that his ex wife has known him since he was born and has held various positions of authority over him throughout his life (teacher, babysitter, etc). The main plot of the episode is her manipulating him into rekindling their relationship as his friends attempt to steer him away from her. While she is framed as a villain, the matter is not seriously discussed and used mostly for shock value given the comedic nature of the show.
Partner Track (TV Show)
Sexual harassment of female lawyers is a common theme in season 1. S1E1: one lawyer tells another lawyer that she is hot and needs to use it before she loses it.
Party Down (TV Show)
S1E1: a professional party host employee flirts with a client's teenaged daughter, leading to them making out in her bed before being interrupted by the employee's boss. This scene is meant to be comedic and there are no negative consequences for the employee. S1E4: an employee of a party hosting company is caught looking up the skirts of the guests. This character is meant to be "creepy," but there are no negative consequences for his actions.
Party Girl (Movie)
A man attempts to follow a drunk woman into her apartment building after she rebuffs his advance. When she manages to lock him out he shouts at her and rattles the door.
The protagonist encounters a news story where her love interest (a senator), denounces a fellow senator for perpetrating sexual harassment. This is a plot point that is mentioned in passing exactly once, and no one goes into detail about it.
Party Mom (Movie)
Sexual harassment on-screen (41:20-43:18).
Pasolini (Movie)
The film starts with footage of the film 'Salo' featuring humiliation of naked people. A man makes a comment about a woman's bottom in the street. In the final sequence, the titular character sollicits a sexual relationship from a 17-year old boy in his car: he performs oral sex on him for money.
A central point of the film is a false testimony of attempted rape.
It is heavily implied that a major source of one character's trauma was an elementary school teacher who he later beats to death. The nature of this trauma is not specified but is likely intended to be from sexual assault or abuse. The character refuses to talk about the teacher so this is never discussed within the film, but past sexual abuse is undeniably a popular interpretation.
Passenger 57 (Movie)
The main terrorist pushes a stewardess up against the wall twice and threatens in a vulgar way to rape and kill her.
Passengers (Movie)
The main character’s relationship came about through the lie that the female character woke up by accident, which constitutes an indirect coercion. The male character manipulates the woman’s life based on his attraction to her and traps her in a situation which ultimately lead to sex.
Passion (Movie)
Worthy of note: an adult man is fixated on a teenage girl and attempts to render her dependent on him.
The ending scene involves a woman being hounded and whistled at by soldiers in a bar while the guy who introduces her to the soldiers makes comments about her body. The situation changes when she starts singing, the soldiers stop hounding her.
It is briefly mentioned that the soldiers may rape some of the female characters.
In general, this series involves a lot of incest. The book takes place in a society where members of a household functionally belong to the heads of the household, and most of the heads of household are men. As such, women are generally perceived as sexually available and unable to refuse sex.
At approximately 16:00, there is a joke about soldiers dragging a woman from her bed and raping her in a field.
Paul (Movie)
Several men ask an alien if he is going to probe them with fingers or metal probes: the alien says this is a myth. At 53:00, a woman is cornered by two threatening men harassing her. After a woman finds out that there is no god/heaven/hell/sin, she kisses a man and makes him touch her breast as well as grabbing his crotch area even after he says no.
A man kisses a 15 years-old's legs while she is asleep. When she wakes up, she kicks him but does not seem distressed at all. Throughout the movie, there are several discussions about whether or not adult men should seduce and engage in a relationship with the teenage girl. Women also frequently have to physically rebuff men who try to hold and kiss them.
Payback (Movie)
A man threatens to rape a woman, but is killed moments later (58:40). Worthy of note: The same man is described as enjoying beating women for sadistic pleasure, and is shown to do so on a couple of occasions, albeit briefly.
The book centers around three queer female witches who seek revenge against their common ex-boyfriend Gareth. Gareth variously cheated on them, emotionally manipulated them and made them feel worthless. In the first couple chapters the female lead (one of the three above) encounters Gareth at a bar. He does not recognize her; hits on her pretty aggressively until the barkeeper comes to her defense.
Peacemaker (TV Show)
S1E1: a main character calls a waitress 'Sweet Cheeks' and talks graphically about the breasts of his coworkers. A guy non consensually touches the arm of a woman at a bar. Worthy of note: a main character has sex with someone. It appears to be consensual, but then she tries to kill him. S1E2: there is an in depth discussion of Louis CK exposing himself to people. This is used for laughs as another character says he does not want someone else to expose themselves to him.
Peau D'Ane (Movie)
The plot revolves around a king wanting to marry his own daughter. It does not happen, nor do they ever get physically intimate. But he attempts to woo her many times.
Peau De Peche (Movie)
Peep TV Show (Movie)
The movie involves people being stalked and filmed without their knowledge, with the recordings broadcasted and at some point monetized on a vouyeristic internet website with ominous writing.
Peeping Dorm Manager (Video Game)
The game focuses on stalking and spying on unknowing women, such as installing spycams in their apartments and stalking their social media pages.
Peeping Tom (Movie)
This film contains themes of voyeurism: it goes as far as watching other people making out in public.
Pen15 (TV Show)
S2E14: a main character falls victim to a modeling scam where the photographer asks her to take her shirt off. The main character is supposed to be 13, but is played by a 34 year old woman.
The Penguin (TV Show)
S1E4: one character is forcibly undressed and hosed down methodically by hospital workers. A metal speculum is shown being taken off a tray and there is a sound effect.
The Pentaverate (TV Show)
S1E2: a man grabs another man's penis as part of a "test." It is played for laughs. S1E3: a man thinks that another man is being anally probed, but he is mishearing the man on the phone. It is played for laughs. S1E5: a man grabs another man's penis. It is played for laughs.
An adult man has a sexual relationship with a girl he knows to be underage: allusions are made to her being "jail-bait". Worthy of note: A man is falsely accused to have committed incest with his mother. The accusation is satirical and obviously false.
A character’s backstory involves his adoptive father bing a serial sexual predator of teenagers, including him. This is described in a non-graphic way. The movie is about being a comedian, and there are various references to other comedians being sexual predators.
Peppermint (Movie)
A woman is kidnapped by one smuggler family after her husband was accused of cheating at cards. It is implied that her kidnapper is forcing himself on her. There is also a scene where he kisses her and she appears relucant.
The protagonist unintentionally kills a woman. He strips the clothes of the corpse and smells her body intensely; also smelling and touching her breast.
The Peripheral (TV Show)
S1E1: a main character uses sexual coercion to trick and drug another character. Someone else is telling them to do this. Drug dealers say that they will give a character pills if she sexually services them.
Perpetrator (Movie)
S1E4: a woman is found to be planning to avenge her sister's suicide after being raped by the episode's antagonist. Other sexual assaults by the antagonist are verbally detailed by the main characters during research, nothing is shown. S5E9: two coyotes (human smugglers) threaten a woman that she will be "earning" her passage across the border a different way. One man attempts to grab her, but she successfully fights back.
Persona (Movie)
One female character discusses an orgy she and her friend had with two boys; she and her friends were adults and she describes the two boys as "very young", implying they were underage. Worthy of note: a woman sleeps with another woman's husband in front of her. The reality of it is a bit vague/dreamlike.
Persona 3 (Video Game)
Jokes about sexual harassment are littered throughout this work, and sexual harassment in general is rarely taken seriously. The perpetrators do not face any consequences for their actions.
The movie starts with a scene where the teenage characters are under a love spell and appear as though they're about to have sex. They break out of the spell. One of the characters, still under the spell's influence, aggressively catcalls and attempts to grope another, but is quickly slapped out of it.
Persona 4 Golden (Video Game)
A high school teacher makes many sexual innuendos directed toward male students. Later, a group of her teen students accidentally walk into her hotel room, and she attempts to have sex with them. The scene is intended to be humorous. A nurse flirts with and tries to convince a high-school student to have sex with her twice. She continues to flirt with him even if he refuses her advances. If he accepts the second time she asks, the screen fades to black and it is heavily implied that they have some form of sexual contact. It is also implied that she has done similar things to other teenage boys. A male main character gropes multiple female main characters in a running gag that is intended to be humorous.
Phantasm (Movie)
A teenage boy spies on his older brother having sex.
A man keeps on trying to get into a relationship with a woman who does not love him back even going as far as forbidding her from seeing her boyfriend and kidnapping her.
A powerful man manipulates women into sex using his music industry connections. He holds fake auditions that essentially amount to orgies. The women are depicted as being willing participants.
The protagonist, who is 16-17, is in a relationship with an adult. She later is coerced into having sex with another adult. There are a couple instances of sexual harassment. Two other characters are groomed by older adults.
Phat Girlz (Movie)
While the male and female protagonists are seated at a table, a man comes by and leans in towards the female protagonist flirtatiously and offers her his card. The male protagonist gives him a sharp look and the man goes away (34:55-35:13). Two of the protagonists have consensual sex in a tub: the man expresses his exhaustion and asks to go to lunch, but the woman says that she wants to continue and kisses him as he tries to resist. This is played for laughs, and the implication is that they will continue to have frequent enjoyable and consensual sex (54:00-54:24).
Phenomena (Movie)
Two men have a woman in their car while driving and one of them is trying to hold her still, but the woman escapes before anything happens.
The context of the book is that most cis women have the ability to do magic and most cis men do not. Throughout the book, there is a terrorist, religiously motivated group that tries to outlaw the use and teaching of this magic and make women subservient. At their demonstrations, they make rape threats as well as misogynist and whorephobic statements towards women. Aside from the above, there are several scenes where men catcall women sprinkled throughout the book.
The protagonist is the only man in an all-female division of the armed forces. They routinely sexually harass him, including forcing kisses on him and telling their sexual fantasies about him.
Phobias (Movie)
A middle school student confronts her teacher about having sex with her dad and tries to force her to strip.
The third episode of the game revolves around multiple men in their 20s falling in love with a sixteen-year-old girl who is particularly child-like in her thoughts and actions.
The final two episodes of the game involve a relationship between a mentally disabled man and his girlfriend, who were respectively 20 and 14 when they met. The younger girl is portrayed as the controlling force in the relationship.
In every episode, a family (including some with children) or individual are spied on in their home in a way that is either clearly, or could be interpreted as, sexually motivated, invasive and violating. S1E1: a teenage girl describes being hugged by a home invader against her will (and there is a reconstruction video of the event) but it ended quickly. S1E2: the rape and murder of a young pregnant woman are mentioned, as well as her children’s murders by the same person. S1E10: a clearly high-risk sexually motivated intrusion is documented, where the victim’s underwear is stolen from her and voyeuristic photographs are taken of her when she believes herself alone at home, over the course of many months. The perpetrator is given a suspended sentence and so does not serve jail time.
Piccolo Corpo (Movie)
At several occasions in this movie about the disappearance of girls, some characters suggest that they may have been raped: nothing suggests that it could have been the case. Worthy of note: children abuse is hinted.
Pieces of Her (TV Show)
The main character was physically and mentally abused by her father throughout her childhood, and it is implied that there was sexual abuse as well.
The main character was physically and sexually abused by her father.
Piggy (2022) (Movie)
A large group of teenagers "pranks" a girl by having her boyfriend pretend to meet her to hook up. While she is undressed they open the curtain and take pictures/video of her.
Pillow Talk (Movie)
In a car, a young man forcibly tries to embrace and kiss a woman even after she rejects his advances numerous times. He eventually stops when she threatens him. This is played for laughs. A man drags a woman out of bed and carries her out of her apartment and through the streets in her pajamas and blanket.
Pin (Movie)
A man briefly reads his own (non-explicit) poetry about incestous rape in front of his sister: her boyfriend perceives this as a threat towards her. A woman has sex with a life-sized doll: it is unclear at that point whether the doll is sentient.
Pin Cushion (Movie)
First cousins are in a romantic relationship.
One female character is repeatedly grabbed and kissed by her lover's nephew, despite her systematic protests. There is also one instance of a male character insisting on a female character getting drunk (despite her repeated refusal to drink alcohol) as he stays sober. He does take advantage of her drunkenness to kiss her. When she passes out, he does not take further advantage of her and simply carries her to bed and lets her sleep. His nephew sleeps in the same bed, and he admits to letting her believe she might have slept with him.
Piranahaconda (Movie)
After kidnapping several people, a man forcibly kisses a woman after insinuating that she would need to have sex with him to make him keep his promise to not hurt any of their group.
The Pirate (Movie)
This film takes place in a setting where women are married off to men they do not know. There are incessant come-ons, and a woman is kissed while under hypnosis.
A woman working on a cargo ship mentions that she is in more danger than her male colleagues due to the possibility of her becoming a target for sexual violence should pirates successfully seize their ship. It is mentioned that her parents worry for her safety as a result of her occupation.
There are several rape jokes throughout the film, but no sexual violence is shown.
A man tries to sexually assault/kiss a woman, but she fights him off. In the beginning, Elizabeth is asked to remove her weapons and clothes to enter Sao Feng's bathhouse, many of which are hidden in humorously questionable spots. We don't see her change, but later see her reduced to a very short bath robe. Ragetti, hidden under the floorboards, looks up under her skirt (though we don't see anything). He gets Pintel to look as well but, at that point, a large man has taken Elizabeth's place, issuing a look of disgust from Pintel.
Two men tell a girl she will be forced dine naked with the crew if she refuses to wear the dress that the captain instructed her to wear for dinner. A woman is told to take her dress off (although she is wearing a tight low cut dress underneath so this does not leave her naked). A man makes a remark about the removed dress still being 'warm.' Later, the captain mentions that his crew has been hospitable to the woman and that it is her turn to return the favor. She is turned over to the men, who immediately start grabbing at her clothes and pulling at her and grab her head by her hair. Her lover turns up and bargains her freedom.
Pitch Perfect (Movie)
In the first few scenes, the main female character is given a whistle and told to blow it if she is sexually assaulted. Later on, a man repeatedly touches a woman on the breast with a microphone. She is apparently uncomfortable. A woman gropes another woman's breast: she tells her to stop and blows a rape whistle. It is played for laughs.
The Pitt (TV Show)
S1E7: graphics descriptions of child abuse + mentions of prison rape.
Plan B (Movie)
A young man exposes his genitals.
A character suggests that being seen with the main character (from a different tribe) will result with either her being ritually raped or him being castrated. It is mentioned only in one sentence and the female character quickly reassures him that it is not something her tribe would do. The topic is immediately dropped and does not get brought up again.
Planetes (TV Show)
S1E1: the female protagonist mentions sexual harassment after seeing her coworker in a diaper. S1E4: a woman is attacked by a man as part of a movie they were shooting. S1E15: a woman explains how her husband pimped her out to other men in order to make money. They would use electric collars and beat her up when she refused to get piercings on places she did not want to. This is not shown on screen. S1E15: a man kisses the female protagonist without her consent. She pushes him away.
In the opening sequence of the movie, the 11-year-old female protagonist is grabbed by a couple of men in a Needle Park. She quickly escapes. It is heavily implied that a side character (another young girl) is beaten by her father. It is hinted that the protagonist's mother (a junkie) has sex with men to buy drugs.
Playing Nice (TV Show)
S1E3: a woman is pinned violently against a wall and asked whether she keeps or removes her pubic hair (about 42 minutes in).
Playtime (Movie)
A teenager catcall-whistles a group of women who do not acknowledge it (1:15:21).
Plebs (TV Show)
The show is set in ancient Rome. A joke is made passingly about masters assaulting slaves.
Pledge (Movie)
A girl referred to as a prostitute by the antagonists clearly isn’t consenting to her situation. Later, she is found tied up in the basement.
The Plumber (Movie)
A character makes an ambiguous comment about having gone to prison for rape.
Poetry (Shi) (Movie)
The film follows a woman whose grandson (a teenager) repeatedly raped a girl with his friends, leading her to kill herself. Throughout the movie, we see the fathers of the rapists trying to pay a settlement to avert a police investigation. The main female protagonist works as a caretaker for a elderly stroke victim. One day, the man takes Viagra before she has to wash him, grasps her and asks her to have a sex with him. She gets out and quits her job. However, she later comes back and agrees to have sex with him.
A woman seduces a man with the intent of distracting him but it is quite clear from her face how uncomfortable she is.
Throughout the film, the father has a sexual relationship with his daughters teenage friend who is staying in their home.
Pokemon (TV Show)
A main character asks reluctant women to date him in nearly every episode.
A girl kisses a boy who is visibly uncomfortable.
Polar (Movie)
A character describes her sexual assault as a teen.
There are a lot of jokes at the expense of women. A man pretending to be in a position of power tells a woman to give him her phone number and to show him her thighs. This main character continues to harass her throughout the movie. The men are called female names and "girls" as insults. In addition to sexism and racism, it is also worth nothing that slurs against LGBTQ+ folks are thrown around and supposed to be funny. This is the source of "comedy" through the entire film.
Police Story (Movie)
This film is about a cop protecting a female witness in a drug-lord trial. She is constantly chased, grabbed, pushed, kidnapped and mistreated throughout. Early in the film, the protagonist tries to convince her to accept his protection by hiring another cop to pretend he is a criminal trying to kill her. This fake killer breaks into her house while she is in her gown and acts like he is actively trying to kill her with a knife. During a comic scene in the police station , the protagonist tries to cope with different phone calls from people who need the police. One call is from a rape victim: she is ridiculed when she says that she was raped one year earlier and that she is seeking abortion pills.
In order to push a criminal to confess, female cops threaten to wrongfully accuse him of having raped a child. Female characters are slapped several times throughout the film.
A female character is drugged and has experiments conducted on her womb and vagina without her consent.
The Politician (TV Show)
In season 2, one character is harassing a couple of women, asking for a date multiple times after they said no and looked uncomfortable, implying that he « received mixed messages ». At one point, he fires one of them because she refused his advances.
Poltergay (Movie)
A woman's clothing is removed by an invisible force.
Polyester (Movie)
A slave is 'inspected' by a woman who feels his behind and says that it is firm. She then enquires about his 'weaponry' and is told that she must pay to see it.
Pootie Tang (Movie)
Pop Team Epic (TV Show)
S2E3: girls say someone is sexually harassing them. S2E8: the perverted man from S2E3 makes another perverted jokes.
Populaire (Movie)
This film is about a romance between a female secretary and her male boss. There is a clear imbalance of power between them and the movie contains many inappropriate moves, looks, and words from the man towards the woman. All is portrayed as normal, romantic or played for laughs. Another man also unconsensually kisses the female protagonist.
A man passes by a room where a woman is changing with the door cracked open. He stays and looks at her for a few moments then leaves.
Porco Rosso (Movie)
Towards the end of the movie, there is a sub-plot in which a seventeen-year-old girl is going to be forced to marry an adult. However, the context for this is light-hearted (the teenage girl has put herself up as the prize in a bet, confident that the person she is backing will not lose) and there is no real threat that the girl will really be forced to follow through with the marriage.
A much older man takes a 17 year old girl to dinner in hopes of having sex with her. She goes to the dinner to get revenge on him for ruining the high school play: nothing sexual happens between them. A group of teenagers force a bunch off KKK members to get circumcised by their Jewish friend. When the KKK members try to leave they threaten them with violence. The teenagers parade the naked KKK members through a assembly of Christians extremists and politicians.
Porno (Movie)
Two teenage boys spy on a couple having sex. Throughout the film, it is mentioned that they do this regularly. It is revealed that a man has installed a camera in the women's toilets for the purpose of spying on the women there.
In the last story, a man is tied to a chair by three sorority sisters. One of them kisses him and grabs his penis through his clothes. It is revealed that he slept with all three of them as a fraternity bet. In other scenes, the other fraternity pledges are being paddled by their frat members as part of their hazing.
Portlandia (TV Show)
S8E2: this episode deals with sexual harassment in a feminist way that highlights the issue of workplace sexual harassment, but also lists several instances of it that could be upsetting. The show in general is socially conscious.
The main character kisses a woman without her consent.
Possessor (Movie)
This film is about a woman possessing a man's body and using it to kill people. Whilst she is in his body, she has sex with his girlfriend. Early in a film, a man jokingly tells about a monster going between the thighs of sleeping women to feed on their menstruations. Later on, a man unknowingly watches a couple having sex via their webcam (this is part of his job).
The film follows two women being followed by, as they describe, 'violent men'.
A man mentions having sex with a woman whilst she was very intoxicated, to the point where the woman cannot remember if it happened or not.
A minor female character was previously raped by her employer, and is now ostracized for her unmarried pregnant state. Her experiences are never described in detail, but are mentioned often (sympathetically). A major female character is forced to partially undress in front of antagonistic men. A friend quickly covers her with his own waistcoat.
Poyopoyo (TV Show)
Worthy of note: one cat humps other cats and people.
S1E6: incest is mentioned.
Pray Away (Movie)
A speaker discusses being exploited for the ex-gay movement, being required to share the story of her rape as a way to justify why she ended up being a lesbian.
There is a discussion of attempted non consensual penetration. Worthy of note: the film contains multiple scenes of sex under the influence of alcohol and BDSM scenes.
Predator 2 (Movie)
A rival gang breaks into an apartment while a couple is having sex. The woman is not assaulted, but she is held naked in a room of strangers. While on a subway, gang members grope and harass several women. Several rape jokes are made throughout the film.
Predators (Movie)
One character makes a gratuitous comment about the one female character's body, and later states he wishes he was back home "raping women".
Chapter 10: mentions of sex trafficking. Chapter 17: prison rape joke.
Pretty Blood (TV Show)
An adult man interrogates a cat malino before sending him to a jupiter-like planet as his execution. The first goes through the second's criminal record while reading it out loud. One of the charges being taken towards a girl the second kidnapped.
One character communicates that they wish they could become an adult with another character while in bed with another one (Sailor Moon), and flirts with him. It is communicated that the second character is her father in the future. Sailor Moon wishes that she were a child, so that she could receive all the care and attention from her boyfriend. Two characters reverse ages later in the show: another character later has a conversation with a female character, and remarks being “thrown off” by her being a child, as if to imply that he would have preferred to kiss her or be close with her. Later, Sailor Mars is in a wedding dress as another character (inner child), whose deepest desire is revealed to her: the inner child in bride dress leans in for a kiss with a villain and full-grown adult.
An adult woman has sex with 17 year old boy early on in the film.
In the manga, the titular character (who is 14 years old) entertains a relation with an older boy (who is 17 years old). In the anime, the boy is supposedly older, even if his age is never clearly stated (he is in college). Season 1: a young girl character falls in unrequited love with an adult villain. He uses these feelings to manipulate her into meeting up with him alone to lure out the titular character on multiple occasions. At the end of this arc, he genuinely falls in love with the girl before dying. Additionnally, an episode shows a middle school student admitting to spying on/taking photos of his unknowing teacher. S2E37: the titular character is captured by a male antagonist. She falls unconscious and wakes up on a bed in different clothing. The villain tells her that he would “do anything to make her his", and is about to physically force her to kiss him when another man intervenes at the last second.
Prey (2019) (Movie)
Rape is mentioned by the main character when he first arrives on the island in a historical context ("the settlers raped the land").
Prey (2022) (Movie)
The main character (a young woman) is captured by a group of hostile men, who keep her in a cage: they imply several times, physically and verbally, that they will (or would like to) rape her.
A man mentions that his sister was raped and became pregnant from it, but lost the baby.
A man equates homosexuality to paedophilia.
A man in his 30s elopes with a 14 years old girl.
An man elopes with a 15 year-old girl. Some other adults treat this as normal and fine, while others are horrified.
A man at a gas station makes lewd gestures towards a woman getting gas. Later she and her husband encounter the same group in the woods where they make several suggestive comments and keep a generally unsettling atmosphere. After being captured and tied up by the creature, it rips open the back of her shirt and touches her skin.
In this movie, "Evil" is transmitted via a liquid: it mostly takes place with a possessed character 'projecting' the liquid into the victims' mouth.
There are one or two instances of sexual harassment that are quickly resolved.
A slave woman is presented to two princes as a gift. They proceed to sexually harass her. Worth of note: a central theme of the film is slavery, which has many implications of sexual violence. There are many depictions of violence done to enslaved people.
One character has sex with someone who they think may be mad and not aware of his surroundings, thus not be capable of consenting. It is also implied that she is coerced into doing so because a king tells her to and could kill her if she does not: he kills other people for disobeying him.
A woman mentions how she has often had to escape the 'advances' men have made towards her.
A teenage boy forcibly kisses a teenage girl in front of a crowd of people. The main character is sabotaged into undressing and photographed without her consent. She is later victim-blamed instead of being helped.
For the sake of her dream, the female protagonist kisses a frog despite being very uncomfortable with it (29:24-29:37). Stuck in a hollow tree, a male character flirts with the female protagonist off-screen and it is implied he tries to get close to her: she slaps him away (35:34-35:48). The scene is meant to be funny. In the very last scene, a full grown woman dances with a 6 year old and says she will wait til he is an adult and marry him.
Princess Nine (TV Show)
Several supporting characters are former prostitutes, who were rescued from brothels and brought to work in an iron town. No clear sexual assault is shown, but there are occasional references to their past (such as some women joking that in their current town, the men know their place).
Princess Tutu (TV Show)
This series is dark, and there are many elements of abuse and manipulation. There is one scene that can be considered sexual assault in the form of a forced kiss. All other abuse and/or assault is non-sexual in nature. There are uncomfortable moments in which a teacher makes verbally suggestive advances towards their students.
In one scene, there is audio from a radio show where people are debating the treatment of and policy related to sex offenders (38:54-41:22). One person says that laws need to be stricter and that the community needs to "stand with the parents and the kids." Another argues that most instances of child sexual assault are at the hands of someone the child knows, such as a family member, teacher, or clergyman, not a stranger on the sex offender registry.
Two characters who are engaged to be married are stated multiple times to be cousins, though nobody treats this as unusual because they are royalty. "How close" of cousins they are is never noted.
Private Life (Movie)
A woman tells her father that her former lover (the protagonist) raped her several times a few days earlier. This is a lie used to cause him discomfort: the sexual encounter in question was shown beforehand and was consensual. At some point, a man touches the bottom of a woman in an elevator without asking her: she seems to enjoy it and they talk together once they leave the elevator.
S1E10 (Magic Clock): a character claims herself to be another character's biggest fan, and is unhealthily obsessed with him. It was made clear multiple times in the episode that the other character is extremely uncomfortable around her and made uncomfortable by her advances towards him.
Problemos (Movie)
Repeated jokes are made about an adult wanting to have sex with a teenager. At one point it is implied that he raped her, but he denies this.
Prodigal Son (TV Show)
Although there is no sexual assault, there are some murders with sexual undertones throughout the series. One of the main characters is a psychopathic serial killer who is obsessed with his adult children. It is revealed that he would drug his son as a young child with chloroform and groom his son to help him torture and murder his victims. Again, no sexual violence, but the relationship is abusive in a unique way and could easily be read as a metaphor for child sexual abuse. S1E9: a woman aggressively comes onto a man and tells him "we're going to have sex." as a statement and not a question. He never actually consents to it and is nervous and clearly uncomfortable, and is seen stumbling backwards while she advances on him. She slaps him across the face without any prior negotiation/warning, kisses him, throws him down on his bed, and rips his shirt open all while he awkwardly protests and clearly does not want it at all. The scene stops there when she finds he is wired with a mic and they are interrupted by his team (about 18 minutes into the episode). S2E12: a woman kisses a man who she previously had consensual sex with, but he is physically unable to move away and clearly does not consent to be kissed.
The film contains several rape (and sexual harassment) jokes (mostly during the first scene, and one of the last scenes).
The male protagonist has sexual relationships with many older women. He is not interested in these relationships and is only doing so in order to solicit money to fund his musicals. He catcalls women from his balcony.
This movie is about a ménage a trois which started when a couple of university professors started a romantic and sexual relationship with one of their students. An engaged woman tells a married woman that she loves her, and forcibly kisses her. The married woman eventually kisses her back before pushing her away. A woman is shown repeatedly spanking one of her fellow sorority sisters with a pallet, due to initiation rites. The scene has clear sexual undertones and is unwanted for both parties.
Prom Dates (Movie)
There is sexual harassment on screen consistently throughout the whole movie and also other uncomfortable sexual scenes. These scenes include: A teenage girl pulling down her shorts, briefly revealing her naked bottom to an adult janitor without his consent, acting like she is doing him a favor. A man catcalling a woman from a van (she then proceeds to actually get in the car and later has consensual sex with him). A girl trying to lose her virginity on prom night, talking about who she will have sex with in a very unenthusiastic manner and it seems like she actually does not want to have sex with any of the men: she proceeds to make out with a boy but does not sleep with him, prompting him to become upset and telling her that he will find another prom date to sleep with him. A man groping a girl in the hallway and later aggressively kissing her without her consent wearing a ski mask and harassing her in the cafeteria while only one person even attempts to help her in any way and dozens of people just stand around doing nothing. He gets suspended for this but is still allowed at the prom. A teenage boy makes unwanted sexual comments to a group of teenage girls.
The premise of the movie is a high school teacher romantically obsessed with a teenage girl. There is a scene where three young women enter an elevator with several older men who proceed to "flirt" with them and invite them to their hotel rooms, taking advantage of the situation in which they cannot leave. They do not touch the girls.
Throughout the movie, a girl constantly tries to start a relationship with a boy which clearly the boy uncomfortable.
A man talks about how he was sexually abused. A woman makes sexual advances on her best friend which clearly makes her uncomfortable however the woman quickly redacts it and says it was just a test to see if the friend is gay. A man records a couple have sex without their consent.
The Promise (Movie)
The movie shows a lot of horrors of war and genocide, and though sexual assault is never explicitly mentioned or implied, there are images of women being chased/pulled.
An unnamed teenage character circulates revenge porn of an ex-girlfriend. His phone gets confiscated and school resource officers also circulate these photos. A school nurse recalls inappropriate touching from the principal.
The premise of the film is that a female boss forces her young male assistant to marry her. A man puts his hand on a woman's ass without her consent and she asks him to take her hand off. He does it again later in the film and she threatens him. A woman is given a lap dance and she look uncomfortable throughout.
The Protege (Movie)
A man pulls open the over shirt of a preteen girl, then gathers bedding with the intent to assault her (1:36:43-1:37:00). He is killed well before that can happen.
The Prowler (Movie)
Psych (TV Show)
S2E3: a man sniffs a woman he has previously flirted with. She is uncomforable with the sniffing. S2E12: a teenager harasses an adult woman by flirting with her. She is uncomfortable. S4E2: one of the main protagonists slaps another man on the butt without asking. S5E2: a police officer mentions a case that involves a serial rapist. S5E9: a woman potrayed as "crazy" makes advances on the protagonist and starts to kiss him though he is not interested in her. S5E12: a relationship between an adult woman and a teenage boy is mentioned. The father of the boy mentions that his son was "taken advantage of". S6E2: a group of characters are drugged and one character speculates that this was because someone was trying to take advantage of him sexually. The other characters dismiss this. S7E2: a man grabs another man's buttocks non-consensually. This episode also centers around women who are murdered for rejecting an antagonist, who makes some misogynistic comments about his motivation for murder.
The game is an Otome game. The player is a high school girl that has the opportunity of being in several relationships with boys in the game. Hikage Route: - Hikage is a shape shifting entity that takes on the appearance of a high school boy, who implied being several hundred years old in comparison to the rest of the cast. Just from that alone, the player may feel uncomfortable as the main character is a 17 year old high school girl. At some point, he forcibly kisses the main character, which she is shown to be extremely distressed about. Yamato: - There is no sexual harassment and he is the same age as the player character. Monshiro: - He is the same age as the player character, but the game portrays his mental age as being younger than his physical appearance. He has circumstances that make him act like a small child and the other characters dote on him. With that said, a player might find it uncomfortable based on his implied mental age to do his route. Karasuba: - This character is by far the most egregious when it comes to sexual harassment and assault. He is constantly teasing the main character, playing 'jokes' and 'pranks' on her. There are several scenes of her grabbing her when she tells him to stop or making sexual innuendos which is also played off by her brushing him off. In his bad ending, he traps her in a world where only he and she , making her forget about her other friends, so he'll stay there forever with him. In the final scene of this ending, despite her saying no twice he traps her on a bed and kisses her several times. Kagiha: - This character is about two to three years older than our main character. There is no sexual harassment in the main game, but similar to Karasuba in his 'bad route end,' in Kagiha's ' bad ending ' he tricks her mind into an alternate world where they act out as if they're married.
S1E7: a woman rips the shirt off the male protagonist and caresses his chest. She then tasers him. S1E8: it is implied that the mother of the male protagonist was kidnapped, raped and impregnated by the antagonist. They do not go into detail and this is not further discussed.
Psycho (1960) (Movie)
A man spies on a woman undressing without her knowledge or consent. A woman is murdered in the shower; there is no nudity shown.
Psycho (1998) (Movie)
A man spies on a woman undressing without her knowledge or consent while masturbating. A woman is murdered in the shower; there is no nudity shown.
Psycho II (Movie)
A woman is watched through a peephole while she showers, similar to the first Psycho movie. A waitress is sexually harassed by a customer and has uncomfortable comments made about her sex life. Two teens break into the main characters basement to have sex.
During a very short scene, a drunk man grabs a woman by her shoulder while asking for her name. She clearly feels uncomfortable about it. Worthy of note : later in the movie, a woman gets slapped many times during an interrogation. A man also hit her with a book.
Pucca (TV Show)
The protagonist pursues the male lead constantly throughout the series, even kissing him multiple times. However the male lead's consent is dubious.
S1E8: two men discuss abusing their girlfriends. S1E10: through symbolism, it is implied that one woman (a witch) is a rape victim. She appears a spider made up of hands coming out of a schoolgirl's skirt. Her minions take the form of the lower half of the body (a short skirt with legs). The witch's domain is also shown to be laundry themed, with her repeatedly washing her clothes.
Near the end of the movie, the protagonist (Homura) reunites with the deuteragonist (Madoka) as Madoka comes to rescue her and take her to the afterlife, but Homura grabs Madoka by the hands as she forcibly takes away Madoka's magical powers, and refuses to let go of Madoka when she protests - this is then followed up by several potentially disturbing comments (such as Homura saying she "will never let go" of Madoka ever again, that the emotion that cursed her soul gem - which is relevant both in the original series and this movie as an emotion-based magic source - is reserved only for Madoka, and later confirming that her actions were inspired by love). Whether or not this can be seen as a sexual assault allegory depends on audience interpretation, but some parts still may be disturbing for sexual assault victims.
Pulse (Tv) (TV Show)
The whole series revolves around a sexual harassment claim.
Pumpkin Scissors (TV Show)
Dialogue from the first few pages of the book: "My boss wouldn't let me leave early. Not unless I did him a 'special favor.'" "Gross, what a dirtbag!" "But don't worry, friends, I did him one better ... and kicked him in the huevos."
At 12:25, a girl says she will shout 'rape'.
Purple Rain (Movie)
A man tries to get a drunk woman to get into a limo with him, but is stopped. Worthy of note: there are a few scenes of [non-sexual] spousal abuse.
Pushing Daisies (TV Show)
A female character has an unrequited crush on a male character who has told her he does not feel the same. Despite this, she continues to make advances and at one point kisses him without asking.
Puss in Boots (Movie)
A character makes a prison rape joke.
PVT Chat (Movie)
A man follows a woman home. He later breaks into her home and hides there whilst she and her boyfriend are at home. A woman mentions how a play makes her feel 'raped'.
The Pyramid (Movie)
A woman is filmed without her consent by a robot as she is undressing. It is later revealed that the robot belonged to her boyfriend, who used this as a form of teasing.
Q Force (TV Show)
S1E7: a main character dresses up and takes another character out on a date, pretending to be someone else: he kisses him.
A window washer washes a window with a woman's office on the other side: it is mentioned that he has repeatedly washed the window in the past and does so specifically so that he can see her (01:45-02:41). A man watches a woman sunbathe topless through a telescope (05:58-06:50). Worthy of note: a woman mentions being hit by her boyfriend.
S1E2: one "seeker" user their debugging mode to sexually exploit female NPC's.
Queen Crab (Movie)
While at a bar, a man hits on a woman and leans in to press against her: she has to push him away and he chases her out of the bar. A man picks up a woman who is hitchhiking. He tries to coerce her into sex and grabs her to keep her from leaving the car, but she is able to get out and away from him.
In one scene, the protagonist speaks with a man who openly stares at her body in a sexual way while he is talking to her. The protagonist's brother reacts strongly against her, a Black woman, being in a relationship with a white man because of the history of white men raping Black women. In the climax of the book, the protagonist's brother reveals that he and a friend of the family used to take turns having sex with their employer's wife. It is unclear in the narrative whether the wife actually agreed to this, but regardless, the brother and the friend were teenagers.
The main character (who is a teenager aged around 16-17) has sex with a college student after smoking weed with him.
A male character tells one of the female protagonists that she would have to "sleep her way to the top" in order to make it in Hollywood.
Queer Eye (TV Show)
In season 6, a woman mentions having been forced to marry at 16 after accidentally getting pregnant. She has had 7 kids, and it is implied that it was with the man she was forced to marry. It is not heavily pressed on.
The main character's last girlfriend was emotionally abusive and cheated repeatedly. At one point during the story, that ex initiates an unexpected unwanted kiss.
There is a brief catcalling scene towards the beginning of the book.
In one scene, a man kisses a woman; she initially resists him. Although the scene is not sexual in nature, it is worth noting that, at another point, he drags her for approximately five miles against her will, occasionally kicking or throwing her.
A group of adult men rub and touch a teenage girl on her hair, head, arms, and torso (1:03:35-1:04:48). They take off her jacket and backpack, and a man gazes at her in a sexual manner before starting to lead her away. She escapes by diving into water.
Serbian soldiers cat-call women throughout the film, and one gropes a woman while searching her for weapons. Near the end of the movie, one soldier restrains a woman while her husband is taken away: it could be thought that she will be sexually assaulted off-screen.
Rabi-Ribi (Video Game)
The main characters are sexually harassed by strangers when they teleport to the city. Lewd photographs are taken of one of the main characters without her consent, and the CG is shown on-screen.
Rabid (2019) (Movie)
Rabies (Movie)
A young woman is groped by a police officer.
There is passing mention of Tarana Burke and the #MeToo movement, but the author does not describe the movement. The author references racist and eugenicist medical reproductive violations, specifically forced sterilizations, Marion Sims' gynecological experiments on unconsenting enslaved women, and the display and dissection of the genitals of Sarah Baartman.
Radiant (TV Show)
S1E17: a 20 year old woman kisses a 15 year old boy: he is shocked.
The protagonist mentions carrying a rape whistle and fearing sexual assault when out at night. While at a party, a stranger grabs the protagonist's behind while she is dancing.
Rafiki (Movie)
A woman receives conversion therapy connected to religion: she is surrounded by friends and family praying for her to be cured. Worthy of note: the two main characters are violently attacked by a group of men in an act of homophobia.
A sixteen-year-old girl commits suicide after having sex with an eighteen-year-old boy. There is mention of this being statutory rape. Another girl is manhandled and shown a video of her having sex with a boy that was filmed without her consent.
A man makes several innuendos towards a woman and she is shown to be visibly uncomfortable.
Raging Bull (Movie)
The main character is 24 when he pursues 15 year old girl. Her ages is discussed before so he is aware but the age gap is not seen or talked about as problomatic by any of the character. He also kisses a 14 year old girl in the bar that he owns after she is questioned if she is 21. He asks her to prove it by kissing him after which he says only a 21 year old could kiss like that. He is also generaly physically and mentally abusive to his wife and also his brother.
Raging Grace (Movie)
Toward the beginning of the film, a montage of the protagonist's experiences while working as a cleaner contains a brief scene where a man touches himself and moans while she is bent over cleaning a stain off the floor. No physical contact occurs. She turns around distressed and begins cleaning the stain again and the montage continues. The main plot focuses on an undocumented mother who begins working off books as a full-time live-in caregiver for a wealthy family. The mother sneaks her young daughter (aged ~8-10) into the house, and it is implied no one knows she officially exists. An elderly man is introduced who displays grooming behaviors towards the daughter such as isolating her from her mother, asking her to call him "grandpa", etc. It is revealed that the protagonist's daughter was the product of a sexual assault; the elderly man threatens to reveal this to her daughter and uses this to further separate them emotionally. The elderly character displays increasingly racist, fetishizing behavior towards both of them. It is revealed that this man has previously killed a woman of the same nationality and kept her preserved in a case in the basement. At the climax of the film, when the old man and young girl are alone in the house, he begins to act malicious, but his intentions are left somewhat ambiguous (though the anticipation of potential assault will likely be present for many with sa trauma, as it was for me). He threatens to put her in a glass box and tries to attack her, but is ultimately killed. The neice of this character also has a major role in this story. It is never overtly discussed, but it is implied that she has some form of extensive trauma resulting from their relationship which, given her uncle's actions throughout the film, could be sexual in nature.
Chapter 11: there is a non-graphic mention of a child who was born as a result of rape.
The female protagonist is repeatedly threatened and kidnapped throughout the film. She repeatedly says things like 'get your hands off me' and is ignored. She is spied on while changing, and a man says that he is going to sell her, assumedly into sex trafficking. Another man grabs her and implies he is going to rape her, and says that he will let other men have her if she does not please him.
The female lead is paid to fake-date the male lead: she expresses discomfort with physical touching. The male lead expresses concern over being her boss and making her feel pressured to do things. The male lead does not ask for consent before kissing the female lead, instead saying "I'm going to kiss you now" in a more demanding way. Two non-lead characters are implied to have won another non-lead female character as a prize, and might do sexual things. The female character does not vocally consent and later confesses that her father is forcing her into doing these things for his own motive. The female and male leads argue over the power imbalance of boss x employee: they end up together.
Rain Dogs (TV Show)
The main character works in the sex trade as a stripper. Rape is mentioned casually in most episodes, including incest/child rape. S1E1: a woman is financially coerced into wearing revealing clothes, and it is clear that she is afraid of further violation. S1E3: the woman wakes up to a man masturbating beside her. S1E6: the woman participates in 'camgirling,' where men get off to listening to abuse stories from women in a refuge. They ask for details of injuries to help them get off sexually. A mentally unwell woman masturbates in front of a man in a hospital ward.
The Rainmaker (Movie)
A woman victim of domestic abuse talks about how her husband mistreats her by being obsessed with sex. A prostitute is briefly seen being groped. A woman says that she had to have sex with different people in the company to improve her rankings.
The film focuses on the rivalries between the four wives of a wealthy man. Based on the backstory of the protagonist (forced to marry the man because her family is bankrupt), it can be assumed that none of the women voluntarily joined the household. In the last part of the movie, one of the wives is dragged to a lone room (on-screen) and hanged to death (off-screen) for having being unfaithful.
Raising Dion (TV Show)
A family friend kisses the protagonist‘s mother. She is visibly uncomfortable after the fact and ask him not to do it again. In subsequent episodes, the family friend character acts entitled, being angry that she rejected him.
Raising Hope (TV Show)
Rape is used as a punchline multiple times in the series. Many times it is applied as a humorous device (for example, a dog humping and breaking a lamp). There also is a scene where a character describes a relationship as starting with a date rape which is still played off as a joke.
Rambo III (Movie)
One character mentions that Soviet soldiers rape Afghan women. We later see women imprisoned in a Soviet base.
Ramona (Movie)
Rampo (Movie)
In one scene, a man shows a woman projected footage in which he binds the hands of naked women behind their backs and proceeds to grope them. He then ties the woman's hands behind her back and smears her bare back with the makeup he's wearing on his face.
Ramy (TV Show)
A recurring theme at the end of season 1 and throughout season 2 is a romantic and sexual relationship between two first cousins. They claim it is okay because they were not raised together and met in adulthood. S1E8: an adult man and a high school girl pursue a romantic and sexual relationship with each other. However, nothing actually happens between them, and they change their minds.
The Ranch (TV Show)
One of the main character's actor was convicted of two accounts of rape in real life. His character catcalls and makes suggestive comments throughout the show but the female characters brush it off or find it funny. His character dies in S6E3.
A murderer kills several women throughout the film: near the end of the movie, he is standing on a wounded woman lying on the floor before killing her.
Ranma 12 (TV Show)
Underage age characters are over-sexualized. Teenage girls get sexually harassed constantly throughout the series for the laughs and fan service. The main character gets married off without his consent several times for the laughs and plot reasons.
Ravenswood (Movie)
A man tries several times to try and pressure his girlfriend into having sex even though she has said she is not ready. Later she tells someone else that she had been raped.
Raw (Movie)
The film contains violation of conditional consent.
Ray (Movie)
Re-Kan! (TV Show)
Throughout the series, a lecherous talking cat frequently, sometimes repeatedly, harasses the female characters asking to see or get pictures of their underwear. However the rest of the supernatural cast typically punish him severely for doing so.
The Reader (Movie)
The first half of the movie focuses on the romantic relationship between a woman in her thirties and a boy who is 15.
This film portrays the way conversations around sexual assault get derailed when abusers are given a platform to speak their side of events. Major details are not given around the sexual violence but it is mentioned and discussed throughout, often adjacently.
REA(L)OVE (TV Show)
The show handles rape and sexual assault as jokes. One of the constants victim blames another contestant, which may be triggering for survivors. S1E7: a man describes how he was raped by a woman.
Reap (Movie)
News headlines regarding a man being caught with pornographic material/sexually abusing minors are shown.
A man watches a woman dress without her knowledge. In another scene, the same man observes a young man forcefully kissing an older woman and then being pushed out of the woman's apartment. This is also seen through a window without their knowledge.
History of incest, it is very subtly implied that a man's first wife was a sexual predator.
Rebecca (2020) (TV Show)
A sexual relationship between two adult cousins is discussed, although the characters are not shown interacting. A man teaches a woman to ride a horse by sitting behind her and touching her thighs. The things he says have double meanings. The film contains gaslighting and emotional abuse between two people living in the same house. SPOILER: it is revealed that a man killed his wife because she cheated on him. The film portrays him as the victim.
The Rebound (Movie)
Reckless (Movie)
A woman is violently kidnapped by two men, who blindfold her and tie her to a bed. They cut all her clothes off in a very intense scene and take pictures of her naked body. One of the kidnappers later reviews these pictures with obvious interest. When she needs to urinate, they pull her trousers and underwear down and force a plastic bucket between her legs. At one point, she initiates some passionate kissing with one of the kidnappers in a desperate attempt to manipulate him. Although the men never force themselves upon the woman, the implicit threat of rape is present for much of the movie. The woman spends the majority of the movie tied up and unable to defend herself against whatever the kidnappers may decide to do to her, and this uncertainty is used as a major source of narrative tension. The men also kiss each other, and it is implied that this is not consensual, but is one of the kidnappers' own desperate attempt to manipulate his partner.
Chapter 4: a man is threatened with being forced to perform oral sex on another man. The act does not happen and the threat does not hang over the character’s head afterward.
After discovering the dead body of her teenage daughter's lover, a housewife takes desperate measures to protect her family from scandal.
Teenagers are pressured into taking illicit photos of themselves and posting them online. A teenage girl and her girlfriend have consensual sex, but are filmed against their will, and the footage is leaked specifically to incite a homophobic harassment campaign against one of them.
S1E3: a domestic violence situation and sexual assault is implied. A man changes in front of two other men as a means of a powerplay to make them uncomfortable. S1E6: a date is used as leverage for a covert operation. S1E7: an undercover agent must pretend to be a boy toy for someone. He makes a joke about filing a complaint with HR, since he has been trying not to have sex with the CIA asset, since she has been trying to coerce him into sex. It is revealed halfway through season 2 that someone was assigned to be in a relationship with someone/is a honeypot. They have a lot of sex before she knows about it.
Rectify (TV Show)
S1E2: the main character discusses being assaulted in prison in non-graphic terms, but bluntly.
RED (Movie)
A man asks a woman to fix something for him so that she will bend over in front of him.
Red Desert (Movie)
Red Dot (Movie)
The film contains a threatened forced abortion by particularly violent means. Worthy of note: a man confronts the main female character at a gas station and it seems like he may sexually harass or assault her. This is not the case.
Red Dwarf (TV Show)
S2E6: a female character starts flirting with a male character, using pickup tactics he is familiar with. The man makes it known that he is not interested but the woman forces herself onto him and says that he is asking for it by "wearing tight trousers." S3E2: a man describes losing his virginity and reveals that he was 12 years old when this happened, without specifying how old the woman involved was. However, he does say that she was "gorgeous enough to work at a perfume shop", which implies that she was older (but possibly younger than 18).
The main character tells a story about a man attacking her: rape is heavily implied.
Red Heat (Movie)
It is mentioned that a character is wanted for rape and that his father was convicted of raping women during World War II. A male character receives an injection in his buttocks from a female nurse who then slaps him on the buttocks when he complains about the injection.
There is enthusiastically consensual incest between two cousins. The narrative jokes about it repeatedly. One male lead pursues the other in ways that cross the line into sexual harassment a few times. The impact is softened as chemistry develops between them.
Red Notice (Movie)
One of the characters say something completely normal and the other person who is talking to him makes it seem like it was about sexually assaulting someone. A man says that he had a boned when a woman beated him. A woman puts an electrode in a man's genitals.
In one scene, a mentally ill woman implies that she murdered her father, who she says was guilty of having raped her. She speaks about this incident in detail, albeit briefly. This scene is played as darkly comedic.
A character has romantic feelings for a boy who is later revealed to be her half-brother. However, nothing ever happened between them, as her mother knew the truth and kept them away from each other.
Red Road (Movie)
A woman falsely accuses a man of rape following a consensual sex scene.
Red Rocket (Movie)
The main character grooms and has multiple sex scenes with a 17-year-old girl about to turn 18.
Red Rose (2022) (TV Show)
A teenage boy is kissed twice at parties without his consent, and to his apparent surprise, by girls: one of the girls is making a point, the other has been blackmailed into kissing him. That teenage characters have consensual sex offscreen is implied: their exact age is not stated but judging by contextual factors they are c. 16. A plot line involves a girl being watched by her stalker through her laptop webcam. This includes a scene where she is being watched as she is about to undress, although the stalker opts not to watch this. The stalker is presented somewhat sympathetically, as if this is understandable behaviour for a lonely teenage boy. Because he then shares access to her webcam with multiple strangers on the internet, it is implied that she may have been watched in further intimate moments by them. It is mentioned in passing that child abuse images were loaded onto his computer by somebody else.
As a forfeit for a game, a woman is forced to undress. Additionally, it is mentioned that people participating in this game are also raped as a result of losing. A woman walking through the street is spoken to threateningly by a man who (verbally) threatens to either force her to perform oral sex or rob her. A woman pretending to be a servant comes across a man who says he will only help her if she has sex with him, though she does not.
A 16-year-old girl tries throughout to run away from an older man her family has married her off to without her consent.
There are elements throughout the movie that imply sexual violence, though nothing ever happens to the knowledge of the audience.
The Rehearsal (Movie)
An ongoing subplot centres around an adult man who is engaged in a sexual relationship with a 15-year-old girl. The sister of this girl sees the two of them having sex, which causes a scandal. When talking to the older sister about this incident, a man asks if her little sister was raped. The older sister reassures him that the encounter seemed consensual.
There is a passing mention of Ernesto Miranda, the person for whom "Miranda rights" are named, who was arrested for rape and kidnapping.
A man is falsely accused of rape. This is a major part of the plot and gets mentioned several times troughout the entire series. S1E6: a man grabs and forcefully kisses a woman (about 45 minutes in).
A woman slaps a man after he kisses her without her approval.
In a locker room scene, a male character kisses another man without his consent. The scene is played off as a joke despite the the man being obviously distraught and angered over the matter. This is barely brought up later in the film, as a means of playing off the first character's ambiguous sexuality.
The protagonist, a child, kills an adult man in self defense who would have dragged her into an alley.
Rent (Movie)
A woman implies that she has been cat-called and viewed sexually since puberty.
Rent-A-Pal (Movie)
A character says: "men are entitled to what they want" in reference to a girl turning him down. He follows with "I eventually got what I wanted". No details are added, and the audience does not know if this is referring to anything real.
The Rental (Movie)
One character watches people showering without their consent.
Rentaneko (Movie)
A man stalks a woman back to her house despite her asking him to leave her alone.
A rape joke is made early in the film. Rape is also mentioned (and ruled-out) as part as an investigation about a murdered woman.
Reptisaurus (Movie)
There is one mention of an attempted rape in the past.
A graphic joke is made about the fact that a character was raped in prison.
Resident Evil 4 (Video Game)
A sexual jab is made at a female character with large breasts, and she is upset by this.
S1E4: someone makes a joke about a priest and a choir boy.
A male truck driver hits on a woman hitchhiker he picks up. He puts his hand on her leg and asks if she would rather stay with him than get dropped off: it goes no further than that.
The male antagonist grabs the female protagonist's face, gets very close, smells it, and licks her nose (1:18:08-1:18:41).
Resurrection (Movie)
Retribution (TV Show)
Two female ghosts undress in front of a woman: they then begin kissing her without her consent.
Returner (Movie)
The main villain, a yakuza, grabs a female scientist by her breast and licks her cheek. She is angry but does not say anything: the movie goes on and it is not adressed.
A man makes unwanted advances to a girl he is holding at gun point. He asks if he can keep her, but she is rescued before anything can happen.
There is passing mention of how Melvil Dewey (the father of American library science and the creator of the Dewey Decimal System) sexually harassed the college students under his tutelage. Worthy of note: in one chapter, two 12-year-olds are caught looking at porn on a public computer.
This series briefly discusses rape of colonial women by British officers. It also briefly discusses rape allegations as propaganda.
The chapter called "Pursuing a Radical Anti-Violence Agenda Inside/Outside a Non-Profit Structure" focuses on a group called the Coalition Against Rape and Abuse (CARA).
The author discusses the clinical ramifications of sexual assault and rape for survivors. At another point, he talks about the sexualisation of father-daughter relationships which can occur as a result of pornography consumption, using a specific case study in which a man began thinking about his daughter in sexual terms as an example.
Characters discuss memories of being raped by a man in a position of power; this is a central plot point. The effects of domestic violence are also depicted.
A student gawks at other female students and talks about them in a sexual manner.
It is mentioned that two characters were sexuallly assault edin the past and suffer from their trauma: one of them was a sex slave and we see him tied in a submissive position.
A little boy defecates in the mountains while an old man accompanying him takes photos of him and records it.
Near the end of the film, the female protagonist interviews online for a new job as a flight attendant, which is quite objectifying (asking her to get up, turn around, explain how she stays in shape, etc.). The interviewer also asks her what she would do if one passenger makes inappropriate comments to her.
Someone threatens to rape a man’s girlfriend: she is captured but no sexual violence occurs.
Rings (2017) (Movie)
A college professor dates and sleeps with his student towards the beginning of the film. The relationship is mostly minor to the movie. There are no explicit scenes between the two, everything is implied. It is revealed that a woman's mother was kidnapped and raped by their town's priest; this is never shown on screen but is discussed by multiple characters rather in-depth in the second half of the movie.
The Riot Club (Movie)
The Ripper (TV Show)
This documentary is focused on the crimes of the Yorkshire Ripper and the investigation aimed at identifying him which occurred during the 1970s. The Ripper's crimes were directed exclusively at women and based in sexualised misogyny; in particular, the show features discussions around sex workers (esp. violent crimes against and denigrating attitudes regarding them) and the domestic violence which occurred in the Ripper's childhood home. Moreover, the series continually addresses the misogynistic attitudes of the investigators themselves, as well as the negative impact which these attitudes had on the efficacy of their campaign. These issues are analysed critically by the show itself.
There is a brief scene (a few seconds) which includes sexual harassment in a club.
S1E1: the protagonist is accused of committing sexual assault. S3E4: an adult man falls in love with a child and pursues her at various times. The child constantly denies it and runs away, but in the series it is portrayed in a comical way.
The 21 year old female protagonist pushes herself onto a much older man. She corners him in her room and pushes him down on a chair while taking her sweater off. The man is shown to reject her advances but she only stops when someone else comes into the room. She continues to pursue him even though he has rejected her multiple times. A man who is 40+ years old is married to a girl who is still in college. She is described as a very young girl. It is unclear whether the girl is a teenager or not.
The Rite (Movie)
When discussing what else might be wrong with a pregnant girl other than her being possessed, rape is mentioned a few times (she might be experiencing severe PTSD from her father raping her). When a demon attacks another woman, he implies forcing himself on her. Both scenes are on-screen momentarily.
The River (Movie)
River's Edge (Movie)
Worthy of note: the naked body of a murdered teenage girl is shown throughout the film.
The Road (Movie)
A husband and wife discuss the potential for the wife and their son to be raped in the post-apocalyptic scenario.
Pregnant women are seen being held captive by men, and later the remains of a cooked baby are seen above a fire; the implication of this could be taken to be that the women are being systemically sexually assaulted in order to provide their captors with a food source.
Chapter 33: the main character's ex corners her and threatens her to try and get her to drop the charges she has against him. He forcibly kisses her and leaves right after
A man being led away in handcuffs by police screams (56:13): "He was raping my wife, he fucking raped my wife" No sexual assault is seen or discussed beyond this.
Road Trip (Movie)
Two characters film themselves having sex. Later, the male character's friends pressure him to show them the tape; however it turns out that the sex tape was mailed to his girlfriend so they are not able to watch it. A male Teaching Assistant at the University is obsessed with a female student and makes her uncomfortable.
A guard whistles at a male character disguised as a woman.
The Rock (Movie)
About halfway through the film, one of the protagonists jokes about avoiding gang rape in prison and "losing his sex appeal" leadjng to less rape.
We see a singer at a concert where women grab him and kiss him, one for quite a long time as he tries to escape her. A man grabs a microphone during an interview, walks close to the camera and licks the head of the microphone, mimicking a sexual act as a woman looks into the camera and says that rock music is "Raping the ears of our children." A man tells another man that a singer indulges in satanic rituals by sewing female genitalia closed.
Rock & Rule (Movie)
The female lead spends much of the story kidnapped by a man, with some implication that he may want her in a sexual way. However, he never makes any clear advances. A scene set in a night club contains many instances of people leering at and touching others inappropriately. At one point, a woman grabs a man's genitals, causing him clear distress. The female lead is publicly bound and displayed on a stage in very suggestive clothing, with it being clear that someone else forcibly dressed her.
Rock-A-Doodle (Movie)
A female character is coerced by her boss into having a sham romantic relationship with another character in order for her career to advance.
Rocky (Movie)
A girl is visibly uncomfortable and says she is uncomfortable with the protagonist's advances. In anoter scene, he kisses her against her will.
R.O.D. (TV Show)
S1E3: an abusive relationship is depicted and there are mentions of toxic love, followed by an attempted murder (07:00-08:45).
Rogue (2020) (Movie)
This movie is based on the premise that a group of mercenaries rescue girls who are being trafficked in Africa. At one point they leave a woman behind and the main character says: "you know what they'll do to a woman", implying that she will also be trafficked. The girls are suffering from PTSD and are jumpy when touched, and are chased through the entire film by their captors.
A male character explains to his coworker that he is not the kind of man to flash women. A man catcalls a woman. A middle-aged male character explains that he is turned on when he sees a young girl. A elderly woman explains that her father made sexual advances to her when she was young. A man rebuffs his mistress (that he is dumping) when she asks to give him a blowjob before he leaves.
Romantiche (Movie)
A woman kisses another woman by surprise, and when she pushes her away: the first woman takes it a little badly and urges her to try again. When she is pushed away a second time, she becomes aggressive in the way she talks, but does not try again. One woman tells her psychologist that she has slept and fallen in love with cousins several times, without knowing that they were cousins. Later, she is seen flirting with a man and interacting after sex, and in the course of their conversations we learn that they share a grandmother. The first scene is a little bit violent but is not depict as a good or normal situation. However the incest is not seen badly by the character because those relationships were consensual, her casualness toward the situation can be awkward and unsettling for the viewer.
Rome: Total War (Video Game)
A man says he will only lend a woman a car if she has sex with him. They only pretend to have sex. It is a revealed that a woman lost her virginity to her cousin.
Room 203 (Movie)
In a bar, an ancillary character rubs the main character's thigh without the main character's consent (20:50-21:10). She tells him to stop and moves his hand away; he then rubs her thigh again. The other two characters at the table react disapprovingly. The offender then insults the main character and the main character's friend reacts by incapacitating the offender with a punch to the face. The incident is mentioned briefly later in the movie.
Room 33 (Movie)
A man watches a woman get changed through a security camera.
Room for Rent (Movie)
Early in the movie, an elderly woman is walking by a skatepark where she is sexually harassed. Later she is sexually assaulted by a teenage boy who puts his hand up her skirt.
Much of the plot revolves around the social fallout of a man grabbing and forcefully kissing the unwilling protagonist when they appear to be alone together. A witness to this forceful kiss is upset by it and asks "what would have happened to" the protagonist if she had not intervened. Later in the film, the same man once again grabs and kisses the same woman, though she appears less shaken the second time.
The Roommate (Movie)
The main character's professor kisses her (briefly) without consent and she is visibly upset by it. Her roommate then goes to the professor and kisses him when he tells her to and then she says he is hurting her and starts screaming for him to stop (he is not actually touching her in the way she says he is) (46:42-51:48). The roommate was recording the whole time and ends up getting him fired. The protagonist's roommate attacks herself (punching and cutting) and then when the main character comes home, she says that a man attacked her in an ally but that she got away (53:56-55:57). She asks the main character no to tell anyone. The roommate tricks the main character's ex-boyfriend into sleeping with her (1:16:27-1:17:33).
There are several references through the book that discuss times when the porn performers faced harassment, felt unsafe, or were pressured into scenes. There is not any graphic discussion of events, but it does pop up a few times. Chapter 29: a character mentions that her boyfriend posted her nude photos online without her knowledge or consent.
The author discusses sexual violence that was a part of slavery, race riots, and lynching in the US.
Rootwood (Movie)
A woman films the man in their group and makes suggestive comments while he is bent over.
A man gets his main-character-girlfriend and his ex-girlfriend drunk. He and his ex attempt to pressure the main character into a sexual threesome including forcing a kiss. When she resists, the man turns verbally abusive. She locks herself in the bathroom until a friend comes to retrieve her.
There is at least one scene with sexual harassment (a man harasses a woman). It happens in the first train scene. Later in the book, other sexual harassment is described.
An sexual harassment scene takes place in episode 28.
There is a rape joke early in the movie. A group of traveling performers are demonstrating parts of their performances, which includes one of them being 'raped.' The head of the performers says that they’re desperate for pay and suggests that the main characters could sexually assault one of the actors in exchange for money. The main character responds with hostility to this suggestion.
Rosetta (Movie)
Sexual harassment takes places approximately at 22:00-24:00 minutes into the movie.
Rosy (Movie)
This movie is about a man kidnapping a woman with the hope that they will fall in love.
It is mentioned in the first part of the movie, that a 17 year old girl may be prostituting. Shortly after, the film deals with the case of a 13 year old girl who was orally raped by a serial rapist. The case is briefly mentioned again near the end of the film.
Half of the film (via flashbacks throughout) takes place in brothels. In the first scenes, we see two women "bought" for the pleasure of two men.
Rough Night (Movie)
The male narrator pressured a young man into sex and escaped while the young man was executed for his "sin." The narrator reflects on this past experience while facing the predatory Dracula picking off a group of trapped sailors (physical and implied sexual assault).
Roxy (Movie)
A teen sends a nude picture to his classmate/tutor: as revenge, the tutor's friend shows most of his nude (everything except the crotch) to the whole school.
The Royal (TV Show)
S2E6: sexual harassment occurs between 37:25 and 37:35.
Royal Alchemist (Video Game)
There is a subplot about child trafficking, though the reason of the trafficking is never explicitly stated. The characters all show disgust when it comes to this and there is extensive time within the game dedicated to one of the children's healing from this experience.
The whole film has this tense vibe where the men are using young women as their entertainment. There is unconsensual grabbing, cat-calling, taking advantage of the intoxicated state of women, and intruding in the place they are staying. There is a brief shot of sex in the beginning and it is unclear if this is consensual.
A romantic relationship develops between siblings, one of whom is adopted.
The Royal Tutor (TV Show)
S1E2: a 14 year old prince makes a comment about the private parts of a tutor. He is also seen hanging out with many girls who look older. However, their age is unknown.
The Royals (TV Show)
Season 1 contains a storyline about a girl being coerced/ blackmailed into a dominating relationship. There are mentions of filming sex while the girl is drunk.
Rubber (Movie)
A sentient tire watches a woman shower without her knowledge.
Ruby Sparks (Movie)
Incest is mentioned briefly in a dialog. Worthy of note: the premise of this movie is that a female character created by a male author comes to life, and that he controls her totally by writing. There is particularly one scene near the end of the movie, where he makes her do different actions and we see how panicked she is of not controlling anything.
A young boy discusses receiving fellatio from an adult man.
Ruido (Movie)
A sadistic male antagonist uses intimacy as a weapon, including stripping women naked while interrogating them. Nothing more overtly sexual is implied.
Chapter 6: a man watches a woman through a two way mirror and sees her as she comes out of a bath. Chapter 7: a man tells a story about how a woman drugged him after they had sex so she could alter his body.
There is a scene where a woman is screaming as she is seemingly assaulted. It turns out to be a trap, she pretended to be assaulted to get someone to approach.
A school shooter threatens to kill students unless the teacher removes her shirt and bra: she complies. A boy tells about having his pants and underwear pulled down in front of a big audience in an assembly hwne he was younger.
Run Lola Run (Movie)
In addition to sexual harassment, this film includes violence against a woman by a man, as well as instances of victim blaming and other people ignoring the victim when she tries to get help.
Runaway Train (Movie)
It is mentioned that one of the main protagonists was in jail for "statutory rape" (i.e. having sex with a 15 years old girl). At some point, he is in a room with a woman, and threateningly asks if she wants to have sex with him: he then gets rebuffed by another man.
A woman tells another woman she is lucky she was not raped during a kidnapping. A man threatens a woman he is on top of in a manner that could suggest rape but no attempt is shown.
RuPaul (TV Show)
There is a mention of sexual assault in season 10.
S10E6: a contestant discusses being raped at a party in college in limited detail, and other contestants are sympathetic. One contestant of season 12 was eliminated from the race after admitting to sexually exploiting one man and humiliating four others. Each episode opens with a disclaimer acknowledging the disqualification without explicitly stating what happened (using instead the phrase, "recent developments and [the contestant's] statement"). International airings of the show retain the contestant's full screen time; however, the U.S. version edits out the contestant wherever possible (for example, during a runway segment). The contestant will not be returning for the season finale.
A male cop makes several suggestive comments towards a female cop he works with. A man accidentally touches a woman's chest as means to hold her back, he immediately removes his hands when he realizes.
Rush Hour 2 (Movie)
In a fight a man pulls off another man's towel. Later, after losing the flight, two men are stripped and dropped off naked in public.. A man watches a woman get undressed through binoculars.
Rush Hour 3 (Movie)
After going through an airport, two men are forced to undergo a cavity search as a means of intimidation. A man enters the dressing room at a theater and pretends to be a costume designer. He has the women strip naked and inspects them.
Rushmore (Movie)
The main character (a 15 year old pursuing a grown woman) attempts to kiss another character violently and against her will.
A woman tells one of her captors that he will be very popular in prison, and references him being sexually assaulted by many men.
RWBY (TV Show)
In the 'Yellow Trailer,' on of the protagonists (17 years old at the time) goes to a bar and demands information from the adult owner. She proceeds to grope his genitals when he refuses. Also worthy of note: the trailer opens with the camera looking under her skirt. S2E11: an adult antagonist flirts with the teenage protagonist before engaging in combat. S5E1: a minor character makes unsolicited comments regarding a protagonist's body and attempts to touch her hair, but is prevented from doing so.
Chapter 21: there is a brief discussion of rumors of monsters being forced to have sex for entertainment.
Rye Lane (Movie)
A man tells his girlfriend to get her rape whistle when they suspect someone broke into their house. Ultimately, the situation has nothing to do with sexual assault. Later, the same man briefly mentions how tourism funds sex trafficking.
Ryman's Club (TV Show)
Worthy of note: in S1E10, a man tries to force a female worker to drink by continuously filling up her glass even though she refuses. He then invites her to his place. Her coworker ends up helping her out by drinking her glass and asking where they are all going. Nothing else happens.
The Sacred (Movie)
Mention of rape as a general crime.
Sade (Movie)
The film centers (and romanticizes) on the Marquis de Sade and thus contains numerous mentions of rape and scenes of sexual assault.
Safe (TV Show)
Safe (1995) (Movie)
S1E10: the female protagonist asks if the men touched the teenage female soldier while she was sleeping. The men say they have not. Later on, we see one of the male soldiers blushing when he sees the female soldier with the scene focussing on her breasts. Nothing happens besides that. In the manga, a pedophile is obsessed with the female protagonist who is a 10 year old girl. He fantasizes about her in a sexual manner and says he has to have her. He is also seen looking at other girls who he deems too old for his 'preference. ' Worthy of note: S1E1: two scenes focus on the chest of the female soldier.
A man is seen looking at a young girl and saying that she is too old for him: he explains how he should have plucked her when she was ripe. This could suggest that he has done something like that before. That character is obsessed with the female protagonist who is a 10 year old girl and wants 'to have her.' He is a pedophile who fantasizes about the female protagonist in a sexual manner. He is seen drooling thinking about her.
Sailor Moon (TV Show)
S1E2: a male character flips up his female teacher's skirt. A group of boys stare up this teacher's skirt when she falls prone on the floor. A male character grabs the protagonist's hand and tries to force a kiss on her: she cries, and he stops.
No clear sexual advances are made, but the antagonist tries to monopolize the male lead, affectionately touches him without consent, and tries to sabotage his relationship with his girlfriend: this is heavily implied to be romantic in nature. The film also features an age gap relationship between a 14 year-old and college-age character.
Saint Laurent (Movie)
At the beginning of the movie, the titular character explains that during the algerian war, when he was hospitalized, some of the other patients tried to 'touch him'.
Saint Omer (Movie)
A character leverages his social power over the protagonist to coerce her into a courtship with him. At one point, he forces a kiss on her. He tries to announce that they will be married, but the events of the final conflict of this book end up nullifying his efforts.
Saints Row: the Third (Video Game)
Due to the comedic nature of the game, there are some topics of sexual violence that are treated as a joke. A particular scene in the game revolves around rescuing a man who was being kept as a sex slave in a BDSM dungeon. Another scene involves rescuing prostitutes who were locked in cargo containers.
Sakamoto Days (TV Show)
A 21 year old man has been in love with an 18 year old girl since they were 11 and 8 years old. He has been stalking her throughout her life and she has voiced that it makes her uncomfortable. He has not gone any further than stalking and no relationship develops between them.
Sakugan (TV Show)
S1E1: te male protagonist asks a woman to cuddle with him and he grabs her skirt. S1E4: the male antagonist threatens to punish his subordinates with a weapon. They cover their behind whenever he mentions this. It is implied he uses this weapon on their behind. This is not shown on screen and used as a comedic relief. S1E12: the male protagonist holds onto a female character. She tells him she will hit him if he cops a feel. He tells her he was not planning on doing that.
Sakura Quest (TV Show)
S1E6: a child slaps a woman's behind in order to embarrass her. S1E17: a man touches a woman's behind in the dark. S1E18. a man tries to secretly watch a woman take a bath. He is immediately stopped by another woman.
Sakura Trick (TV Show)
The anime contains incest between cousins: it is often mentioned.
SalemS Lot (Movie)
A man catches his wife in bed with someone else: she claims the man she was with was trying to rape her, but the audience knows this was not the case.
Salt (Movie)
The first few minutes of the film show the female protagonist getting tortured by North Korean soldiers while only in her underwear and bra. Nothing happened as the scene is over: nothing hints that she was sexual assaulted during her torture.
This movie uses visual metaphor to convey the protagonist’s a loss of power and the loss of her heritage. In one of the earliest scenes the protagonist is physically “searched” by airport security and then forced to strip naked. Later on a young woman (the main character) and her male friend are driving in occupied Palestine when they are stopped by a car of Israeli army men. The army men force them to get out of the car with their hands up and then instruct them to undress, and the male friend tells them she is a woman. They allow her to remain clothes but still force him to strip naked.
The protagonist is recovering from an abusive relationship with her boyfriend/ coworker. The relationship is never described in detail and what he did to her is never discussed. However, the whole situation is framed using the trope of no one believing her, particularly her employer, when she tells people what happened and her having to leave her life and job while he remains employed. The most detail given is that her boyfriend "got fed up of her", became angry and aggressive, and then was on top of her. One could read this as non-sexual assault or as sexual assault, however the framing of the narrative and the main characters worries heavily imply she is a rape survivor. Two male characters verbally harass the main character under the guise of flirting, making her very uncomfortable. She is stuck in confined quarters with one and is afraid, checking the locks and doors to make sure he couldn't get to her if he wanted to.
Sami Blood (Movie)
In one scene, the main character is forced to strip in front of adult men and other children as part of eugenic study. A group of boys spy on the scene through the window and the protagonist is visibly uncomfortable. Worthy of note: the main character is held down by a group of boys who cut her ear. The assault is racist in nature.
Samurai Cop (Movie)
The film contains plenty of verbal sexual harassment (and violence) targeted against female cops and nurse. The female lead refuses the lead male's advances several times verbally, then goes home with him and has a 'romantic date' that leads to tender sex scenes.
It is subtly implied that a female character is subject to rape. She is forced to marry a man whom she finds sexually repugnant against her will, who is over thirty years older than her, to bear a son for him.
San Tiao Ren (Movie)
Sanctuary (Movie)
The entire plot of the movie revolves around a dominatrix controlling and playing mind games on a man. There are times where the woman keeps going when the man says stop, but it is revealed that that is also a part of their dynamic and there is a safe word for when he actually wants her to stop. There is a scene where a woman yells “rape” a few times while her male partner is trying to get her to come inside to continue the sensitive conversation they are having. She does this in a joking way.
During the first half of the movie, American soldiers stationed in China often go to a brothel. One of them falls in love with a prostitute whom he aims to "free" from her owner by buying her liberty. The woman is frequently groped, stripped, threatened and sexually harassed by other men and a scene even features her "auction" like she was merchandise. She always seems very distressed by the situation. During the first scenes of the film and during its last minutes, several dialogues mention on-going or potential rapes by Chinese soldiers and warlords.
A young boy fakes drowning in a pool to force a kiss on an older teenage lifeguard he's attracted to. The girl visibly resists, is very upset, and the boy and his friends are kicked out of the pool. This scene is played for laughs, and the girl later marries the boy.
Chapter 1: a male character compels two women to have sex with each other and implies that one will also eventually murder another, though nothing is depicted. This is done as an amusement. The youngest sister of the abovementioned character is portrayed partially nude at different points. She is an ancient manifestation of human thought patterns and does not appear to be directly drawn as a minor (rather as a young woman), but her youthful appearance and sometimes childlike personality may cause this to give some readers discomfort. Worthy of note: in chapter 5, a love goddess, working at a strip club, gives a performance that destroys the building and causes all the men inside to die graphic deaths while experiencing overwhelming sexual ecstasy.
A government official has an underage concubine who is drawn partially nude, but no sexual situations are depicted.
"Lullabies of Broadway" : a trans character has a vivid nightmare in which she is prepped to undergo forced genital surgery, which she has pointedly mentioned before that she does not want. Another character has a nightmare where a character from Preludes and Nocturnes (who was depicted in a rape scene, though this is not mentioned) returns to her, and they discuss the physical abuse that this character perpetrated against another character (though this abuse was not sexual). Worthy of note: a character early on is shown to be stalking the protagonist, and it could appear to be sexual at first, though it is quickly revealed that this is not the case.
Brief mention is made of a character having had concubines.
In "Cluracan's Tale", a ruler offers the storyteller to send a girl or a boy to their room, implying that it is for sexual purposes. He refuses.
It is implied that an enslaved character is forced into prostitution.
S1E1: a man attempts to force himself onto a his female coworker who defends herself (he verbally harasses her). He then goes to her house to attempt to blackmail her into sleeping with him but nothing further happens. A married woman finds it hot that a man does not take no for an answer (not her husband). S1E3: mentions of a 26 year old man who was in a relationship with a high school girl. S1E6: brief mentions of sex trafficking as part of a police file. S2E3+4: sexual relationship between a woman in her early 20s and a high school boy.
A man makes salacious sounding comments towards a woman he sees walking down the street. She responds with "in your dreams."
Santa's Slay (Movie)
S2E8 involves the rape and pillage of the Mongolian people centuries ago, but sexual violence is not an aspect of the comedy in this episode.
In one scene (between the 43:00-45:00 minute marks), a woman is attacked by several female vampires. Although their aim is to kill the woman, the scene consists of them grabbing her arms and legs and tearing at her clothing. At one point, one of them places a hand on the woman's inner thigh and runs it up her body to her breast.
A group of men bother a woman and say that they think she is a call girl.
A young teenage daughter is visited by a blonde older teen/young adult (unclear) and the blonde begins to undress the girl and touch her without consent (23:23-24:10). The teenager seems confused and was not asked permission for the touch nor for a kiss afterwards.
This novel-writing guide features summaries and breakdowns of several famous novels including "the Kite Runner" by Khaled Hosseini which features the main character witnessing a rape and "The Heart Shaped Box" by Joe Hill which features a man sexually abusing his two step-daughters and grand-daughter. These plot points are discussed in analysis of the works.
Saved! (Movie)
While practicing at a shooting range, a girl mentions that she is practicing for if she were to meet a rapist.
There are mentions and attempts of human trafficking of children. It is mentioned that a 10year old is legal to get married and is seen as an adult at age 15.
Two jokes are made that refer to sexual harassment/assault (02:05:55): one man jokes that a woman told his friend "Don't touch me" and another man jokes that an unconscious girl is "easy" (meaning easy to take advantage of).
The film contains a prison rape joke about halfway through.
Saw (2004) (Movie)
A policeman makes a brief reference to paedophilia.
Saw 3D (Movie)
A man checks out his female coworker without her consent.
Saw II (Movie)
A man insults a woman by telling her the only door she knows how to open is her legs.
Saw III (Movie)
A woman is stripped naked for a trap.
The show discusses historical medical practices and unusual medical cases. Occasionally, sexual assault will be mentioned, but never in graphic detail. Medical malpractice and pseudoscience is a main theme, and many episodes discuss malpractice used specifically to discriminate against and abuse marginalized communities, often in the form of restricting their bodily autonomy. (For example, discussing the practice of forcibly sterilizing Black women in the United States during the 20th century.) These sorts of incidents are discussed with as little graphic detail as possible, and trigger warnings are usually given in the show notes or at the start of the episode.
Say Nothing (TV Show)
S1E1: a mother is seen bathing when a group of masked men break into her home and rip her from the tub, forcing her to walk out in a towel. Two teenage girls are cornered by a group of grown men. One of the men begins to beat one of the girls with a wooden block. S1E5: two women are forced to strip naked on screen after being arrested. S1E6: two women are forced to strip naked off screen after being arrested. They are also forced to stay in a men’s prison. A girl is attacked and strapped down by a group of men and women and force fed with a tube down her throat. The scene is not sexual but is very violent.
It is strongly suggested the male lead has had an incestuous relationship with his sister.
Scary Movie (Movie)
This film contains lots of jokes about adults being attracted to teens, a closeted gay character being inappropriate to his male friends, roofies, a trans character being creepy to her students, etc.
Schitts Creek (TV Show)
S1E2: a main character goes up to a man who later becomes her boyfriend and kisses him. He kisses back but there was no consent: it is played off as romantic. S1E3: incest joke. The series contains several rape jokes (i. e. S1E4).
Schmigadoon! (TV Show)
Season 1 involves a teenage girl who has a huge thing for an adult man, and there is a whole song about how she is technically legal and her daddy wants her to get married. S2E1: a man is in jail for presumed rape, which he denies. A joke is made about that fact that "no doesn't always mean no". S2E2: a sexual relationship exists between a boss and employee. S2E6: a man tries to force a woman into marrying him. He has also done this in the past.
S1E3: a teenage boy gets a nosebleed when he touches a child’s cheek. His friends says that he is too much of a child loving deviant to be a babysitter. He is shocked and says he loves children the regular way. This is a running joke in the anime. S1E5: a male student is in love with his female teacher. The male protagonist misunderstood that the student and teacher are in a relationship. This ends up not being true. The female teacher is not aware of the boy’s feelings at all and talks lovingly about her husband. S1E6: the teenage boy from S1E3 ruffles the hair of a child. He does not like it and calls him a pervert. S1E10: a parent says to a few students and children that if he was 15 years younger he would ask for their hands. He also says he was excited to see the cute female students of the baby sitter club. This seems to be a joke, but can make some uncomfortable. S1E11:aA child touches the breasts of a teenage girl telling her she has the same breast as her mother. The babysitter then comments that the girl probably has a difficult time due to the sexual harassment. Later on the girl mentions she does not seem to get along with kids because they flip her skirt and spit on her.
The main character kisses someone without asking for their consent first. The person does not seem to mind it and it is not discussed further.
School Spirits (TV Show)
S1E1: a ghost sits in the high school men's locker room and stares at the naked teens. He is also a teen, but they do not know he is there. A teenager uses the locker room after school is closed: when a coach catches him, he makes a joke about how the coach should not be watching him. S1E2: a teenage ghost says that she has measured an (alive) teacher's penis. S1E3: a ghost tells her alive friend that a teacher gave her his number. He looks concerned so she says: "not like that". It is implied that a guidance counselor was romantically interested in a senior in high school: he ended up killing her. S2E2: this episode starts out taking place in the 1960s. A high school girl’s grandmother gifts her with a lab coat since she is interested in going to college for chemistry. Her father finds the lab coat and asks her if her male teacher is giving her ideas to pursue college. He hints that she may be having relations with her teacher. He tells her that she does not need to go to college and she should focus her time on finding a husband to take care of her and give him a house full of babies. She responds loudly by saying she doesn’t want a husband or children and her father slaps her in the face. The scene is tense. It is explained that her teacher kept her trapped in the school basement for atleast a couple months. S2E3: this episode contains flashback information about unfair power dynamics and adults in relationships with teenagers or coercing them.
Scissor Seven (TV Show)
This series contains multiple instances of sexual harassment. A 21 year old man is in love with a 17 year old girl and flirts with her on multiple occasions: at some point, she falls in love with him as well.
Chapter 28: there is a singular nongraphic mention of rape as part of a myth . Chapter 29: a story is told via third party about a sexual relationship between a male high school teacher and a female student that resulted in pregnancy.
Scooby-Doo (Movie)
One of the male characters swaps bodies with a female character and he looks down her shirt to see her breasts.
The main character is recognized by a man and told to "keep her mouth open" so he will keep his shut. He attempts to coerce her, but she tells him "not here", and they move into an alley when she escapes. Later, she recounts the story to a different man saying that the first man was trying to rape her, but she got away before he got what he wanted.
Score (Movie)
A teenage boy and girl spy on a woman getting changed through her ceiling window. A relationship between an adult man and teenage girl is referenced throughout, and we learn that she has become pregnant by him. The man is repeatedly harassed for this relationship, with the words 'child fucker' spray painted on his caravan.
Scream (2022) (Movie)
A man in his twenties is dating a high school student. A girl is harassed by a former one night stand.
Scream 2 (Movie)
There is a mention of leaked nudes. While a man and a woman are making out, one of the killers spies on them and records them.
Scream 3 (Movie)
It is revealed that a main character's mother was sexually assaulted at a party. The event is discussed twice throughout the movie. A character is revealed to have participated in sexual coercion in the past and a room meant for nonconsensual voyeurism of said coercion is featured prominently.
Scream 4 (Movie)
A police officer says he "wouldn't mind living next door to her" in reference to a teenage girl in a suggestive tone.
Scrublands (TV Show)
Spoilers: It is said that a priest is a pedophile, but this is turns out to be a lie.
Scum's Wish (TV Show)
Sea of Love (Movie)
Search Party (TV Show)
A man lies about who he is to have sex with someone, He later tries to physically force a woman to kiss him and have sex with him. She gets away before it happens.
It is implied that a man had sex with his niece, which is later proven false. A sexual offender publicly confessed to having abused and killed a teenage girl: it is revealed later to be false.
A woman is harassed by a man at a party but he is told to leave pretty quickly.
Sebastiane (Movie)
S2E1: a call girl is conned by a man who tries to force himself on her. S4E5: a woman kisses a man without his consent. He tells her to stop. S4E6: that same woman gets in bed with a man while he is sleeping.
It is occasionally mentioned that a main character sleeps with another character only when he himself is drunk and later claims not to remember. It is unclear whether this is true, but the first assumes he is lying. A character fantasizes about choking and raping a female character (this is only mentioned and not described in detail) in a moment if light-headedness. A major plot point in the last third of the book is the incestuous relationship between a twin brother and sister: they kiss in a sexual way and the brother eventually becomes physically abusive toward the sister (which is not shown, only the aftermath, i.e. bruises/injuries).
Mention of the American Library Association's decision to oust founder Melvil Dewey for repeated instances of sexually harassing women. Mention of acquaintance rape among a list of social problems. Neither mention is graphic.
A typical 1980s comedy wherein sexual harassment and coercion are frequently played for laughs.
This film features a highly tempestuous relationship between a secretary and her boss (including sexual assault). The main character is shown to be in a delicate mental state and is occasionally touched sexually and beaten (within the context of BDSM) without her consent, but the movie portrays this relationship as romantic.
Sedimentos (Movie)
A man watches the group of women while the are sitting in the hot tub.
See No Evil (Movie)
A man watches a woman take a shower through a hole in the wall. After he has captured her and locks her in a cage, he rubs himself over his pants while looking at her.
While a female character leaves a movie theater, the word "rapist" can be seen.
See No Evil 2 (Movie)
A woman straddles and kisses a man who she believes is dead.
The Seed (Movie)
An alien basically mind-controls two women to have sex with it to impregnate them.
After Chucky captures a female character and ties her up, he leans in readying to grab her breasts as she attempts to move away and tells him to stop (56:43-56:59). A woman is knocked unconscious, tied to a bed and has a half doll half men's semen injected into her via baster. She is nonconsensually forced to become pregnant and give birth to the child of the assaulter.
Sekasin (TV Show)
Season 3 features an older woman who has sex with a 17 year old guy. At first he seems to like the relationship, but in S3E4 they do something where consent is unclear. It is implied that she has similar relationships with other boys as well. S3E4+5+6 rape is discussed because a woman was raped by someone who has power over her. The rapist is blackmailing her with a video of the rape. Worth of mention: season 3 features a married couple with a 16 years old wife who is lot younger than the husband. Apparently they got married when she was 12.
A character is advised not to deny any wishes that a male character may have. She interprets this in a sexual way and later yells at him when she assumes he is about to make advanced towards her. The misunderstanding is resolved quickly. A minor character alludes to being sexually assaulted by a rebel which causes her to be very anxious.
S1E9: after a show, the titular protagonist is suddenly grabbed by an angry man: she punches him.
The author discusses a few times throughout how some neurotypical people target autistic people for nefarious ends because autistic people can be very trusting and unclear about social contexts. These are all passing mentions.
Chapter 27: there is a brief mention of a young girl who was murdered and raped by a serial killer.
Senior Year (Movie)
Senseless (Movie)
The main character wants to donate sperm. He asks for “dirty magazines” to help him. Magazines display cheerleader women in bondage. A woman comes over to a man’s house. He loses feeling in his arm and begins hitting her breasts and side with his arm. This scene is not viewed as abusive, but it may be triggering for some.
The Sentinel (Movie)
Two characters masturbate and grope one another with the intention of making the protagonist uncomfortable (23:40-27:15).
Sentinelle (Movie)
The film revolves around revenge for rape, but the rape itself is only discussed and never shown.
One plotline of this movie is about an elder male character who is discovered to be a sexual predator. This is discussed throughout, and once he explains to a younger woman (who has a crush on him) that he only does it because he is afraid of women, the movie proceeds to redeem him. The happy ending is about all the other characters accepting him as he is. The second plotline is about a divorced couple reuniting: it is mentioned that the man used to beat her and went to jail for it. At some point, he knocks her down again in the movie. He is also presented as a hurt character who is equally victim and abuser of his ex-wife.
A vampire character named often harasses the teenage characters and is very odd towards children (he openly only drinks blood of children, and states that he only finds children beautiful). He particularly harasses the deuteragonist (who is 16), many times throughout the series, through touch and comments. He grabs the deutaragonist's bottom, threatens to rape him, tries to get teenage girls to look at his genitalia, etc.. Overall, his predatory behavior is treated as comedic relief and he is given plausible deniability about actually being a pedophile, because it is established in the series that vampires are not capable of actually experiencing attraction.
S1E1: a couple briefly appears on-screen: the girl keeps saying no. S1E8: an eight grade girl has a sexual relationship with a teacher. The sex is not shown but the lead up to it is.
The book opens with the (female) protagonist arriving to murder a (male) serial rapist and killer. She finds him already dead. His crimes, and the crimes of similar perpetrators, are repeatedly mentioned throughout the book– never in detail. At one point the protagonist startles a male character by enthusiastically kissing him (without consent) as a distraction. He gropes her while surprised. They later refer to both of these incidents as sexual assault within the context of witty banter. She decides that she has feelings for him and makes ongoing repeated jokes about "claiming" him as her own, regardless of his opinion (this is perhaps mitigated somewhat by his revelation that he already had a crush on her when she set her sights on him). It is casually mentioned that a lycanthrope's bite inherently creates a lifelong mutual romantic and pheremonal bond.
Serial Mom (Movie)
The underage daughter of the title character was in a one sided relationship with a 22-year-old. Also, a cop flirts with two presumably underage girls. This is played off as comedic.
The adult antagonist attempts to marry his fourteen-year-old adopted daughter, though his explicit intent is merely to get her family's money. However, he makes some flippant remarks about the marriage that are a little dubious. S1E2: an adult character suggestively touches a young teenage girl's shoulder and say that he will 'touch whatever (he) wants'. The girl seems disturbed. S2E7-8: adults kidnap a teenage girl in an attempt to cut off her head. She is restrained and knocked unconscious with anesthesia. No indication of sexual violence, but it could be triggering, particularly given that the man orchestrating the kidnapping is the same man who tried to marry her earlier in the show.
The Serpent (TV Show)
Throughout the series, men and women are drugged (often undressed) and killed. S1E1+2: a woman's drink is spiked and she is consequently kidnapped and murdered. S1E2: the male protagonist, who has just recently started a romantic relationship with a woman, suddenly says that he has to 'take what he wants' while grabing her by the neck and engaging sex. S1E4: the protagonist spikes the drink of his girlfriend (she willingly drank it as a 'test'), undresses her and hesitates to kill her with a pillow: he does not. Later in the episode, he touches an unconscious naked woman (drugged), with whom his friend has just slept with. S1E5: the protagonist punches a woman in the stomach and brings her to his room (presumably to kill her). A man intervenes and stops him. In the final scene of the episode, an antagonist is surprised by a woman in a room set in the dark. He threatingly comes near her but nothing happens. S1E6: one antagonist suddenly pins a woman to a wall, threatening her while speaking very close to her face. He eventually lets her go. S1E7: a woman is drugged, kidnapped and murdered. The protagonist goes to his ex-girlfriend's house, who is visibly afraid of him. He enters and stays despite her protestes. He ends up getting really close to her and threatening her. S1E8: the protagonist threatens his girlfriend (on-screen) and beats her up (off-screen).
Servant (TV Show)
S3E4 : a female character is harassed by a security guard who makes her clearly uncomfortable.
The Servant (Movie)
A man kisses a woman without her consent and she is visibly upset. The two have been rivals the entire film and the kiss is meant to be degrading to her.
S1E17: a man kisses a woman without consent. Rape is mentioned.
Session 9 (Movie)
It is discussed that one of the former patients in the hospital had a (non-consensual, for the patient) incestuous relationship with her father and grandfather.
Set It Off (Movie)
A boss agrees to give his new employee an advance only if she has sex with him first.
Set It Up (Movie)
About halfway through the movie, a man making a pass to a woman jokingly tells her that she can scream in case he does anything inappropriate. Several lines of dialogue then concern this line (the woman not being distressed at all).
Seven Mummies (Movie)
A man tackles the woman they hve taken hostage and gropes her several times before the other men pull him off her.
The film features a lot of brutality towards women: there are mentions of women being raped and killed in flashbacks in the beginning and the middle of the movie.
Seven Samurai (Movie)
This film is about a rural village hiring samurai to defend them against bandits. Early on, one character (rhetorically) asks another if he would give his daughter to the bandits. One hour into the movie, a father tries to force his daugther to cut her hair to avoid being "seduced" by the samurai. He runs after her with a razor blade and eventually succeeds in cutting her hair off-screen. At about 01:25:00, one samurai runs into this woman "disguised" as a man and berates "him" for skipping training. He catches "him" and they start struggling before discovering that she is a woman: he is confused and lets her go. At 01:30:00, rapes committed by samurai (in general) in wartime are mentioned. At 02:20:00, one woman living with the bandits sees the samurai ambushing them but does not react. It is implied that she was kidnapped by the bandits. At 03:09:00, a father beats his daughter because she slept with a samurai. He slut-shames her in front of the village and she ends up crying alone in the rain.
A character tells a woman he could rape her, and forces a kiss on her.
Sex Appeal (Movie)
S1E1: the main character is in a sexual relationship with her college soccer coach. Both are over 18. A main character's boyfriend comes to college knowing he wants to break up with her. Before he breaks up with her, they have sex with each other for the first time. She is very upset and immediately calls him out for it. The main character (19 years old) drinks while sad: she goes on a dating app and finds a 34 year old to have sex with. Their encounter seems fully consensual and empowering for the younger partner. A main character does not want to drink a glass poured by a bartender at a frat party because she thinks there could possibily be roofies in it. There is no alternative given to drink at this party so she drinks it anyway, without negative consequences. Worthy of note: a girl wants to make the college comedy newspaper staff. She decides to have a drink and then gives 6 handjobs in order to ensure she gets on the team. S1E2: human trafficking is used as a joke matter to make a point about how college girls might be worried when their roommate does not come home for good reason. S1E4: a girl who is in the closet has sex with a man, pretending to be straight, to get into a sorority. S1E5: the Brett Kavanaugh hearings are used in a joke by a main character saying "all you know about Frat guys comes from the Brett Kavanaugh hearings". A character tries to expose inequality in locker rooms of sports teams and makes a video of the men's locker room without knowing there are men using it. She accidentally films a 18 year old naked man. Later, it is discussed that she is lucky that no 17 year old was there, or she would have created child pornography. It is implied that someone wears a hidden body camera to a frat party, as part of an investigation to make sure that fraternities are not being sketchy. Fraternity reputations are discussed, and one make a point to show that they only use certified bartenders and that their drinks are safe. An editor for a comedy magazine gets a main character alone in his room. He tells her he wants to show her a funny video, but it is porn. She tells her friends about it and they are horrified: she tries to say that it is not a big deal, but she is clearly upset. Two girls who have been drinking have an argument about one of them being a straight privileg person: she proves she is not straight by kissing the girl without asking (everyone is into it though and neither party is visibly intoxicated). S1E7: the discussion continues over the affair with the soccer coach. A main character mentions starting to make out with bartenders when she was 14. A minor character is revealed to have been repeatedly getting catfished by her cousin: it is used as a joke The same character who showed porn to a main character non consensually grabs her without her consent. She says no, and he gets upset about it. The main character is upset about it and assumes she will not be chosen for the comedy magazine, she is still chosen. Two main characters are about to have sex in a professors office without his consent. S1E8: someone reports that the coach had sex with the player. The college takes it seriously: the coach is fired and the student does not have her life ruined. Another girl admits that the comedy writer guy sexually assaulted her too. The victim (a main character) denies that anything happened to her because she is scared she would get kicked out of the comedy magazine. A discussion follows. The main character and other victim meet with someone from the women's center to discuss. S1E9: the discussion of the relationship between the student and the soccer coach continues. It turns out the latter had done it before. The student's soccer team calls out how he was clearly wrong and supports her. The girl who was sexually assaulted by the comedy writer and her friend have told people about it: discussions about their options ensue. S1E10: the discussion over the comedy writer who assaulted two women continues. Some characters defend him and others not. S2E2: a joke is made about a high school boy dating an older woman who showed him the ways of love. A male older colleage professor tells a college student they should "fuck sometime". S2E4: a woman considers not telling her sexual partners that she has contracted chlamydia. S2E6: there is sex between an 18 year old and a a man in his thirties: the woman is sleeping with him to try and get a job. S2E10: a character says that she has left Polaroids of her breasts in a delivery guys truck without asking him. S3E5: an incest joke is made. S3E7: date rape joke. S3E9: a man tries to avoid deleting nudes he was sent that are requested to be deleted.
Sexy Beast (Movie)
One male character says that he was sexually assaulted by a steward on a plane: this is a lie in order to escape the legal consequences of having smoked a cigarette inside a plane. During the heist sequence of the film, there is a brief close-up of pictures that are hinted to be taken from a snuff movie (they show women being mistreated).
A background character is implied to have been sexually harassed or more by her boyfriend. This happened in an era when he could, and did, arrange for her to be committed to an insane asylum for defending herself. Unnamed other women are mentioned to have also been committed for "domestic disputes" and other suspicious excuses.
Throughout the film, cat calling and suggestive comments are made to the female protagonist (with many statements relating to her, her body). Additionally, there is clear talk of spousal abuse (a drunk husband beating his wife).
A woman is held down on a bed and drugged by a group of men. This is done so that a vampire can drink blood from her neck: he grabs one of her breasts and holds it throughout the long scene in an overtly sexual manner.
S1E9: two characters are (wrongly) told that they are siblings after having kissed several times. They break it off immediately and the truth is clarified in S2E10. S2E4: a character struggles with his feelings for a woman who he believes is his sister and is questioned by authorities about his feelings for her. S2E5: a character uses a demon to impregnate young women. One character is left with said demon but escapes. S2E17: one character kisses another while knowing she is in a relationship and has already turned him down once before. This character also knows they are siblings, while the character being kissed does not until S2E18. Worthy of note: throughout the series, there is coercive drug usage and mind control that is sometimes played off as romantic. Season 3: the main character's brother is obsessed with her, to the point where he shapeshifts and pretends to be her boyfriend. They share a kiss before she finds out. A woman who refers to herself as a character's mother kisses him while he is in the body of another person that did not consent. This happens twice.
A naked woman is surprised and harassed by a man in a field: she flees and he does not pursue her.
A man makes sexual advances towards the main character, a mute woman, who is his employee, because he likes the idea of a woman being silent during sex. He makes potentially derogatory sexual comments referencing her condition. Her clear unwillingness to reciprocate his advances does not dissuade him. Linking to this, at an earlier stage in the film he is seen covering his wife's mouth during intercourse for the same reason, preventing her from voicing her discomfort. The sex is initiated on her part and consensual, but some may find this sex scene uncomfortably aggressive..
A man hassles a latin woman, making "cleaning lady" jokes and referring to her as "the help". Lather, he ogles her friend's chest and makes uncomfortable comments toward her. He makes her strip down to her bra and underwear and licks her neck (much to her discomfort) after she stabs him in the leg.
The protagonist mentions reading Speak by Laurie Halse Anderson. Famously, Melinda, the protagonist in Speak, experiences sexual violence, but the protagonist of this book, Kita, just says "something bad" happens to Melinda. There is passing mention of “Chester the Molester” in a list of fears unlikely to come to pass.
Sharkula (Movie)
A man sniffs then steals the bra and underwear of a woman.
Sharp Stick (Movie)
The main character, who is very naive and inexperienced, enters a relationship with an adult man whom she nannies for.
Sharper (Movie)
There is no onscreen sexual violence or assault, but the film includes multiple confidence tricksters having adult relationships with their unknowing targets, so it could be inferred that offscreen rape by deception forms part of those relationships. A young and vulnerable woman is wary of a strange man, telling him that she has a knife and to not 'try any shit,' when she gets into his car and goes to his place. They have an unhealthy relationship in which he is financially and emotionally controlling her.
Shattered (Movie)
A thief threaten one characters by saying that he will rape his girlfriend and calls her a bitch (19:09-19:17). A character confronts another character who spied on her wearing a bikini: the latter ends up mocking her and doing a sexual gesture (23:35-23:54). The same man spies on a woman doing yoga naked by a telescope. Worth of note: a man keep repeating the word “shame” to tease a woman after he saw her going out with a man.The same man (a landlord) enters the house of a character because she does not respond to him: he keeps asking if she is decent so he won’t walk on her naked, then he says to himself “I hope not”.
An antagonist male character forces a kiss on a female character as a display of power.
The main characters tells his mother that his step dad used to "touch" him. It is a lie, as he is trying to get his mother to stop caring about her husband.
Shayda (Movie)
One of the male counselors surprise kisses a female counselor: she pulls away and he attempts to kiss her again, but she leaves. A male counselor kisses another male counselor after he ties him to a tree. Later he also grabs the breast of a female counselor.
There is an overlong, crude conversation about dolphin sex that references sexual violence by dolphins.
It is implied that one of the antagonists takes advantage of naive young women and makes them do sex work. The protagonist visits her possessive boyfriend in jail: he grips her arms as they embrace (26:57-27:30). A man pulls the protagonist close to him as she tries to leave: she is not fazed (37:29-38:42). The main love interest tries to kiss the protagonist and she stops him, but it is clear she is teasing him (41:55-42:1). The protagonist's possessive lover breaks into her room and tries to grab her and strangle her, but he cannot follow through with it and stops (44:41 - 45:25). The main love interest takes the protagonist's hand: she shakes him off but he takes her hand again, and puts a ring on it (59:53-1:00:53). The implication is that she is happy about it.
One of the protagonist's gets hit on while she is at her job. She is uncomfortable with this because the person hitting on her is a man, and she is a lesbian.
The protagonist's ancestor married into a rich colonizer family whose home she worked in as a servant. It is doubtful that this marriage is her choice.
The chapter entitled "How to Mind Your Own Damn Business" touches on Bill Cosby's alleged serial rapes and the kidnapping and trafficking of Black girls in the US.
The film centres on a group of human traffickers and it implies that many of their victims are subjected to fetishistic torture. A brother and sister almost kiss on the lips.
Some may interpret the main couple as pseudo-incest, since they have the same mother figure/caretaker (confirmed to be an adoptive mother for one of them and strongly implied for the other) who plays a big role in their relationship. S1E8: the protagonist is forced to dance with one of the villains, looking visibly uncomfortable and scared when the villain implies that they harmed one of her friends in some way. When the protagonist tries to fight the villain and prove that she is there to cause harm, other people do not believe her and claim her to be the aggressor. S2E5: the villains use a magical device that renders the protagonist unconscious and later when she wakes up she appears "pg drunk". It can be interpreted as if she was drugged. While the protagonist is unconscious the villains talk about how they can use her as a weapon to make her kill her friends. At the end of the show, the protagonist ends up in a relationship with one of the former villains, who gaslighted, tried to kill, physically harmed and tortured her numerous times. This fact may be unsettling to some people.
She Said (Movie)
This movie is about the investigation of the journalists who contributed to the launch of the #MeToo movement with an article about Harvey Weinstein's sexual abuses. Sexual violence is thus a major theme and sexual harassment, assault and rape experiences are detailed throughout. Brief and non-graphic flashbacks show some survivors being shocked and distressed after a traumatic experience. An audio tape of one of these encounters is played: we hear Weinstein trying to coerce a woman to perform sexual acts despite her constant and repeated refusal.
A man leaves a camera running while he and a woman begin kissing each other. They start taking off their clothes before she notices and turns it off. The other men with them are also watching and recording from inside the cabin, laughing about what is happening.
A theme throughout the book is that women in this context (1300s China) have no autonomy over their own lives. The protagonist's father tries to sell her to bandits so they will spare him and her brother. The narrator comments that this is a common behavior for peasants. There is a scene later on where a group of women are expected to sexually entertain a group of military men.
A woman is cornered in an alleyway by two armed men; whether they plan to rob her or sexually assault her is unclear, but they comment on her attractiveness. She quickly overpowers her attackers and leaves. Later in the film, a woman drugs a man and leaves him tied naked to a headboard in her hotel room. The maid who comes to change the sheets is horrified and thinks the man is trying to get her to sleep with him. A character later comments his surprise that she was so scandalized, implying that a hotel maid should be accustomed to sexual harassment and assault from guests.
A man exposes himself to a woman, who is clearly shocked and disturbed. Throughout the interaction, however, the man does not seem to understand or even notice her discomfort, almost as if he were unaware that he is naked.
Sherlock Jr. (Movie)
In a film within the film, a man repeatedly forces a kiss on a woman. Worthy of note: A man kidnaps a woman and acts as if he may attempt to sexually harass or assault her, but this is never stated explicitly and she is quickly rescued.
Sherwood (TV Show)
This show contains onscreen male violence against women, but it is not sexual or sexualised at all. "Rape by the state" is mentioned in one conversation, in the context of describing undercover police officers having sexual relationships with unsuspecting civilians. One female character is an undercover officer in this way, and her husband does not know (he never finds out in the course of the series).
One of the main guys buys a hotel room for him and the main girl (who does not like him). He wants to get her to sleep with him, but she is well informed about consent and always carries a device that makes really loud sound when pressing a button. Later, she tells the guy she really loves that she has just used the device when he wanted to touch her and that nothing happened. It is handled as comedy. Nothing sexual between her and the one that bought the hotel room is ever shown on screen. One character puts pubic hair on someone else’s food but then is forced to eat the food. A high school senior tricks a high school senior girl to go to prom with him. They leave prom early and shelater tells another character that he sexually assaulted her and that she blew his eardrum out with an air horn. The high school senior is later shown struggling to hear his name called at graduation, implying that he is now deaf in one ear.
A woman threatens to shove pencil up a man's penis.
When the main female and male characters are making out, he asks her if they can slow down or stop for a minute, and she says no. It is played for a laugh. There are also sexual jokes littered throughout the movie, mainly making fun of the man character.
Shine (Movie)
The male protagonist touches the breast of a woman several times without her consent. Since he is suffering from schizoaffective disorder, the scenes are played for laughs and the woman does not seem distressed.
Shinjuku Boys (Movie)
Story 1: there a couple brief rape mentions as they happened within Greek mythology. Story 2: it has several interlocking stories of sexual harassment that the women fend off/fight back against in various supernatural ways.
The author references Abu Ghraib, where rape and other forms of torture took place. The author does not go into detail about the sexual violence aspects of the torture, mentioning it in passing.
The film contains a brother and a sister who frequently imply incestuous acts on the other. A "blind" man "accidentally" attempts to walk in on a woman showering. He is interrupted.
Shogun (TV Show)
S1E7: during the meeting of the two brothers, one makes a comment implying his “consorts” expected to be sexually assaulted by his brother’s army in a gleeful tone (08:00).
Shooter (2016) (TV Show)
S1E2: a prisoner's sexually violent crimes are mentioned in passing between the 24:35-24:55 mark.
Shooting Stars (TV Show)
A female employee makes a typo that starts a misconceptation that the male protagonist has a small genital size. The male protagonist, who is angered and has certain authority over the female employee, corners her into the men's bathroom, where he unbuckles his pants; wanting to force her to see his genitals to prove the size to her. It is stopped because multiple male colleagues intervene. Although the directory portrayed this scene and the aftermatch as more lighthearted; the female employee does experience multiple nightmares from this incident.
Short Cuts (Movie)
A phone-sex worker mentions a client asking her to pretend to be a child and mimic incest. A newspaper article read aloud mentions a dead woman being raped and murdered. The men who found her body joke about having sex with her. A waitress is harassed by male patrons at her diner. A woman tells her husband about the time she had an affair while drunk, it is ambiguous as to how much she consented but seems mildly upset about the incident.
Shortbus (Movie)
Shounen Omnyouji (TV Show)
S110+11+12: a girl is to be married off to an older man to become his concubine in the future. This ends up not happening because her sister takes her place. It is unclear how old her sister is as she is not shown throughout the entire series. S1E19: a woman is revered to as a concubine. S1E20: a man becomes obsessed with a female deity and ends up kidnapping her. A woman thinks the man is her father and the female deity is her mother. This ends up not being true.
The author discusses lynchings stemming from false rape allegations against Black men and boys, Strom Thurmond's impregnation of a Black teenager who worked for his family, and rape allegations against Clarence Thomas.
Shrek (Movie)
A female dragon pursues a male donkey, after he compliments her to avoid being attacked by her. After she mistakenly assumes he is flirting with her, she pressures him into going on a date and getting into a physical relationship with her, as well as affectionately touching him and trying to force a kiss on him. He protests and says he is not interested, but he is quickly rescued and later makes amends with her. This is all played for humor. The female lead tries to force the protagonist to kiss her and immediately expects a romantic relationship with him, after he rescues her from being trapped in a tower. However, she backs off when she realizes he is not interested. A Robin Hood-esque character kidnaps the female lead and tries to get physically affectionate with her, to her discomfort. However, she fights back and defends herself.
Shrek 2 (Movie)
A character forces a kiss on another character in order to make her fall in love with him. It does not work. Another character looks up someone's skirt while chanting "I see Paris, I see France."
Shrill (TV Show)
The chapters "Death Wish" and "It's About Free Speech, Not Hating Women" deal heavily with the debate over whether or not it is ever appropriate to make rape jokes in standup comedy. Specific comedy sets involving rape are mentioned, including an infamous one by Daniel Tosh. Louis C.K. and Bill Cosby are referenced as well. "Death Wish" in particular provides a detailed description of the Steubenville High School rape case from 2012. The author also recounts the mountain of explicit rape threats she received over the years in response to her television appearance and writing on Jezebel. The author refers to Miss Piggy from the Muppets as a rapist because she does not respect Kermit's bodily autonomy. She recounts a statement made by a dog breeder, that a particular dog had a bark that sounded like a woman being raped. She mentions a friend whose partner slipped off a condom during sex without her knowledge or consent, transmitting herpes.
The Shrine (Movie)
Two women have their clothes ripped off by a group of men so they can be put in a ceremonial dress.
Shrinking (TV Show)
S1E7: an adult woman tells a story about how she had sex with a 50 year old when she was 19. S1E8: a high school student wants to hook up with a college student. They do not have sex, and a joke is made about her age by her dad and friends. S1E10: a neighbor tells a story about watching his neighbors have sex. S2E8: joke about an adult janitor trying to kiss a student. S2E9: this episode includes a joke about getting tied up in a trunk being hot. There is also a rape joke from a straight woman towards a gay man, and jokes about the sex offender registry. S2E12: rape joke about a priest.
The Shrouds (Movie)
This film discusses sex, infidelity, and terminal illness. There are moments in the film where a man is harassed by an AI woman who uses sexual provocative imagery and statements.
Shugo Chara (TV Show)
A teenage boy stalks and harasses an elementary school girl constantly throughout the show, and eventually falls in love with her. A girl kisses her brother on the lips. He became angry and pushed her off, telling her she can not do that.
Before interrogating a man and torturing him (water boarding) off-screen, a man acts threateningly towards a man held prisoner by invading his personal space (he is standing and his crotch being very close to the sitting man's face). Halfway through the movie, the female protagonist invites a man to sleep with her at her place, but she then understands that he is actually a threat to her. She asks him to stop: he complies, but when he realizes the situation, he tries to kill her, ending up on top of her and choking her: another man intervenes and saves her. A man threatens another man's daughter with sexual violence.
Sick Note (TV Show)
Throughout the show, a boss repeatedly makes sexual passes at an employee, who seems fairly oblivious to the situation. For example, he schedules one-on-one "meetings" in an attempt to either seduce or assault her, and she never questions: in S1E4, he shows someone his genitals. S1E1: the episode starts off with two men discussing whether or not they would have nonconsensual sex with the dead boy of Marilyn Monroe. S1E5: a woman gives an hospitalized man a handjob even though we do not know for sure if he is fully conscious or not. S2E7: a man harasses a disguised cop thinking he is a woman. When he does not accept his offer, he calls him a 'bloody lesbo'.
Sight Unseen (TV Show)
S1E5 includes a hazing where a girl is topless. S1E6 mentions allegations of attempted sexual assault. S1E7 includes sexual harassment
A prisoner throws sperm at a woman's face whilst also shouting abuse. The main antagonist of the movie (a man) forces female characters to moisturise under threat of violence. One man asks an uncomfortable woman if she was sexually assaulted in her youth. A man asks a woman questions about breastfeeding, which makes the woman uncomfortable. Worthy of note: nude bodies of murdered women are shown on screen.
There are harassing comments on a teenager's social media page insisting on her posting sexier pictures Journal entries are found about a girl who felt uncomfortable about the attention her brother was showing her.
Silent House (Movie)
It is revealed that the protagonist's father and uncle have routinely sexually abused her as a child. The victim-blaming language used by them as well as polaroid photographs that are briefly seen are especially uncomfortable.
A brief sexual assault/harassment is shown on the television around 44 minutes in.
Silicon Valley (TV Show)
Silver Haze (Movie)
A man is shown masturbating over a sleeping woman. He is shown to have ejaculated in her hair whilst her sister was in the same room as her. We see her observing the aftermath in the mirror.
The breasts of a dead female body are fondled.
The main character recounts having sex with her half-brother: some scenes are shown in flashback (no nudity).
A Simple Plan (Movie)
One of the characters gets drunk and grabs a woman’s bottom while she is at the bar. She is visibly upset and calls him out as he walks by: nothing else happens.
Sin City (Movie)
A police officer talks about a girl who has been raped and killed.
Sing (2016) (Movie)
A male mouse keeps touching a female mouse who does not know him: it is perceived as flirting but it is not.
A female robot kisses one of the male characters without his consent. A teenage boy likes a girl and sometimes watches her through the security camera's of the school.
Sing Street (Movie)
The female lead (a teenage girl) has a relationship with an adult because she is portrayed as ‘mature’ for her age. Later, she tells the main character that the man physically and verbally abuses her, but there is no mention of sexual abuse though it is implied that they have sexual relationships. The headmaster of an all boys catholic school beckons the main character to use his toilet: although there is no sexual abuse, the man chases and physically assaults the boy, forcing him to remove his makeup violently. The main character’s father is verbally abusive towards his wife, making inappropriate remarks on her underwear and clothing, and using sexual slurs. The main character is bullied by another boy who corners him in the toilet and threatens to physically assault him if he does not take off his underwear for him. He repeatedly uses homophobic slurs but nothing happens. He later punches him for not doing what he said. In a daydream of the main character, the female lead is seen to be harassed by her adult boyfriend and she is clearly uncomfortable and uneasy. This is stopped by the brother of the main character who fights the older boyfriend.
There is passing mention of a 30-year-old man who likes to date high school girls. A character who works as a waitress makes allusions to her and her coworkers being grabbed or otherwise sexually harassed by customers. A white woman intentionally falsely accuses a Black man of sexual harassment, and he and his wife are lynched. A prison guard rapes and brutalizes a "good time girl."
The main character says 'I will not molest you. I am but a humble jester, and you?' as a joke to a female character, who later becomes his love interest.
Sinners (Movie)
A man recalls a time where a white man lied about a black man raping a white woman. In turn, the black man got his penis cut off and was lynched. A vampire tells a woman distress that he knows how she likes to be licked to try and convince her to do something she does not want to do.
Chapter 3: there are rumors of a character keeping women imprisoned as sex slaves.
The antagonist blackmails his uncle into forcing his (adult) daughter to marry him. After he accepted, the antagonist goes to the woman's room and tries to kiss her despite her clear refusal: he persists and she flees. Later, a similar scene occurs when they are both alone in her house.
Sirens (TV Show)
The series mentions past abuse and features sexual harassment on screen.
Incestuous relationship between two sisters.
Sister, Sister (TV Show)
Worthy of note: throughout the show, the main characters’ next door neighbor tries to get them to go out with him, despite being met with repeated rejections. This is mostly played for laughs since he is younger than the main characters are and they are all (at least at the beginning) children. S1E5: several female characters preparing for a wedding flirt with a man who is clearly uncomfortable. One squeezes his butt as he walks by. Later, one of the protagonists goes on a date: her date tries to kiss her and she protests. Someone else intervenes to stop him. S1E12: the protagonists meet a rapper who makes sexually suggestive comments to them, despite knowing that they are underage. S2E7: a man pretends to be dead and grabs an unsuspecting woman's behind. S3E21: a 16-year-old starts going out with a college sophomore who is 20. The audience do not receive any indication that the relationship is sexual and they break up by the end of the episode. Later on in the episode, one character’s mother gets grabbed suggestively by two men as she is walking in the bus station. Another character’s father receives repeated unwanted flirtatious comments from a woman in the same bus station. Both scenes are played for laughs. S4E10: the protagonists' father plans a formal dinner with a potential business connection. When she arrives, she clearly has the intention of flirting with him rather than talking about their business interests (i.e. touching him and trying to press her body to his inappropriately). The scene is played for laughs. S4E17: the premise of this episode is that an adult man pretends to be a famous photographer in order to lure women (including underage girls like the protagonists) into his apartment. One of the sisters falls for this scheme, and the other sister goes to rescue her. He tries to get them to dress in skimpy clothing for his photographs. E6E1: The twins begin moving into their dorm room at college. They find out that they share a bathroom with two jocks who immediately begin hitting on them and fetishizing the fact that they are twins. This makes them so uncomfortable that they move out. S6E3: The mother (a fashion designer) hires a fashion assistant, in spite of her misgivings about his lack of experience, because her daughter persuades her to give him a chance on the basis that the man is attractive. The mother ends up firing him because he is incompetent. The man then attempts to sue the mother for sexually harassing him. In reality, the mother never sexually harassed him, but her daughters and their friend flirted with them and she shooed them away. In one scene, she asked him to model a garment she was making because he forgot to call the modelling agency and she needed someone to fill in. This whole situation is played for laughs, not only by implying that the concept of a woman harassing a man is laughable, but also because the two parties give wildly different accounts of what happened.
In the opening scene we see a blind woman walk into a locker room and start undressing in front of a man. We later find out they are on a tv show and the scene has been staged; he leaves before she takes off her top. A doctor kisses and gropes the breast of his ex-wife/patient who is likely drugged and possibly hypnotized.
A sex worker in a brothel is implied to be unhappy about her work, and it is implied that she has been treated poorly by customers.
The central issue of this book is Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls (MMIWG). The protagonist uncovers a conspiracy by influential members of her tribe to traffic teenage girls into the sex trade.
Six Feet Under (TV Show)
A storyline involves a borderline-incestuous relationship between a brother and a sister. They never actually go on to have sexual intercourse, but are shown to have an intense and co-dependent relationship. S1E1: rape joke. S1E3: a man sleeps with a girl and asks her to suck on his foot. He then tells the whole school about it since he had sex with her just to mess with her. S1E5+6: rape is mentioned. S1E8: a character who finds the closeness between the aforementioned brother and sister unsettling has a drug-fuelled hallucination in which they are kissing. An adult and teenage have a sexual relationship. Season 2 features a guidance counselor who says there is sexual tension between him and a high schooler S2E6 mentions a 15 year old boy losing his virginity to a 32 year old. The family is mad but also laughs. Season 3: an 18-year-old college student is seduced by his middle-aged teacher. S3E10: this episode features a scene where the aforementioned brother kisses his sister on the lips. She immediately rebuffs him and he claims that the kiss was platonic, although it is heavily implied that this is untrue. S4E4 mentions adult men having sex with teenage girls. S4E5 involvesa car jacking, kidnapping, where one of the main characters is forced to take drugs and then is sexually assaulted. There are also hate crimes. S5E2 mentions child rape and a joke is made about it. There is also a mention of an adult wanting to have sex with his babysitter (a teenager). S5E4 involves a boyfriend attacking his girlfriend and trying to have sex with her. S5E10: it is revealed that a character taped another character having sex with him without his consent and is showing it to other people. S5E11: incest is mentioned.
Sk8 (TV Show)
The antagonist (Adam) sexually harasses/assaults a main character (Langa) many times. He also grooms a character who is 13 (Miya) and assaults and harasses the main character (Reki).
Skate Kitchen (Movie)
A group of teenage girls discuss their various experiences of having their consent violated. A teenage girl looks visibly uncomfortable as her friends try to coax her into group sex by touching her leg.
It is revelead that one of the main characters was abused by his teacher when he was 15.
Sket Dance (TV Show)
Throughout the series, there are multiple moments where female characters get harassed. There is a lot of sexualization of female characters after the first season.
Worthy of note: a male character has a vivid wet dream that becomes a nightmare about a demon possession. A female character mutilates a human young man during a passionate kiss. It is consensual, the man is overjoyed to receive this badge of honor (it is described in deeply disturbing detail).
Skincare (Movie)
Someone posts personal ads encouraging men to show up and act out a "rape fantasy" with a woman who is not aware of the ads and did not consent to any of it. A man kisses a woman unwantedly and without consent, then offers to do a favor for her in exchange for a blowjob. A woman receives unwanted graphic nude photos via text with sexually explicit messages, unwanted.
Skip Beat! (TV Show)
A 21 year old guy and 16 year old girl are in love with each other.
In a dream sequence, a woman passionately kisses a teenage boy.
It Follows (Movie)
This is a horror movie where the monster is a shapeshifting, unstoppable entity passed on through sex. Several of the monster's forms are that of disheveled, naked or half-dressed people who are bloodied. Two preteen boys spy on the main character while she is swimming and changing clothes without her consent: her reaction implies that this is not the first time this has happened. The main character has a consensual sexual encounter with a man, but it takes a turn into potentially disturbing territory when he drugs her, knocks her out, and whisks her away to an unknown location. She then wakes up half-naked and strapped into a wheelchair in an abandoned warehouse for the purpose of him explaining the curse he has now passed to her, after which he lets her go. She feels understandably violated and betrayed, consequently filing a police report. The monster shapeshifts to a victim's mother and, after killing him off-screen, is seen gyrating on his dead body in a suggestive manner.
In the introduction, the main character explains that he is depressed by problems "less dramatic" than being sexually abused. Later, he jokingly tells that someone tried to rape a penguin.
One character proclaims that she has been violated, when in fact she has not.
The protagonist's reputation is threatened by someone working at newspaper company unless she would grant him sexual favors; she rejects it. The protagonist is showing severe stalking behaviors towards her love interest (saying that he is going to be hers, forcing him to see her by manipulating the situation).
This is a sexual education book aimed at children. In addition to explanations and illustrations pertaining to puberty, reproduction, and different sexual organs, the book also devotes a lot of time to the topic of sexual abuse, explaining what it is and giving examples, giving advice on how a child can seek help if they are abused, and emphasizing the importance of personal boundaries and consent. Worthy of note: The book contains several illustrations of naked people at all stages of life, including children in the book's target demographic, to illustrate puberty and sexuality in a purely educational context.
A man chases a housekeeper and insists he is in love with her. There are also scenes with men ogling a woman as she walks down the street. A woman loses her robe while walking home, leaving her naked. She hides behind a bush and we do not see anything, but the man she's with refuses to return the robe and jokes about selling tickets to see her naked. A woman is slapped on the butt.
The female protagonist is forcefully grabbed by her boyfriend to prevent her from running away during an argument. The protagonist is twice drugged to sleep - once willingingly as part of a ritual but later unwillingly. Neither occurrence resulted in anything sexual but after the second occurrence she is questioned regarding why the drug showed up on a drug test and was offered the opportunity to speak out if she believed she was a victim.
Sky Sharks (Movie)
A drunk passenger catcalls a flight attendant multiple times. Two people are filmed having sex and it is unclear if they are aware of it.
Skyfall (Movie)
One of the characters is revealed as having been a sex slave when she was younger. Later on, the protagonist sneaks up on her when she is in the shower and starts a sexual interaction, when she has given him no previous indication of being interested in him. On screen, the woman appears into it, but given her past and the power dynamic between the two of them, it can be upsetting. The protagonist is tied to a chair while another man touches his neck, chest and thighs. He stops when the protagonist seems mostly unbothered. Later, the same man kisses a tied-up woman- she is clearly uncomfortable with it.
After being abducted, girls are asked if they were raped. While they initially do not remember what happened to them, they eventually remember that there was no sexual assault at all.
A man walks in and films a group of women who are all changing, later they discover another camera hidden in the changing room. The same man also grabs the breasts of one of the women, and walks in on them while they are showering.
Slaxx (Movie)
One character refers to another as 'jail bait'. It is unclear how old this character is but he and a colleague are implied to have a sexual relationship.
Slayers (Movie)
This film contains mentions of rape. It also features a scene where teenage girls are attacked and bitten by older men who are revealed to vampires, which is reminiscent of rape.
The film contains a lot of transphobia and homophobia, especially in the beginning and near the end of the movie. Two boys take nude pictures of the girls including the killer without their consent. Later in the movie the boys go on a panty raid in the girls cabin.
In the story "Emeline", the titular character tells another woman how she was always being watched by a man who she implies assaulted her.
The film centres on a woman who performs a type of sex work where she is put to sleep and men are allowed to grope her. She consents to this and it is explicitly stated that they are not allowed to penetrate her. There is one instance where a man burns her with a cigarette during one of these sessions and proceeding clients are warned that they must not leave permanent marks.
There is one joke among two friends where one says to the other that his father molested him. This does not appear to have actually happened and nothing else is mentioned about it.
A wealthy, older man in the community is revealed to have a sexual relationship of some kind with a far younger woman of lower stature; the relationship seems consensual, but there is a clear inequality at play. A demon seizes a screaming woman and kisses her so hard she bleeds. He then rides off with her, which could be taken to imply that he intends to assault her further.
Slither (Movie)
A woman is undressed and changed into a nightgown while she is unconscious Worthy of note: there is a sexually coded scene where the male alien is infecting a woman. He pins her down and covers her mouth, but does not sexually assault her.
A character who is thought to have cheated on the protagonist later implies that she was coerced into the encounter.
U.S. title: Big Time Operators. A woman is sexually assaulted by a cinema crowd.
Smile (2009) (Movie)
A woman is grabbed from behind in an alley and sexually pushed against the wall. It is framed as consensual and they know each other.
A man married a 16 year old woman, but they had no sexual relationship in two years they are married.
Smithereens (Movie)
One of the male main characters follows the female protagonist to her job and then her home to ask her on a date. Another man grabs the protagonist's chest without consent and asks for sex, she denies him. He asks for sex multiple times throughout the film. A kid grabs a piece of the protagonist's underwear from the street floor and runs off. There are multiple instances of kissing under dubious consent. The protagonist behaves stoically through all of these events. None of the scenes are particularly violent and are mostly portrayed as casual.
A woman describes a violent rape in detail for an extended amount of time towards the end of the film.
Smokin' Aces (Movie)
A man says that another man should be raped when he is found.
A woman is blackmailed with pictures of her masturbating to do various things like wearing a short skirt and buying a vibrator. A man makes another man take off all his clothes. He then kisses him on the face.
A man hits on a woman and when she rejects him: he says that he willll hit on her underage friend instead so she knees him in the balls.
There's a brief joke where a woman worries that she and her companion will be sex trafficked, but they are assured that they are safe because traffickers only want young and beautiful women.
In this book, marrital sex is considered like a duty from the wife and true consent is sometimes unclear: sex is described in some scenes.
The woman antagonist has an inappropriately intimate relationship with her brother: she kisses him and he appears uncomfortable but nothing graphic is shown. The protagonist is surrounded by unsavoury men who do not care about her discomfort; one of them later rips her clothes, insinuating that he could take this further and become sexually violent.
Worthy of note: A man kisses the unconscious female protagonist to wake her up.
A woman has her clothes forcibly removed by a man while another takes pictures.
Snowpiercer (TV Show)
Season 1 contains a plot line of a murderer that cuts off mens genitals while they are alive. This character is killed off, but was doing it under orders of a girl who remains in the show until season three. S1E2: a guard gives a man medicine in exchange for oral sex. S1E4: a teenager has a sexual relationship with an adult. It is not clear if she is over the age of consent, but her father says "morality is a sliding scale" in regards to their relationship. Season 2 (mid season): there is a character arc where a woman has clearly been sexually traumatized by a man who used to "own" her. She has escaped and is now being asked to go back to him to help the cause. S3E10: right after the intro, a man kisses a woman without consent and says something sexual.
Chapter 18: mention of a late show host interviewing a candidate running for public office who had bragged on tape about assaulting women.
The author describes several moments where co-workers made sexually harassing comments towards her.
A woman drinks so much she passes out, and is taken home by a man. She confirms later they had sex. She at first insists it is not assault because she would have said "yes" if she were conscious, but later acknowledges it as rape. The same man later forces a kiss on a teenage girl, though he is unaware of her age until he is told. A woman is regularly catcalled by a man who lives near her apartment, who shouts sexually-charged comments at her almost daily. When she insults him in response, he follows her and grabs her until she fights him off. One woman kisses and vaginally fingers her friend without consent. She later gets angry when the friend pulls away. The friend is unsure whether she wants it or not, but never seems to consider it assault.
The xenophobia-motivated rape and killing of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar is mentioned in passing.
A young male main character faces occasional sexual harassment from other men. One antagonist deliberately manhandles him and promises future sexual assault as part of an interrogation.
The Society (TV Show)
The shows contains repeated talk and jokes about sexual assault and rape.
Towards the beginning of the book, a character grabs the hand of one of the protagonists and tries to force a kiss on her. She is able to fight him off. There are several references to professors and other characters with authority sexually assaulting their female students and turning public opinion against them.
A man grabs a woman's hand and puts it on his crotch.
Solar Opposites (TV Show)
Almost every episode has at least one comment/joke about assault, harassment, or incest. These instances are brief, not graphic, and played for laughs. Although the main characters are not technically family, they live and act like one which can make their sexual relations feel incestuous. The ages of the main characters are not specified, but two of them look and act like teenagers. They sometimes have sexual encounters with adults, but the interactions do not feel predatory. Two characters are having sex and are filmed without their knowledge: the scene is played for laughs.
Solo Leveling (TV Show)
S1E8: three male prisoners join the protagonist's party for a mission, hoping to reduce their sentence. They immediately start verbally harassing the woman in the group, before being told off by their overseer (19:00). S1E9: in a flashback, a man is shown bribing the prisoner's overseer to kill the three men (4:40). He explains that the three prisoners assaulted his daughter (age not given or implied). The girl then committed suicide. When it cuts back, the overseer kills the prisoners.
A woman seems to be in a relationship she was pressured into.
A man teases a woman about her chest size (09:09): he moves the front of her jacket out of the way to try and prove his point, but he is quickly stopped.
About 5 minutes into the movie, producers of a show talk about their genitals (workplace sexual harassment). A fiance jokingly tells her husband (who is drunk) that she wants to "take advantage of him". A side character gets hit in the testicles several times in a row.
A man in a position of power is revealed to have sexually harassed multiple women. There is a scene where he harasses the female romantic lead that is described in some detail.
The male coprotagonist does a background check on his coprotagonist and finds out that he is a registered sex offender. However, the latter explains that the record is due to a misunderstanding; he was caught publicly urinating, but did not realize he was urinating on a (closed) daycare.
The premise of this book is that two women, a showrunner and her assistant, fall in love. The plot deals thoroughly with the power differential and the age difference (the showrunner is 41 and the assistant is 27) between them. They have some near kisses throughout the book, but they don't actually kiss or have sex until close to the end, when the assistant is about to transition to a different job in which the showrunner will no longer be her boss. A director, who is a colleague of the showrunner, attempts to persuade the assistant into giving him a handjob or a blowjob, citing a rumor that the assistant has no qualms with sleeping her way to the top. The assistant tells the showrunner what happened, and the showrunner leads a campaign to expose the director's misconduct, leading other women in the film industry who had also been harassed by him to do the same. The director does not retaliate or respond in any way.
It is very much implied that the main character in the film is imagining an incestuous relationship between her husband and his cousin.
The film contains one mention of involuntary probing (by aliens) and one insinuation of child abuse which is not actual.
Sonny Boy (TV Show)
S1E5: a female teacher presses a male student against her breasts.
The protagonist is a psychoanalyst. In the first 10 minutes of the film, one of his patients (a sex maniac) tells him that he is afraid to end up raping someone. This character appears at several other occasions throughout the film. A few minutes after that, the protagonist's daughter does her homework with a friend who insists to kiss her despite her refusal. Her parents are in the next room and her mother signals to her husband not to pay attention to the incident.
Soul Eater (TV Show)
S1E5: a girl is held by her hair by an adult man, and has her shirt lifted to reveal her stomach before she is freed. The scene is not sexual, but it is suggestive. A man discusses non-consensual experimentation done to him while sleeping (not sexual). S1E9: a teenage boy is pursued by someone trying to pull his clothes off. This is supposed to be comedic. One character frequently spies on his partner whilst they are bathing in the nude. Another, on multiple occasions, touches the breasts of his two female companions in order to make comments on the differences between their bodies. This is played for laughs. A teenage character is frequently harassed by an adult, who wakes him up by sitting on him and smothering him with her breasts. This is also played for laughs.
Chapter 23 : a man is threatened with being locked up with monsters, the implication being that they would rape him. Chapter 26: monsters attempting to capture the same man imply that he'll be used as "entertainment" for the monsters.
Soul Survivor (Movie)
After the main character's boyfriend dies, he shows up in a dream and she asks him to make love to her : we find out that she was talking in her sleep and that her friend had sex with her because he thought she was talking to him (or so he says). About halfway through the movie, the main female character goes to the church for help and the priest puts his hand down her shirt. We later find out that he was just checking her necklace to see if she was Catholic to give her last rites. The main character also gets pinned against the inside of a car when the same friend tells her she liked when he kissed her. This turns out to be part of a dream too. Its also worth noting that the main character is constantly followed and physically attacked by men.
Soulmates (TV Show)
S1E2: a sexual assault between and older professor and his college student is discussed. S1E6: a woman gets catcalled and shoved around in an alley by two different men. The first man is trying to teach her how to breathe in scary situations but the second's dialog indicates he plans to attack her.
There is a mention of sexual abuse on a child by his grandfather (35:00).
S1E14: the mother of the protagonist dresses up and goes to a club. She is grabbed by a man, and pushed into a room of men. She wants to escape but the door is blocked by a man. Nothing happens because the men in the room happen to be some acquaintance of her son. But it is clear that something fishy is going on and it is a regular way of doing business in the club.
Two main characters (male and female) are kidnapped and implied to be threatened with sexual slavery. No harm comes to them, and the threat is never treated with much emotional weight.
A side character has an emotionally abusive relationship and gets upset when his partner only cares about having sex with him. A character calls someone else a "donkey raper".
One man says he will 'take' another man's wife - meaning is left ambiguous.
This story features a woman coping with the memories of an extremely, violently abusive relationship. It is never explicitly stated what age she is when the relationship begins but it may have been her mid to late teens after she was unsuccessful at becoming a sex worker. The focus of the protagonist's memories are the non-sexual violence of the relationship. Their sexual relationship is never really mentioned. A few chapters are spent with some secondary characters, one of whom is an adult man, 30+, who is married to a teenager. They are never seen together in the story. There is a brief passage explaining one of the methods sex workers use to prevent clients from interacting with them in non-consentual ways which describes some hypothetical non-consentual acts.
Space Dandy (TV Show)
Space Force (TV Show)
S1E1: the main character’s wife is in prison and a joke is made about her being raped or molested by a guard who slips her food while she is being denied food by the prison (around 19:00).
There are mentions of trafficking over a few chapters as part of a plan to kill the trafficker. This culminates in chapter 30 which includes a fake deal to sell someone as part of the plan, but they are never taken from the crew Chapter 38: an aphrodisiac drug was found mixed into food packets so if someone ate it they would be unaware of the drug.
Space Jam (Movie)
Multiple characters make harassing comments and wolf whistles toward a female character.
A character discusses three females captives, asking whether they are pretty, young and soft, and stating that young girls are nicer to touch (27:20-27:50). A man forces a young woman into the water and then washes her hair against her will and then forces her to wash herself while he watches (33:00-34:00). The three female captives are held by guards. Their leader orders one of the women to be undressed. As the guard starts to pull the woman's clothes off, he is ordered to do it slowly. The leader makes overtly sexual sounds as he watches (48:00- 48:40). The character who earlier talked about touching young girls, attempts to grab a restrained woman's chest, but she manages to pull away (1:12:30). A woman is chained up and a male character tells her that she is going to give herself to him. An unexplained process then follows in which the male character gestures and makes sexual noises and the woman is physically affected, although there is no contact. Despite the lack of physical contact the allusion to rape is very strong (1:18:00-1:19:00).
A drunk guy gets on stage whilea female band is performing: he grabs the singer's chest and she shoves him offstage.
Spark (2016) (Movie)
While there are no clear sexual advances, the villain forces a woman to be betrothed to him even though she clearly doesn't reciprocate his feelings. He attempts to force a kiss on her at the end, but she refuses and defends herself.
There is a point where a young looking woman says that she had a sexual relationship with one of the band members who is clearly an adult, and said they knew each other since she was 14. It was not made clear their ages when they were in a relationship. Worthy of note: the protagonists discuss teenage girls who were fans of the band being disrespectful of boundaries, such as pressing them against buildings and running onto stage hugging them.
Spawn (Movie)
Threats of sexual violence in this movie are particularly violent, sudden, and cruel. 21:37-21:40: inappropriate comment towards a child. 1:03:11-1:03:53: rape threats. 1:15:28-1:15:49: sexual harassmen. 1:21:43-1:22:06: more rape threats and sexual harassment.
The premise of the movie is that one family goes to visit another that they met as tourists. While the wife of family A (the guests) is taking a shower, someone from family B (the hosts), presumably the husband, enters the bathroom and starts brushing their teeth. Although the shower has frosted glass walls, and no one can see in or out, the fact that someone walks in on wife A, without knocking or acknowledging the transgression, makes her visibly upset. During a sex scene with couple A, the husband from family B stares at them through a window 38:44-39:50. Later, child A is crying in the middle of the night because she is lonely. Husband B picks her up and brings her to the bed he shares with his wife. He sleeps naked in the bed.
A male character makes passes at a married woman who is uncomfortable, including kissing her neck and winking. A woman finds her young daughter sleeping in bed with a couple who are in their underwear. SPOILERS: There is implied but not explicit child abuse/grooming. It is implied that a woman may have been a child victim to the man she is married to in the movie. When this woman dies, he says that he intends to replace her with one of the female characters that is a child.
Worthy of note: the protagonist, a high school student, goes on a few dates with a college student. However, they are both 18. Spoiler: police shoot one of the protagonists on the assumption that he is raping someone. He is not.
The Special (Movie)
A man asks another character whether they were sexually assaulted whilst held captive.
Spice World (Movie)
Spider-Man (Movie)
A character is cornered by a group of men and her clothes torn, implying a forthcoming sexual assault, which is prevented by the arrival of the hero.
The main character is non-consensually slapped on the buttocks by another teenager (49:30).
Spiderhead (Movie)
Prisoners who sign up to be part of drug trials in exchange for a nicer prison and amenities consent to be drugged with a drug causing their libido to increase, leading to them willingly have sex with each other. While they technically can decline to be drugged, it is shown that they are threatened with removal from the program and sent back to regular prison if they choose not to be drugged.
A man invites a woman to dinner and when she tries to leave she realizes he is locked the door. He forcibly tries to kiss her but she is able to fight him off and get away.
Spin Me Round (Movie)
Splash (Movie)
At the beginning of the movie, a child repeatedly drops coins on the floor to bend down to look up women’s dresses. He gets older and continues to do this as a grown man. A scientist explains that he wants to do an internal exam on the mermaid including an exam of her reproductive organs. It is unclear whether or not she will be alive for the examination. The exam does not happen.
The Spoilers (Movie)
A man forcefully kisses a woman. Later, another man grabs the same woman to abuse her, but before anything happens, he is stopped by that previous man.
S2E13: prison rape joke. S3E15: the characters go on a panty raid.
Story 1 (Repent): a high school boy drugs a girl, strips her naked and leaves her like that at a party. It is specifically stated that no one assaults her, but that the rumors were enough to ruin her reputation which was the intention. Later, there are brief, non-graphic mentions of women being abused by the police.
Spree (Movie)
The film contains a mention of "date-rape" (1:05:52), kidnapping and unwanted advances (1:11:06-1:32:32). A male character tells a female character that he is taking her to his house so they can make a sex tape and leak it to further their brands. She is trapped in the backseat of his car and attacks him to try to escape: he takes a poll to his live stream on what he should do to her and the rape option loses (1:16:30-1:17:26). There are date rape jokes throughout the movie.
About halfway through the movie, the main male character talks to one of the female protagonist, who is willing to leave his place. Getting close to her, he tries to convince her to stay while touching her face and getting threatening. The woman is visibly distressed, but nothing further happens: she then leaves.
At 29 minutes in, the protagonist accidentally walks into a room where a woman is changing. At 31 minutes, he touches her breast while she is asleep. She is surprised and rebuffs him but then reciprocates. They are stopped by another character walking in. At 35 minutes, he again touches her breast and she slaps him. After that, they have consensual sex several times. SPOILERS: Years after, it is revealed that the protagonist eventually killed her because of his jealousy.
Sputnik (Movie)
During a discussion about a prisoner (01:15:40), it is mentioned that "he raped and killed his neighbour, a 12-year-old girl."
The Spy (TV Show)
S1E3: a soldier sexually harasses a waitress multiple times, while the other men surrounding them laugh. S1E4: three women are brought to a military man of high rank and the other soldiers grab the women and joke they should be given to the soldiers first so they can "get them ready".
Spy (2015) (Movie)
The film contains many instances of cat calling and non-consensual grabbing and kissing attempts. At the beginning of the film, the main character is given a rape whistle. Twice, images of male genitalia are displayed on screen. The main character warns another woman that a man has spiked her drink with GHB. After that, the victim implies that, based on the main character's appearance, she cannot be sexually assaulted. There is a scene where the main character is tied up, and a man takes the opportunity to touch her buttocks, then positions his pelvis at the level of her neck. The main character is visibly uncomfortable and does not consent to these actions.
A woman is shown tied to a recliner. Her male captive strokes her hair for a brief moment and tells her that she is beautiful, to her obvious discomfort (1:40:00).
Squirm (Movie)
A woman is visibly uncomfortable at being left alone on a boat with a man. Soon after he tells her that he wants to be in a relationship with her and forcibly kisses her but she pushes him away. Later he tries to kidnap her, and he does gag her but nothing further happens.
A doctor is shown kissing an unconscious teenage patient recovering from surgery. The plot revolves around the doctor's obsession with the teenage patient: he drugs, abducts, ties up and kisses the teenager without consent.
S1E6: while a Vulcan woman is being held captive, an Andorian guard says he "looks forward to having her.... As a prisoner", the implication being that he hopes to assault her. S1E17: a female character is assaulted telepathically in an extended metaphor for sexual assault. S1E18: female characters are threatened with sexual slavery. One woman is touched in a way that is seen as sexual by the abuser while he assumes she is unconscious. S1E19: the episode has lots of discussion of sexual slavery, with multiple female characters threatened with being sold into slavery. S2E25: one female character undergoes "Pon Farr", which means that her mating drive is driven up. She triesseveral times to convince one of the make characters to have sex despite his obvious discomfort. S3E4: a female character is pressured into a physical act with sexual overtones. S4E4: characters and plot elements regarding sexual slavery from S1E12 return. S4E17: multiple male characters are chemically coerced into sexual acts.
The encounter between an adult and a teenager is only implied; nothing is shown on screen.
S3E5: a character has their body taken over by a piece of their younger self's consciousness, which had been previously erased by a brain implant. The consciousness then uses his body to sexually harass a coworker.
S1E1+2: these episodes are about an alien trying to reproduce (workplace sexual harassment). S1E15: one character mentions that someone he fell in love with was raped and killed (33:50). S2E6: a hologram woman sexually harrowes another hologram. S2E8: this episode includes mind control that makes people have sex they are not having. S2E11: this episode contains sexual harassment and reproductive violence through stealing someone's genetic material to make a baby. S2E15: this episode involves a kidnapping and forced species transition that results in offspring. It is not clear if the mating was consensual or not. S2E18: graphic sexual harassment. S2E26: a character mentions how Native American women were raped, adding to the plot of a male main character having his DNA stolen by a woman to conceive a child without his consent. S3E10: a main character is mentally taken over by a very aggressive pansexual who uses her body to flirt with and kiss many people. S3E11: a main characters bedroom is taken over by a man who has chosen her to he his mate. He does not respect her no, and off screen, he pushes himself on top of her. He forcefully changes her into sexy clothes through magic. S3E14: an Alien threaten the whole ship unless a male crew members stays and becomes her lover. S3E16: a character proposes marriage and then gets violent when he does not get his way. A female character is forced into heat by another character. Several characters force themselves on other characters. S3E18: a main character's personality changes into a very creepy predator. Several women are touched in non consensual ways. S3E20: it is revealed that a main character's mother was impregnated without her permission. S4E13: a main female character forces herself on a main male character saying "resistance is futile". It is a dream. S4E17: a woman suffers from PTSD from a male character performing non consensual surgery on her. She describes it as being violated. Flashbacks are shown on screen. People doubt the woman's story: men discuss it all without her. The crew gaslights the victim into believing she was not violated. They aggressor is killed, and they have the victim regret him dying. S4E18+19: a character believes that she is pretending to be in love with a Nazi and pregnant with his child. The whole episode also makes the whole crew believe false things in a holo program causing them to have no control over their bodily actions. S4E20: an alien using the form of one of the crew is intimate with the crewmates partner. Later, he is physically aggressive when she turns down a date with him. S5E10: one character kisses another under false pretenses. S7E7: a female crew member's body is occupied by the male holographic doctor. While in her body he experiences sexual arousal while interacting with other people. He kisses someone and receives a message while in her body. S7E18: a female crewmember has her clothing removed by a young man without her consent in an attempt to "observe humanity". S7E19: in a holonovel, a female patient is drugged by a doctor . It is assumed that she is assaulted off screen.
S4E14: an adult woman is shown spanking a young female character. S4E20: a character rejects a man's advances and he grabs her by the arm in retaliation. Another female character is being held hostage and transported to a man she would be forced to marry. S5E8: a young woman is captured and in discussing her ransom, her captor implies that she will be sold to a male criminal for sexual purposes. There is also mildly implied necrophilia.
SPOILERS There is a kiss and (implied one-sided) attraction between siblings. However, both are unaware that they are related at the time. Worthy of note: at the time that the film was written/came out, it had not yet been decided by the writers, director or production team that the characters would later be revealed to be related.
A man grabs a woman in order to get her to be quiet. She tells him several times to let go, and he responds: 'don't get excited.' SPOILER: One scene depicts a kiss between a brother and sister (they aren't aware that they are related).
Character is held prisoner and forced to dress in a metal bikini while chained. Strong abuse of power and sexual overtones.
A woman kisses a man without consent. Worthy of note: the main female character returns to an older male character who had previously captured and restrained her while violating her mind. After working together for a period of time, he continues to emotionally manipulate her.
Starcrash (Movie)
The female protagonist is captured by enemies and tied up.
Stardew Valley (Video Game)
During a cutscene involving an available-to-romance NPC, the character takes the player on a date alone at sea, where he non-consensually kisses them after proclaiming his love for the protagonist. At that point in the game, the player would already have to be romantically involved with the NPC (by choice) to trigger this event, but in the scene, he states that the player and him had “been friends for a while,” therefore implying that you were not dating by that point.
It is briefly implied that a pirate may act violently towards a woman, but the threat is quickly dispelled and the scene is handled comedically.
Stargate (Movie)
A team arrives on a planet where a woman is offered to them as a sexual gift by a tribe. At first, the man refuses, but because the woman faces humiliation of rejection, he eventually gives in later. This is later portrayed romantically since they become a couple.
S2E4: this episode involves a person taking over another person's body and kissing someone. S2E15: when a constable becomes unsatisfied, he implies to a woman that she might have “something else” to offer him. He then forcefully grabs the woman’s arm against her will. The situation is quickly stopped by one of the main characters, and he fights the officers. S3E3: this episode revolves around a man who is revealed to be systematically drugging the people in the town he lives in with a potion that makes them highly susceptible to suggestion. He uses this to make everybody do what he wants, including coercing women into having sex with him. At the end of the episode, the main characters are able to stop him from continuing to drug the townspeople, and the effects of the potion wear off. This character also shows up again in a later episode and the main characters are concerned that he may be drugging people again, but it is revealed that this is not the case. S3E5: the main characters experience hyper-realistic hallucinations induced by their captors in an attempt to extract information from them. They do not realize that what is happening is not real until it is over, at which point one character vaguely implies that the hallucination he experienced involved some form of sexual assault. This is played as a joke. S3E15: this episode features the rapist again. He is no longer drugging people, but he is still using his cult of personality to draw innocent people in and deceiving them. Also a threat of rape is made against villagers. S5E18 includes an alien taking over someone's body and trying to seduce their boyfriend.
To the Stars (Movie)
In one of the first scenes of the film, the teenage protagonist is sexually harassed by a group of teenage boys when she is alone in the middle of nowhere. They first catcall her and one of them tries to grab her breast, encouraged by the other. They are eventually stopped by another character who chases them away. The alcoholic mother of the protagonist makes repeated sexual advances to a teenage boy throughout the film, which makes him uncomfortable. Worthy of note: homophobia is an important plot point.
Stay (Movie)
An old VHS tape showing women lined up implies they are being sold as sex slaves; this is later confirmed in dialogue.
Stay Close (TV Show)
S1E2: a man spikes a girl's drink. The latter uses color changing nail polish to discover the drugs and then switches the drink and drugs him instead. He is over 18, she is a teenager. A woman tells the story of her boyfriend, who offered a private strip show to his friends, and who broke someone's fingers after they tried to touch her despite her refusal.
Towards the end of the book, two cis men corner a trans man in the bathroom, beat him up, and forcefully remove his shirt and his binder, exposing his breasts.
Steins;Gate (TV Show)
The show has a male character that is a stereotype of a 'pervert.' He repeatedly, almost every episode he is present, sexualizes or makes sexual jokes about the female characters in the slow. S1E1: a man attempts to manipulate girl into making a sexual joke about touching male genitals, her friend stops this. S1E2: the protagonist worried a girl was hurt prods and pokes her looking for a wound, she is clearly uncomfortable and not understanding his intentions warns him she will call the police. S1E3: the girl refers to her previous interaction with the protagonist (E2) as an excuse for sexual harassment. The protagonist and a male character attempt to manipulate the girl into a sexual joke. When she calls them out on this, they accuse her of having perverted thoughts. The protagonist tells her to forget all the sexual harassment he committed against her. She agrees, but she and the protagonist call each other perverts throughout the episode. S1E5: a man sexualizes the imaginary relationship between two girls and one of them calls him a pervert. A friend tells another girl it is dangerous to take a shower with the protagonist and another male character around. The friend asks her why she is around them which leads to the girl in question stating that she is being held hostage by the protagonist. The friend takes this seriously, almost calling the police but ends up not. S1E6: a male character makes more sexual jokes about the female characters of the show. S1E7: a father accuses the protagonist for not being able to 'control his lust' around his young daughter who appears under the age of ten. This did not happen in the slightest. A male character makes sexual jokes and is called a pervert by the female cast S1E8: two girls touch an LGBTQ+ character without their consent, once behind a curtain and once on the chest. This character tells them to stop and they do not. There is a lot of emphasis on this character's gender which leads to other characters making sexual jokes where this character is clearly uncomfortable S1E9: more scenes of sexual harassment by a male character. S1E10: the protagonist grabs a girl and touches her breasts and crotch directly on screen trying to prove she is male, the girl begins to cry. A female friend stops this. S1E15: a male character makes a sexual comment about a girl. S1E16: a repeat of the scene from S1E15. A father when finding out that a girl is his daughter makes an uncomfortable sexual joke about calling him 'daddy.' S1E19: a man restrains a women, when she attempts to call out for help he forcibly kisses her to stop her. His intention is not to assault her, but the scene is very intense and might disturb some viewers.
A drunk man tries to forcibly plant a kiss on a teenage girl.
Step Up (Movie)
A high school girl has relationship with “much older guy” who presents as a young adult in a band.
A stepfather catches his daughter consensually kissing a boy and calls it "attempted rape." There's also a shower scene of a 16 year old.
A character voices discomfort about having sex with her husband, saying that she is never really interested, but he is always "chasing her around the bed" and trying to get her to wear fetish gear. In a conversation between two adult women, one notes that there are a lot of teenage boys around "with permanent erections," and the other jokes, "Send them to my place." Worthy of note: the climax involves the protagonist running away from her husband and trying to escape the notice of any other men. Several men find her and corner her. Nothing sexual happens, but the fact that they are cornering her is very tense.
Steven Universe (TV Show)
S2E14 (Historical Friction): one character slaps another character's butt without his consent (10:13). It is treated as a joke. Worthy of note: in S1E37 (Alone Together), two main characters are forced to dance with a man and are uncomfortable, and have a discussion afterwards about how it affected them though they didn't completely understand what had happened. This is not inherently sexual, but the conversation is similar to one between people who have been sexually assaulted. S1E52 ('Jail Break'): an antagonist coerces a supporting character into fusing. The supporting character does not relent when the antagonist is unhappy with the direction the fusion takes. S2E8 ('Keeping It Together'): two of the main characters are made to see 'forced fusions' created by the antagonists. One of these characters is deeply unsettled this, and she explains to the other character that forced fusion isn't true fusion. S2E11 ('Cry For Help'): one of the main characters repeatedly tricks another main character into fusing. Subsequent episodes in the arc (such as 'Keystone Motel') discuss the impact of this deception. S2E13 ('Onion Friend'): the impact of the non-consensual fusion of S2E11 is mentioned. One character is forced by another child character to watch him being born on a video tape without his knowledge or consent. The same character is repeatedly made uncomfortable by him, but he feels he cannot end the 'play date' in order to appease the adults applying pressure for them to be friends. S3E15 ('Alone at Sea'): the antagonist and the supporting character from S1E52 discuss the effects of their fusion. S3E23 ('Earthlings'): an antagonist forcibly fuses with a 'corrupt Gem' who cannot give consent.
S1E17: the main character (a teenage boy) is forcibly kissed by an older gem of ambiguous age. He reacts angrily, and she replies with a joke. While it is implied that the kiss was not intended sexually/romantically and was more of an overbearing greeting, it may still make viewers uncomfortable.
A man attempts to coerce a young woman into sex, despite her clear disinterest, and she spends the entire episode trying to avoid his advances.
A man attacks a woman while she is in the shower. Later, he kidnaps another woman and forcibly kisses her.
Stinger (Movie)
A man threatens to "have some fun" with a woman before killing her.
Stir Crazy (Movie)
In one of the first scenes (04:31-05:33), a main character implies that the weed he has is for his girlfriend that will let him "have her mind and her body [and also of] two of her girlfriends. At the same time (06:19-06:48), another main character insists to a woman he doesn't know that she has "nothing under that coat".
The lesbian main character faces misogyny, slut-shaming, and homophobia are various points. Some of these moments involve threats of physical violence, though she is never harmed beyond one time a man grabs her arm. A vigilante militia group tries to disrupt a Drag Queen Story Hour at a children's festival, and the main character is one of those who intervenes. This violence is not specifically directed at her, but is particularly intense because of the situation and her queerness.
Homophobia & transphobia are central themes.
Straight Up (Movie)
Previous sexual assault is mentioned a few times but not talked about in depth. During one scene a woman is straddled and forcibly made out with in what is supposed to be a comical tone by the assaulter.
A woman who is being stalked is told by her stalker that he knows of a sexual relationship that happened with her teacher in highschool who also stalked her. She later reveals that she ended up telling everyone she lied because no one believed her, but it did actually happen. It is mentioned many times through the film to make people question if she is crazy or truly being stalked.
The two main characters (who end up in a relationship) have a seven-year age gap, meeting initially when one was a minor. They get into a relationship when both are adults. Once they are in a relationship, the younger of the two occasionally “pesters” the other to have sex with him. There was no real threat insinuated, and they only end up having sex when there is no pressure involved.
Stranger Things (TV Show)
S1E1: during a secret study date in her bedroom, a girl's boyfriend initiates intimacy. She is into it but hesitates because her parents are home. She says 'no' because she does not want "to be a notch on his bedpost": he apologises and backs off. They go back to studying. S1E2: a character is photographed without her knowledge while undressing in her boyfriend's house. A significant part of the scenes in this episode show a girl's hesitation lessening and becoming more comfortable with her boyfriend. It culminates in her getting his attention to have him turn around to watch her undress: she eventually initiates and consents to sex. S4E3: two teenagers kiss on a bed and we hear the girl teenager's inner thoughts which say "Can i say no? I can't say no. He'll leave me" (35:34). We do not see any more of this encounter. Worthy of note: S1E3: sexual scenes are spliced with scenes of a girl trying to escape a monster, crying for help (00:36-01:55). S2E9, a teenage boy implies that another teenage boy has a sexual interest in the first boy's sister, who is in her early teens. This is untrue and it is unclear whether he really believes what he is saying or whether he is saying it in order to be provocative. In the same episode, the same teenage boy who made this accusation has an overtly flirtatious encounter with an adult woman. S3E1: several middle-aged women at a public pool takes sexual pleasure in watching a teenage boy lifeguard take his shirt off. The boy makes sexual advances toward one of them who clearly expresses attraction to him and later show up at his home: they flirt and plan to meet up for a sexual encounter but do not go through with it. S3E2: the end of the episode involves a scene where a possessed character kidnaps a girl and takes her to a secluded location in order to feed her to a monster (no sexual assault). She is tied up with tape over her mouth and held to the ground. Her attacker tells her not to be afraid, and that she should stay very still. While not directly related to sexual violence, season 4 may be distressing to survivors of sexual violence because of the way it handles trauma. Trauma is an overarching theme, and multiple characters experience vivid flashbacks of past traumas and exhibit other symptoms of PTSD (anxiety, hypervigilance, flashbacks, etc). There is also a creature (a villain) who preys on people (mostly children) who have experienced traumatic events. This is a main plot line throughout the season, and is exhibited to varying extents in every episode.
A woman is unknowingly watched in the shower by a masked killer (32:00-32:38). There is no implication that this is done out of sexual intent, but it is still violating and may make some viewers uncomfortable.
A woman briefly discusses an incident of rape in her past, and the man listening victim-blames her.
A female character hints that she was sexually assaulted in her past.
As a movie depicting sex work, prostitutes are routinely seen sexually harassing men, often quite aggressively, for sex.
Stripes (Movie)
A man spies on women showering without consent (50:18). In the film’s extended cut, the main character asks his friend on how he would feel if his sister was raped by Russians. The friend makes a poor joke by replying “Come on, you know my sister. You practically raped her one night. The Russians would just have to buy her dinner” (1:42:28-1:42:38). The joke goes by quick, and nothing is visually described or seen.
The series involves a serial kidnapper who targets women. Worthy of note: homophobic, transphobic and rape jokes are made throughout the series.
A character says that her father, who she had not met before, “made a pass” at her.
Stud Life (Movie)
The Studio (TV Show)
S2E4: #metoo joke.
The Stuff (Movie)
One character sometimes throws his arm around another, who is not interested in him. He also jokes that she can reward him for helping them, implied sexually. She just sort of ignores it all and laughs it off. There is an implication of a sexual relationship when a man mentions a past instance where he secretly taped the apartment that another man rented for a 17-year-old girl and sent the tapes to the man's wife.
The narrator witnesses a scene in which a woman is lectured by her boss. She compares the scene to a rape and describes it: the description if extremely violent (1:08:30-1:09:24).
Subspecies (Movie)
A male vampire pulls down a woman's shirt while she is sleeping. Later he has another woman chained up and wearing clothes that are torn across her chest.
The Substance (Movie)
This film contains recurring objectification and sexualization from older men towards women, especially younger women.
A protagonist mentions that his mother, who struggles with mental health issues, once walked out of the house wearing very little clothing. Some young boys teased her. The protagonist says that the boys were more so teasing her about her mental health struggles, but sexual harassment is implied. Another protagonist attracts the attention of an antagonist who at first seems to have pedophilic intentions. He is evil, but he demonstrates no sexual intention.
Frequent jokes are made regarding a character who raped a girl in highschool and is a teacher now.
Story #2: mention of a man getting handsy regularly. Story #7: a woman sleeps with a teenager whose age she does not know, assumed to be somewhere between 16-18.
Suburbia (Movie)
A bunch of punks forcibly strip a woman of each article of clothing until she is completely nude in a public concert while people laugh and make inappropriate gestures at her. Full rear and breasts and pubic region shown. There are conversations between characters regarding a woman's childhood and issues revolving around her father abusing her.
Such Brave Girls (TV Show)
The show is riddled with incest jokes and people misunderstanding consent.
There is passing mention of a coach who had an inappropriate relationship with a high school junior at some point before the events of the book.
Worthy of note: part of the story revolves around a romance between a 15 year old female character and a 100+ year old fantasy male character (age range unclear). S1E11 : A girl finds herself in an ambush. Several boys try to torture her. She ends up being saved.
Sugar Hill (Movie)
Sugar (TV) (TV Show)
Around the 15 minute mark, a woman explains a situation in which a man attempts to blackmail her using a video of them having sex. The video is from a hidden camera and taken without her consent: he attempted to use the blackmail to rape her, and it is explained that he has successfully done this to many other women. S1E2: there are talks about victim who was raped and murdered. And then a man who was killed and is a human trafficker.
During the film’s climax, it is briefly mentioned that one of the villains “had their way” with the villain and those controlled by the creature’s sort of hive mind system. None of the assaults are shown on screen, but the implication along with the graphic reveal of how these individuals were tortured and mutilated is disturbing. The main female character briefly describes her trauma from an abusive relationship and how it affected her.
Suits (TV Show)
A women details how she was sexually harassed at work, told she needed to have sex with her boss to keep her job, and after telling HR she was fired and black listed. False sexual harassment claims are used against male characters as a way to attack them in court. S1E1: there is one mention of a pro bono sexual harassment case. S1E10: a woman kisses a man without asking. He seems unsure about it considering he has a girlfriend (which she was aware of when she kissed him). S1E11: the rape of more than 30 victims by a rapist (who is then in prison) is mentioned (32:49). S2E4: a woman slaps a co-workers but jokingly to make him move (14:53-14:56). Moments later, a guy knocks on the door so she quickly ruffles and pulls on the co-workers hair and his tie to make it look like they were doing sexual things (15:20-15:52). S6E11: a male character gets out of prison and a teenager mockingly asks if he ever “dropped the soap”. S9E8; a man's sister comes to him in an effort to prevent a merger with a company run by a man who attempted to rape her 15 years ago. It is discussed throughout and other characters mention more rape cases that failed to see justice in court. The assaulter shows no remorse, but the recurring characters are kind and ready to fight for the survivor.
Summer of 84 (Movie)
Teenage boys watch their neighbor undress through her window.
Summer School (Movie)
A student works as a stripper and is harassed at his job. Off-screen, his aunt and mother molest him, not initially knowing it's him. A teenage girl is ogled by two of her classmates as she takes off her bra at a beach, but stops when a classmate warns her not to.
The two love interests are the main character's step sisters.
Summertime (Movie)
A character mentions her ex husband assaulting her.
The narrator worries that his girlfriend was raped by the authorities as punishment for rebellion. Worthy of note: An older woman tells a teenage girl who is a participant in the Hunger Games "I hope you do win. You have no idea what's in store for you then." It is not explained in this book, but it was revealed in previous installments in the series that some winners of the games are sex trafficked.
A stranger at the barber shop touches a woman: she is visibly uncomfortable.
Chapter 1: In an optional scene, a female character pranks three other female characters by locking them in a bathhouse while the boys are in there. The scene is played for laughs. A male character makes unwanted romantic advances towards the female characters. His behavior is criticized by the narrative and it never goes into sexual harassment territory, but it can still make players uncomfortable. Chapter 2: A male character is forcefully bound and gagged by another male character. This is played for laughs. A female character ends up sick and bedridden for the chapter. One day, as the other characters go to her room to perform their daily check-up, they find that she has been murdered. She is seen lying on her bed in a bra and underwear, frozen to death, with both of her hands mutilated. Although the scene is not presented sexually, it is still highly disturbing. Chapter 3: A girl is revealed to be a sadist who psychologically torments her twin sister and has an incestuous infatuation with her. The girl also grooms her sister to only rely on her for support. The other characters (including the girl's sister) are disgusted at the revelation. She also mentions killing a teacher whom her sister had a crush on, and calls said teacher a pedophile, but we aren't given any further details about the teacher and if he had a relationship with her sister, so it's unknown if this is true or not. Chapter 4: At one point, the main antagonist is tied up, stripped down to his underwear, and repeatedly punched by another character. The scene is presented in a sexual and comedic manner. Worthy of note: There is a gameplay segment called "Terminate Talk Shooting" where the player has to shoot down an opponent's argument. As the opponent's health bar gets lower, parts of their clothes fall off until they're in their undergarments.
Super Drags (TV Show)
Super Lovers (TV Show)
Super Mario Bros (TV Show)
A princess is kidnapped by the villain, who makes some suggestive comments and shakes his lizard tongue at her, which she clearly does not want. Nothing is explicit and he does not touch her, but says: "little girls ... they never forget the first time they were kissed by a lizard."
The main villain touches a male protagonist's face in a predatory manner. It is most likely not meant to be sexual, but he does it without his consent, and it exudes that same feeling. A major plot beat is a villain attempting to marry one of the protagonists. When she makes it clear she does not want to marry him, he manipulates her into agreeing at one point. There is in general a lot of coded manipulation and predatory behavior to his desire to marry her and his attempt to force her into it. The scenes are played light, but the character's reactions show clear disdain and disgust.
Super Mario Sunshine (Video Game)
Similar to the dynamic across several other games in the Super Mario series, the main antagonist kidnaps the female love interest; in this game, he intends to kidnap her so he can go on vacation with her, as well as convincing his son that she's his mother. However, none of this is depicted in a particularly disturbing or realistic manner, per the usual light-hearted tone of the series.
Superbad (Movie)
The central plot of the movie revolves around procuring alcohol so as to get women intoxicated, with the expectation that they will be more likely to get sex if the women are less capable of providing informed consent.
Superman (Movie)
There are two non-consensual kisses in this film.
At the start of the movie, a woman walks towards a group of men while naked (or just wearing a trench coat): they whistle and cat call.
Superman III (Movie)
One character says that they do not want to go to prison because, "they have robbers and rapists, and rapists who rape robbers" (34:00).
Superstar (Movie)
Superstore (TV Show)
S1E2: a reporter is seen kissing an employee on a video tape. The employees all think and insist he was raped by the reporter and it is played for laughs. The encounter was in fact consensual. S1E3: one character accuses another of being a rapist in front of who he belies to be a secret shopper to try and get ahead. S2E3: a woman plans to rape her ex-boyfriend (who is in a coma) in order to get pregnant with his baby. S2E5: an adult harasses a teenager, but nothing further occurs. S3E4: after a robbery takes place, one of the female employees assumes that the male employee present during this event was sexually assaulted by the robber. This did not happen and the assumption is played as a joke. Following this robbery, all employees receive rape whistles. S6E13: a character says they will trap someone in a relationship by "poking a hole in a condom" without that person knowing. They do not end up going through with this plan. It is played off as a joke.
The main characters are women who work in a sports bar, so there is some discussion of sexual harassment on the job but nothing graphic. Near the end, there is a joke about someone being "groped" during an audition.
The Surfer (Movie)
An adult man has an implied sexual relationship with a teenager of unknown age. This is mentioned as a bad thing.
Surveillance (Movie)
A police officer forces a woman to kiss him. Near the end of the film, the killers near the end restrain their victim and grope her before killing her.
A teenage girl denies the fact that her father touches her.
There is a long scene in which a male officer searches a suspect for weapons, feeling and grabbing at him. It may be uncomfortable for some viewers. In another scene, a man tells officers that a woman is being raped. When they go to check, there isn’t actually a rape happening. However it is implied the officers went to the wrong place and that someone may still be in danger elsewhere.
Survivor (TV Show)
In season one, a contestant repeatedly strips around others and once rubs against someone without consent: it is discussed very little. Season 5 had an instance of one cast member rubbing up on another cast member and trying to engage her without her consent. She brings it up to other cast members and the men all gaslight her and call her crazy. In season 39, a woman repeatedly was touched without consent and ended up getting voted off because she came forward.
A flashback implies that the protagonist (an Auschwitz prisoner) was forced to have sex with a female inmate while a Nazi guard was watching them. In the same scene, taking place years after, the protagonist struggles in engaging intimacy with his new wife because of this trauma.
Suzume (Movie)
The movie centers around a romance between a high school student and a college aged love interest. The difference in age and power dynamic is hardly acknowledged. At 01:21:20, an aunt misunderstands a situation believing an adult male is trying to pick up her underage niece and tells him she will call the police.
Swallow (Movie)
About halfway through the movie, the main character describes how she was conceived (a rape) to her therapist. The subject is briefly brought up a few other times after this scene, when the therapist reveals this confession to the main character's husband (during a conversation that she overhears). Worthy of note: prior to these events, the protagonist (a woman) finds herself alone with one of her husband's drunk colleagues, whom she does not know. He asks her for a hug, while stating that he feels lonely: she agrees.
Swallowed (Movie)
A menacing stranger asks the protagonist if he wants to perform oral sex on him while making threats (25 minutes in). The villain threatens to extract a package from the the protagonist's anus (50 minutes in). The villain says "people took advantage of me" while bathing the protagonist who has undressed and gotten into the tub under threat of being shot (65 minutes in).
Swamp Shark (Movie)
A sheriff asks a woman on a date and it is clear that she has had to turn him down several times in the past. He implies that he could make things difficult for her or help her out based on her answer. A man watches through binoculars as a couple begins to have sex.
Sweat (Movie)
The protagonist (a female influencer) notices that a man is stalking her. He is parked in front of her house and when she confronts him, he starts masturbating. She makes him leave and later discovers that he posted an apology video online, explaining that he feels lonely. This encounter disturbs her but when she talks about it to her family, they blame her for knocking on his window. She then invites a male colleague to her house and they start kissing but she quickly shows that she is not into it. She explains him the situation and asks him to scare the stalker off (who is in front of her house again). He agrees but eventually beats the man up. When he comes back to her apartment, she asks him to leave: he refuses and starts masturbating in front of her before leaving. The protagonist then checks on her stalker, who is severely injured: she brings him to the hospital.
A man bribes a columnist with a sexual favor from a womn who is visibly uncomfortable.
A woman discusses how she had sex with a man she came upon in a graveyard, and who 'just lied there'.
The Swerve (Movie)
S1E9: a man threatens a girl by telling her that he is going to grope her avatar's corpse. He is killed immediately afterward.
Sydney (Movie)
The main character is a sex worker: there is a scene where she does not get compensated for her work.
Early in the film, Black Panthers hold white women hostages while one of them is reading about Black men's sexual desires towards them (rape is mentioned). They are fondled against their will, presumably sexually assaulted before being shot (both off-screen).
A note is shown in which it is stated that a man was raped the previous night. Worthy of note: a woman makes a joke about spiking a man's drink, but nothing comes of this.
In a monologue, the main protagonist mentions rape-jokes, slut shaming and revenge porn (1:01:59)
Table 19 (Movie)
Tactics (TV Show)
It is implied that a demon was used by his master for sexual purposes. This was against his will as he could not refuse due to her being his master. A child is in love with an adult man and this is shown throughout the series.
Taffin (Movie)
After a date, two characters are blocked in a parking lot by an 18 wheeler truck: six men get out. The woman is pulled out of the car by two men and thrown onto the hood of another car. The main male character beats them up but then gets beat up himself.
Tail Sting (Movie)
A male passenger hits on a female passenger and she becomes uncomfortable and leaves her seat.
Taken 2 (Movie)
A kidnapper runs a blade down the front of a woman's chest snipping at her clothes while he leans in to smell her. A kidnapper says to the protagonist that they are going to capture his daughter and sell her to "the worst brothel that exists".
A man leers at a female passenger on a train, she is clearly uncomfortable and he slowly licks his lips while looking at her (05:10). A few moments later her momentarily grabs her thigh as he walks past (05:45). Later in the film, the same man deliberately touches the breast of another woman with the barrel of a machine gun and then claims that she is a sex worker and makes a number of derogatory sexual comments towards her (52:35). A subway police lieutenant mentions "sexual molestation" among the crimes they deal with on the subway.
The plot involves middle-age men courting a teenage princess, and she has to come up with ways to discourage or fend them off.
The protagonist pointedly asks his niece if she was ever “bothered” by her mother’s boyfriend. A local politician has photos of naked teenage girls.
In the second story of the film, a man makes several comments discussing sexual violence and degradation of black women.
Talk to Me (Movie)
A demonic entity forces someone to act sexually: ut takes over a teenage boy's body and starts making him act in a sexual manner as well as making out with a dog. The scene does not go any further and people intervene before anything graphic happens. A woman sucks on a man’s toes while he is sleeping.
Talk Radio (Movie)
The movie is about a talk show host who takes calls from all type of people. About an hour into the movie, one person calls to talk about how he cannot stop raping women., and how he is going to do it again. They try to trace the call to report it to the police but the call is not long enough.
The Tall Man (Movie)
There is a mention of a man seducing and molesting a young teenage girl.
In the last part of the movie, a male character says he has only ever slept with his wife while she is unconscious. It is played for laughs.
The man wooing the protagonist grabs her and puts her on his lap while she struggles, but he lets her go (37:26). He chases her around, pinning her down and making inappropriate jokes until she is too tired to run away - he then grabs her by the wrist and twists it behind her back, bringing her to see her father to say that she has agreed to marry him. She then runs from him and locks herself in her room, where he lies that she has consented to marry him. However, aside from this, the scene is not sexual in nature. The protagonist tries to say no when it comes to exchanging 'I do' at the wedding, but right as she tries to, her husband forcefully kisses her to stop her (1:03:45).
Tangerine (Movie)
The film follows two sex workers so it contains several scenes of paid sex as well as some assaults (e.g. : a man pulls open a sex worker's clothes to expose her).
Tango & Cash (Movie)
At 33:48, two men are shown walking through a cell block while various prisoners shout threat at them, including threats to rape them. A man makes a verbal threat of sexual assault regarding a woman who is kidnapped (01:33:50): he is soon killed.
Early in the book there is an instance of a man verbally harassing and grabbing a woman in a bar. She subdues the man, and her handling of the situation is referenced a few times later in the story. In the last few chapters, the rival MMA fighter verbally degrades the main female character in order to offend her boyfriend.
Tapewormz (Movie)
An alien kills a man by crawling up into his rectum.
Tar (Movie)
The film is about a woman in position of power who exploits her position of power over several young women for sex, driving on of her victims to suicide. Nothing graphic is depicted. There are instances of this person making light but inappropriate touches to students. There is a scene where the main character is on a run and hears what might be an assault- we do not see anything or find out what happened, but the audio may be distressing to hear.
The Task (Movie)
It is mentioned that a male warden would rape female prisoners and force them to have his children.
Tasokare Hotel (TV Show)
S1E3: there are pictures shown on screen of women wounded and tied up. S1E12: a character is a serial killer who assaults and kills women. It is not specified that its sexual assault. The pictures are shown on screen again.
A man abruptly pinches a woman's bottom early in the movie. Women are wolf-whistled at. A man kisses a woman after she tells him not to.
There is a kiss between a 17 year old boy and an adult woman but it never becomes sexual, though it is implied that it is something they both want.
A character repeatedly claims his female cousin is in danger of seduction from the protagonist. The audience knows this accusation to be false because the protagonist is gay. A character mentions that men will try to leer into carriages if they think young women are in them.
A Teacher (TV) (TV Show)
The entire series revolves around a teacher/underage student relationship.
A female teacher is forcibly partially undressed in order to stage photos of her supposedly having an affair with her underage student. Teenagers touch a blindfolded man, who is expecting sex, in ways that comply with his fetish. The same man expects sex from a sick woman and does not accept no as an answer, refusing to leave her house. A teenage boy is kissed without his consent multiple times during the movie, this is played as a joke each time. The main character's deep fear of pregnancy and resulting sex repulsion promptly disappears after she is prude-shamed and she immediately has sex.
A 15 year old girl and a man in his 20s are in a relationship. Worthy of note: Underage characters discuss japanese cartoon pornography. There are depictions of nudity with unclear age of the characters involved. Many of the art created by the teen characters is heavily sexually suggestive.
Ted (Movie)
About a half hour before the end of the movie, a man walking home says to a woman: "If I get raped it will be my own fault because of what I'm wearing." This is played for a laugh. The main character touches a woman’s breast without her consent while she is taking a photo with him: it is not presented as being a problem.
Ted Lasso (TV Show)
S2E11: a man kisses a woman without her consent. He quickly pulls away and apologizes, and she does not appear to be severely impacted by it. S3E1: a character makes a joke that she got her office space cheap because the boss was pinching employees' "butts". The response is "one man's grope is another woman's gain". This i played for laughs. S3E3: a joke about a child psychologist having sex with her clients is made. S3E6: a man makes a woman tea and leaves a note saying that it is not drugged. The same man makes a joke about watching a woman through a peephole. A character mentions that his abusive father took him to lose his virginity to a sex worker when he was 14, and it is implied that he was traumatized by it. S3E7: a joke about Jeffrey Epstein is made. S3E8: private sex tapes and nudes are leaked for celebrities including characters on the show. A discussion between footballers takes place on the ethics of keeping nude photos that people have sent you. One player is accidentally outed during this process. A character remembers when a teacher passed around a nude photo of her when she was 15. A joke about handsy old men is made. S3E9: a gay character is subjected to homophobic slurs, which is handled well by the show. A boss creepily tries to get his employee to cheat on his girlfriend and expresses disappointment when he does not. The boss is also creepy to the girlfriend. S3E10: an employee tells his boss that she is hot. The aftermath of the sex tape being leaked continues. S3E12: an inappropriate relationship with a subordinate is mentioned. A joke about peeping on people in a locker room is made.
Teddy (Movie)
A female masseuse gets on top of a male and forcibly kisses him before he pushes her off.
Teen Titans (TV Show)
In one scene, the antagonist torments a teenage protagonist in a highly suggestive manner and rips her clothes.
A psychic character perceives someone thinking sexual thoughts about her and feels uncomfortable. One character touches another character on the shoulders. The latter voices discomfort with this and the former immediately apologizes.
The protagonists pass a character who is wishing a man would leave her alone. There is a passing mention of human trafficking as a concept.
Teen Witch (Movie)
A teen boy takes a teen girl home after a school dance and tries to pressure her into kissing him and performing sexual acts on him while he is driving. She pushes away and yells at him, but he keeps trying. Nothing sexual happens.
Tekken (Movie)
There is a past non-graphic mention of rape which leads to the main character learning that the rapist is his father.
While a man is sleeping, a woman pretends to have sex with him, A man has a woman pinned against the wall, he touches her face and calls her pretty while she tries to get away from him,
A woman is violently assaulted by her boyfriend who disfigure her with acid.
A man begins to fondle a man without his consent (at first). A man and woman have sex in their bed while other creatures watch secretly A character pretends to masturbate at a woman.
Two characters have circumstances that force them into sex work at various points.
Ten Canoes (Movie)
All the men of the movie (members of a tribe) have three wifes, one of whom probably is a teenage girl. This particular girl is kidnapped and sold by another tribe.
At the end of the movie, when the two main characters are singing with the devil, one character sings about potentially getting raped.
Tentacoli (Movie)
While on a date, a woman grabs and tries to forcibly kiss a man.
The Terminal (Movie)
A woman mentions being groped by men during her work as a flight attendant. Men mention having collected the panties of a famous woman in an airport lounge: it is implied that some of them watched her having sex without her consent. Men set up a woman to make her ends up on the knees of her love interest (the main protagonist): it is played for laughs.
Terminator 2 (Movie)
A guard in a mental institution verbally harasses a patient. He also gets very close to the face of a sleeping woman.
A man and a woman kiss passionately; the man reaches into the woman's dress and caresses her breast (no nudity is visible); she becomes offended and angrily stops him.
Terraferma (Movie)
A woman gives birth to a child conceived through the guards "visiting" women at night during her time in immigration jail and tells the story to another woman, saying that the children were kept in the same area and could see (1:00:00-1:01:22).
About halfway through the movie, it is mentioned (through the reading of a private diary) that the antagonist is a pedophile, who abused one of the main female character as a child. It is played for laughs. This is briefly mentioned again later on, and in the final part of the movie, the antagonist is killed (off-screen).
Terrifier (Movie)
A woman’s breasts are cut off and then worn (off screen). Another woman has her underwear ripped from her naked body and is sawed in half from the vagina up while conscious and restrained. A woman jokes about the villain committing public masturbation.
Terrifier 2 (Movie)
A male character wears a shirt that says “just the tip I promise”. Worthy of note: the antagonist mutilates one of his victims by stabbing him in the groin over and over and cutting off his penis, then showing some of it to another character. There is no sexual dimension to him doing this.
Chapter 2, "Franklin", features a flashback scene in which two sailors, implied to be in their 30s, engage in a sexual relationship (separately) with a teenaged Inuk girl. Worthy of note: a lone Inuit woman lives for a time on a ship inhabited by exclusively male sailors. The fact that she needs to be protected from these sailors is occasionally discussed; this is partially due to the fact that some of them believe her to be evil/a witch, but it is implied that there is also some possibility of sexual violence.
Terror Train (Movie)
A man thinks he is being invited into bed by his date but it is a prank: he is tricked into touching a dead body. Later, a woman makes out with a masked person pretending to be her boyfriend.
A boy sexually harasses a girl.
Terror Trips (Movie)
There is mention of sex trafficking that happened in the past, and it is also implied that the women kidnapped during the movie are going to be trafficked.
Terrortory (Movie)
In the second story, two people go into a tent to have sex and a man masturbates outside of it without their knowledge.
Tesis (Movie)
This is the sequel to Margaret Atwood's "The Handmaid's Tale." A central feature of the plot is an authoritarian regime which systematically controls women's sexuality, paring those of them who are fertile with "eligible" men and obligating them to partake in ritualised rapes, with the intention of impregnating them. Women who rebel against this regime are met with cruel and violent punishments.
An antagonist runs his chainsaw, implied to represent an erection, moving up the woman's thigh and crotch. Later, an antagonist is visibly aroused and makes thrusting motions at a woman with a chainsaw. Towards the end of the movie, the antagonist kisses the protagonist without her consent after she is tied to a chair.
Thanksgiving (Movie)
A man makes a comment that vans are the chosen vehicles of pedophiles and rapists.
That 90S Show (TV Show)
S1E3: one of the main characters kisses an employee at the mall unconsensually after he rejects her advances multiple times. S1E5: an older woman lies about selling a hot tub to get in the hot tub with two teenage boys and touches their feet. She then offers that they can “try out her bed” upstairs.
One of the protagonists is a 16 year old boy whose ex-boyfriend is 26 years old. They are no longer together, but they remain friends and the adult occasionally makes flirtatious comments towards the boy and his friends of a similar age.
The trigger warning at the beginning reads: "Please be aware, this book contains light BDSM, dubcon, violence, mentions of sexual violence (no rape or sexual assault occur; it is mentioned in conversation), and sexually explicit content that could trigger certain audiences".
The shows contains a lot of sexual grabbing to female characters.
The Thaw (Movie)
A woman is forced at gunpoint to strip naked so that her body can be inspected for bugs.
A man puts his hand on a woman's knee and around her shoulder.
The protagonist's grandmother, who started life as a slave, was raped and impregnated by her master. The protagonist was conceived when the protagonist's mother was raped at the age of 17 by a schoolteacher. Male characters constantly comment on and covet the protagonist's beauty.
Themroc (Movie)
S1E1: a man stares at the legs of the main female protagonist on a train and makes her feels uncomfortable. He later acts threateningly towards her but she eventually is seduced by him in the next two episodes (they have consensual sex). S1E2: a woman hints that a girl was the result of a rape committed during wartime.
A former ensembke dancer is sent to a monastery for conversion therapy: he is subsequently raped by a priest supposed to "cure him". He escapes but is forced into prostitution to survive. Nothing of this is shown on screen. A character worries the same fate will happen to the protagoist. Worthy of note: homophobia.
Therapy (Movie)
There are passing mentions of sexual assault in chapter 12.
A woman is groped by her bed-bound father in law while helping him in the morning. She swats his hand away and tells him to stop. It is a brief scene and does not feel gratuitous. Worthy of note: The same father in law talks about how he married his first cousin and wishes his son had done the same, claiming "the old ways" (that is, marrying ones first cousin) were better. No incestuous relationships are depicted in the film.
The author's first sexual relationship was with a man who was 19 while the author was 16.
A group of people believes that an alien is looking to mate with the women, and it does tear open one of their shirts while it is attacking.
There is a passing mention of a character getting catcalled. Both protagonists get sexually harassed on an app.
The author discusses being strip searched as both a visitor to and an inmate in prison. She describes how a fellow prisoner exposed himself to her and some others had sex in front of her to unnerve her.
In a satirical scene, a man nearly has sex with his grandmother.
The author discusses slut-shaming lyrics in emo music.
There is one mention of a stepfather raping his stepdaughter.
Within the first few minutes of the film, one character jokingly says that his basement is for "raping animals". It is implied that he is not serious.
A man kisses a woman while strangling her.
The Thick of It (TV Show)
Thief (Movie)
Mentions of prison rape (~40 min).
A man approaches a woman and begins to caress her elbows; her reaction is clearly fearful. Worthy of note: this same man is forcing the same woman to marry him.
One policeman mentions suspecting that a man's intent in an attack might have been sexual. During a re-enactment, a drive-through movie theatre shows a very brief scene of two young people kissing in bed. The man attempts twice to take off his partner's underwear despite her refusal. The movie largely focuses on a murder case and does not linger on the subject of sexual violence.
A man tells another man a dirty joke in Norwegian. The joke mentions sex, incest and a child in a sexual context.
A man spies on and then grabs a little girl before being stopped. It is implied, and characters later speculate, that he was attempting to molest her. A man makes repeated sexual comments towards his nurse. Rape and child molestation are repeatedly brought up throughout the film. A man threatens to have another man's girlfriend raped.
There is a passing mention of a tertiary teenage character who became pregnant while in a relationship with an adult man. A teenage character jokes that he gave an adult man a handjob in exchange for a vinyl record. He says this just to get a rise out of someone, and it turns out to be untrue.
It is implied that a woman became pregnant as a result of rape.
A man makes suggestive comments to a female ghost who is nude.
The Third Day (TV Show)
S1E2: a man talks about a child who was kidnapped and killed (15:40). He mentions that the child was "not molested or anything like that". A teenage girl kisses an adult man (44:18): there is not any kind of sexual or romantic relationship between them, before or after that. S1E4: an adult man approaches a teenage girl and talks about a drawing of a naked woman on a wall. It is implied by the scene and her mother that he had sexual intentions (19:30).
It is revealed in the second part of the movie that the murder victim (a father) had been sexually assaulting his daugther since she was 14. This becomes a central part of the plot and is thus discussed frequently throughout the rest of the film.
The plot revolves around a teenage girl being married off to an adult man. They have a sexual relationship, though very little of it shown on screen. An adult woman is shown to have a secret sexual relationship with a teenage boy. A teenage girl watches people have sex without their knowledge/consent on several occasions.
There are brief mentions of different harassments that women faced (never more than a couple sentences) in chapters 1, 11, 16 and 17.
An adult man flirts with a teenage girl. He manages to find her alone and then grabs her arm. She steps on his foot to get him to let her go. When others find out what he did, gaslights her and tries get her fired. His assistant reveals that he also harassed her in the past, indicating that this is a pattern of behavior for this character. The harasser character gets asked to leave and the remaining characters support the teenage girl who was harassed.
The author references the following: sexual abuse against elders as a form of elder abuse, sexual assault allegations against banker Mahmoud Abdel Salam Omar, and a news story about an old man who groped a young woman in a grocery store. Most of these are in the chapter entitled "No Expiration Date: Sex and Intimacy."
There are mentions of child sex abuse and rape jokes throughout.
The female narrator spends multiple chapters wrongly convinced that she accidentally dosed her (female) love interest with a coercive love potion. The narrator's ex-girlfriend was emotionally abusive, and she struggles with her lingering insecurities. Because of her insecurities and her concerns about the love potion, she repeatedly and painfully pushes away her current love interest. Mentioned in passing: at a festival, someone gave an unnamed woman essentially a magical date-rape drug. She was rescued before anything happened.
This Is Us (TV Show)
Sexual harassment on-screen: In S1E14 a woman is propositioned. When she refuses, the man states “you don’t know it yet, but this is happening.”
A woman mentions that her father sexually assaulted her during her youth.
This Way Up (TV Show)
S1E5: a woman is groped when her friend propositions her. (~17:35) Two women casually joke about the possibility of being raped at a few points throughout the series.
The main character's clothes are removed by magic in front of a huge crowd: his comrades and others visible enjoy this.
Prior to the events of the book, the female romantic lead left her job because her boss was sexually harassing her. Her boyfriend at the time dismissed the seriousness of the situation and she broke up with him. This ex-boyfriend then continues cyber-stalking, texting, and calling her, even though she made it clear they were breaking up.
Thoroughbreds (Movie)
One character is mentioned to have done jail time for statutory rape for having sex with a minor when he was 23 (31:08).
S1E1: a 22 year old woman kisses a 16 year old boy.
A woman describes a past incident in which a man attempted to rape her, but she fought him off and escaped.
There is some muffled cat-calling in the background during a very short segment.
Three Amigos! (Movie)
Three Ways (Movie)
Chapter 1: a man forcibly kisses a woman as a means to take her magic into himself.
Implied incest between a brother and sister. A woman describes a hallucination she has wherein a giant spider sexually assaults her.
Throughout the film, a young man tries to convince a young woman to marry him. He firstly harasses her grandmother, and later the girl herself, despite her clear disinterest (she never answers his questions during the whole movie). The last scene shows him insistingly following her home and harassing her.
Thumbelina (Movie)
A beetle appears in front of her and speaks to her inappropriately, invading her personal space and making her feel very uncomfortable. He then kisses her on the arms and hands as she protests and tries to resist. He drags her off to his club where she will perform for him (37:20-39:04). During a struggle, the toad and the beetle try to grab her as she runs away (1:10:23-1:10:54). Worthy of note: the titular character is kidnapped by toads who intend to force her to join their musical troupe and make her marry one of the toads against her will (28:50-29:18).
Thumper (Movie)
Ticks (Movie)
A man hits on a teenager multiple times, touches her hair and blows kisses to her. While everyone is trapped in the cabin, he also grabs her and means to escape the cabin with her but does not.
There is one flashback to the protagonist fighting off a boy who tried to kiss her on a dare.
Tiger& Bunny (TV Show)
One of the male character grabs the butt of another male character. He also makes sexual comments to the male protagonist. The male protagonist laughs it off. Worthy of note: a 16 year old girl is dressed very provocatively in order to attract more male fans. Her parents address this in one of the episodes.
Tigerland (Movie)
A man teaches soldiers how to torture people by using electric wrenches on their enemies' testicles. One of the soldiers is forced to pull his pants down and the sergeant pretends to demonstrate the procedure on him: it does not happen. Early in the movie, a rape joke can be heard.
Human trafficking and veiled rape threats towards child are mentioned.
Till (Movie)
A black teenage boy compliments and whistles at an adult white woman with no ill intent. She falsely accuses him of sexual assault, resulting in his being lynched by a racist mob. She later describes the non-existent assault in court. This is a true story based in Jim Crow-era USA.
Time traveling peculiarities aside, one character grooms the other from childhood to expect a romantic relationship, which begins when that character is in her mid-teens.
Timecop (Movie)
Antagonists grab and attack a female character, who screams as she is pressed up against a window and touched in a sexual manner (14:00).
Timeless (TV Show)
Time's Up (Movie)
A girl has to tell her boyfriend to stop kissing her multiple times, and eventually pushes him off her
The Tingler (Movie)
In a movie theater, a man tries to put his arm around his date several times and she pushes him off each time. He eventually stops when she moves a seat away from him.
S1E6: a woman shares a sexual fantasy she has about her father because he abandoned her when she was younger.
Titane (Movie)
In the first sequence after the opening title, a female dancer is briefly touched by a man: he is quickly escorted out of the building by security. Just after that, a man, who says he is a fan of the female protagonist, pursues her after she finishes her job at night. She flees and manages to take refuge in her car, but the man insists and says that he is in love with her. After she opened her window, he grabs her head and starts kissing her: she complies in order to be able to kill him. After having sex with a car, the female protagonist wakes up with bruises between her thighs. Later, the female protagonist engages in sexual intercourse with another woman: she persistently pulls the woman's nipple piercing despite the woman's apparent uncomfort, until she protests. The protagonist then stops and goes away. A few minutes later, the protagonist kills the woman while they are kissing on a couch. The protagonist tries to get an abortion by herself with her hairpin: she fails but the scene is rather long and shows her visible distress. In the second part of the movie, the female protagonist disguises as a man and pretends to be the lost child of an elder man. There are several tense scenes where the protagonist tries to hide the fact that she is a woman (for example. the man insists on undressing her). In the final scene of the movie, when the man has discovered that she is a woman and decided to keep treating her as his son, she starts kissing him but he protests. After she dies while giving birth, he eventually kisses her. The protagonist (dressed up as a man), enters a bus where a group of men harass a woman alone in an increasingly violent way. As the tension rises, the protagonist exits the bus, leaving the woman alone with her potential assailants.
Worthy of note: a man saves a woman from jumping off of a ship, shortly after she slips and screams for help. When other people arrive at the scene, they mistakenly accuse him of assaulting the woman due to both parties being put in an awkward position, but she quickly explains that it was a misunderstanding and that he saved her life. The same woman is engaged to a possessive and abusive partner; he does not sexually assault her, but he physically threatens her and slut-shames her for seeking out a relationship with the man who saved her life.
Titanic 666 (Movie)
A man hits on a woman several times even as she tells him to stop.
Toc Toc (Movie)
There is no assault in the film, but some scenes may make viewers uncomfortable. A man with Tourette’s Syndrome makes obscene gestures and phrases towards multiple characters, but it is explained that this is uncontrollable due to his condition. He has no sexual desires or intent to hurt anyone. A female character runs away from the man, in fear that he will assault her: he runs after her in an attempt to explain that he has no bad intentions, but the scene mimics that of a victim attempting to escape possible sexual assault, as that is what the woman thinks is happening.
The protagonist is sexually harassed by another main character.
Tokyo 24Th Ward (TV Show)
S1E3: a girl walks into the bathing area knowing the three male protagonists are naked. She then makes comments about the body of the guy she has a crush on. S1E7: one of the male protagonists spends most of the episode staring at the chests of different women, including an underage girl. This is played for laughs as he is trying to figure something out. All of the girls seem uncomfortable by this. Worthy of note: the naked body of a 17 year old girl is semi shown throughout the series.
An adult man grabs a teenage girl's boob as a "joke" and comments on how she has matured. A man falls asleep injured and in dirty clothing in a drag bar. When he wakes up he is wearing different clothes, implying that one of the (presumably gay) performers must have undressed him while he was sleeping. A teenage character is held hostage and believes she will be made a sex slave (no such thing occurs).
S1E3: one of the villains kisses the protagonist without her consent. Later on, he harasses her a few more times (pinning her down, kissing her again, threatens to make her "his").
On a mission to reach one of the bosses (Boston Reed), a buyer reveals that the people kidnapped by the traffickers are both men and women. The women end up as sex slaves. This case only concerns Boston Reed. The Santa Blanca cartel is not involved in this traffic and everything happens without the cartel leader (El Sueno) knowing.
Tomb Raider (Movie)
A man strokes the protagonist's face (43:20-43:52).
Tomboy (Movie)
Towards the end of the film, a child character is forced to show her genitals to prove they are female. This is without sexual intentions but is still presented in an overpowering/predatory way which could be upsetting to some viewers. This happens off screen but we do see the aftermath and damage this does to the person.
Tombstone (Movie)
At the very start of the movie a wedding is interrupted by outlaws and it is implied that the bride is going to be raped.
Tommyknockers (Movie)
A woman is seemingly kidnapped and a man says that the men who took her have probably raped and killed her. She is secretly part of their group and is unharmed.
Tomodachi Life (Video Game)
This is a life simulator game where the player creates and influences the lives of "Miis" who interact with each other, including romantically. In the Japanese version exclusively, it is possible for adult and minor Miis to have a romantic relationship. If they get married, the child will be magically aged up for the wedding, but this does not apply to Miis who are dating. The Miis can have children, but it is unknown if they reproduce sexually and nothing sexual is ever shown. At the end of the day, the player is given the final say in any romantic relationships that naturally form between Miis, allowing them to deny any pedophilic relationships.
A woman talks about her experiences of having been born into the Children of God cult. Although she does not explicitly mention any sexual element of the abuse she suffered, it is worthy of note that this cult is notorious for its sanctioning and practice of routine child sexual abuse.
Tootsie (Movie)
There is an implied sexual harassment plot point in the soap opera that the characters of this movie are filming (no graphic details are discussed). Also, there is a scene in which one of the characters tries to seduce the lead, while he resists. Nothing happens, as luckily someone walks in as the assailant is trying to kiss him. The assailant then apologizes and leaves.
The main character discovers that he had his memories forcibly altered and that he is not who he believed himself to be. He learns that the woman he thought was his wife was someone spying on him for the past several weeks. Though there is not any sex shown between the two, it is implied that they had sex during that time.
This film contains nude groping and sexualized violence/sexual assault.
This film consists of four stories. In the third one, the female protagonist, working as a receptionist at a spa, is harassed and then assaulted by two men who wants to pay to have sex with her. One of them repeatedly slaps her with his money: she then kills him with a knife. The fourth segment takes place in a hostess club. We see the main female character performing sexual services on a client (massaging him and then licking his torso, before the scene cuts).
Most of the women of the movie are hinted to be prostitutes. A man grabs a woman's breast without her consent: she does not seem distressed at all and even smiles, but she asks him to stop. A janitor stings woman's butts (dancers) with a needle as they are heading on stage.
Touki Bouki (Movie)
The male protagonist pretends to be interested by the sexual advances made by a wealthy man in order to rob him. We see the latter taking the former to his room despite his apparent reluctance. While her boyfriend is away, the female protagonist is briefly caressed on the cheek by another man.
Tourist Trap (Movie)
A man pins a young woman down and forcibly and roughly kisses and touches her because she reminds him of his late wife. The killer refers to several young women as "pretty".
The Tourist (TV) (TV Show)
During a brief sequence where the protagonist remembers all her late mother's 'life advices", we hear her mentioning that all men are potentially agressors.
A man auditions for the role of a rapist in a film, who is described as participating in a gang rape and falling in love with his victim (10:40-11:40).
Tove (Movie)
A romance breaks between two characters, with a pattern where one states that she will not do something (often involving kissing/sexual implications) and the other states that she will and then proceeds: then the first changes her mind.
The Town (Movie)
A bank robbery victim recalls that they were threatened with rape and murder if they talk to the FBI (12:17). During an FBI interrogation, an officer implies that the suspect's father is regularly raped by rival gangs in prison (1:17:53).
A man tries to feel up his date in the car, but she stops him. He tries again and she tells him to stop again, but then they are interrupted. A cop asks a doctor if a female victim was raped. The doctor says no, but says that she did have bite marks on her back, stomach, and breasts.
Tracers (Movie)
The main female protagonist states that her brother beat up a guy who crawled into her bed and started molesting her.
Traffic (Movie)
A man has sex with a 16 year old girl.
Tragedy Girls (Movie)
A man tells two high school girls that he is going to rape their severed heads. Worthy of note: One of the teenage protagonists attempts to use sex appeal to distract an adult male. However, he does not appear to notice.
The antagonist (an adult man) kidnaps the protagonist's teenage daughter, intending to forcibly marry her. However, it is made explicit that he does not intend to do anything overtly sexual with her until they are married, and she is rescued before that happens. Before his status as a villain is revealed, he flirts with the girl and she reciprocates until her mother arrives and forces the man to back off. She specifically mentions that her daughter is "a child", which does not put him off at all.
Trainspotting (Movie)
A character (in his twenties) meets a teenager (15 years old) at a bar and has sex with her, presuming she was an adult. It is implied he would not have done it if he had known otherwise. In one scene, a woman removes a man's underwear while he is passed out in order to look at his genitalia.
Trainwreck (Movie)
An adult is on the verge of having sex with a 16-year-old, only to be stopped by the teenager's mother.
There are two sex scenes where a man is asking a presumed sex worker to role play being raped. This seems to be a consensual agreement, although there is struggle on screen. The scenes are not explicit and mainly concern close-ups of faces.
The protagonist mentions in passing that she noticed her mother getting catcalled.
As a woman is looking at a car's engine, a man is seen to be checking out her body.
There is mention of transgender incarcerated people being raped in prisons. There is also discussion of the pervasive fear that transgender women will rape cisgender women and girls in public restrooms.
Transplant (TV Show)
S2E4: a male patient makes unwanted sexual advances towards a female doctor. It then becomes physical and she fights him off: she is visibly distressed. The show eventually explains the assault with a brain tumor, saying that is why the man is aggressive. S2E5: the said doctor continues to be stressed after her assault. S3E12+13: spousal rape is mentioned. A girl is abducted.
Trapped (Movie)
The villain kidnaps her child, and then uses that to sexually harrass both verbally and physically. The heroine pretends to have consensual sex, but then pulls out a hidden scalpel.
Rape is mentioned. There is also drunken but consensual cheating.
A teenage girl is implied to be having a sexual relationship with her adult female teacher. A teenage girl obsessively collects information and essentially stalks her next door neighbour. Two teenagers have sex next to one of the couple's younger brothers as he is sleeping.
Trespass (Movie)
The female protagonist is forced to the kitchen where a man tells her that she is going to “serve him like she served his brother”. She is also bend over the counter as the man continues to talk to her.
Early in the movie, a man briefly suggests that the protagonist entertains a relationship with his 16 years-old female cousin. Even if it is not the case, the said cousin later mentions that cousins sometimes get married. At some point, a man harasses and abducts a woman. It is implied that he sexually abused her. The scene repeats again later. Throughout the movie, the protagonist gets hit on by several women even if he is clearly not interested.
Trial By Fire (Movie)
In the first part of the movie, domestic violent is discussed and shown on screen, because the protagonist is abusive towards his wife. One scene shows him pinning her down on a couch and holding her arms behind her back: they both calm down and engage consensual sex.
The Triangle (TV Show)
In the beginning of part 1, a woman is told she needs to leave her job and she says "they don't want to rape me, they want to kill me".
Tribe Nine (TV Show)
S1E1: a boy trips and falls in between the thighs of a girl. S1E4: a group kidnaps a girl and one of them tells her that they are gonna have a lot of fun with her. Nothing ends up happening. S1E: a young boy walks into something that resembles a red light district. Multiple women grab him and begin giving him a massage even though he does not want it. Later on a man grabs something from the bra of a woman. She seems upset by this.
Trick (Movie)
A group of teens play spin the bottle with a knife, a teenage girl kisses a boy and one boy is forced to kiss another boy despite him not wanting too. He is convinced to do it but ends up killing the boy.
Trinity Seven (TV Show)
Triple Dare (Movie)
A teenage girl is dared to pretend to be an escort. She ends up in a situation where she is about to have sex with a 31 year old man. They kiss a bit before she runs away. Later, she accuses him of nearly raping her, which she is found out to be lying about.
The main male character spies on his neigbour's phone conversations (one of which involves a romantic relationship). A man climbs up a building to see what his girlfriend is doing and he briefly watches her having sex with someone else.
Trophy Heads (Movie)
Kidnapped womenare undressed and changed into new clothes while unconscious: one of the women is left naked.
Rape, incest, and pedophilia are mentioned in passing.
True Beauty (TV Show)
A man on the bus is caught taking 'up-skirt' photos of the protagonist. Worthy of note: the protagonist is kidnapped by a group of boys. Nothing sexual happens before she is rescued by her friends and these scenes are portrayed in a comedic light.
There is a mention in the past of a teacher who tried to molest a student. There are several past instances mentioned of a younger highschooler who was in a sexual relationship with a senior. Later, after he he graduates, they continue to hook up.
True Grit (Movie)
An old man sexually harasses a teen girl. When she doesn't "comply" to his perverted advancements, he insults her looks. A mature man tells a teenage girl that he considered kissing her as she was sleeping.
True Lies (Movie)
A woman is stalked and put in multiple sexual situations with questionable consent.
True Romance (Movie)
When being interviewed by the police, a character is goaded by the officers, who imply that he will be raped in prison, and tell him that it will make him a better lover in future because he will "know what it feels like to be a woman".
The True Story (TV Show)
S5E5: this episode is about the serial killer who inspired the movie Scream (1996). His crimes include rape and torture, and are discussed throughout the episode.
Many of the essays in the book discuss how vulnerable children are to all forms of abuse and coercion, including sexual abuse and coercion.
There are a few passing mentions of the issue of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls (MMIWG), including a scene where the protagonist's car breaks down on an isolated country road and she worries she could be kidnapped. Nothing bad happens in this scene. The author employs the "There is only one bed" trope, wherein the protagonist falls asleep in her hotel room, thinking it was assigned only to her, but the romantic interest also shows up. He climbs into bed, not noticing her in the dark, and she reacts by trying to fight him off physically before realizing who he is. She says something along the lines of, "I thought you were a stranger who was going to rape me." A few of the protagonist's male coworkers make inappropriate comments to her and about women in general. The protagonist also references "grabby" customers at a bowling alley where she used to work.
It is implied that a priest was raping young nuns. A character discusses how she was almost assaulted.
Trying (TV Show)
S4E5 contains a joke where a kid threatens to tell people that an adult is a pedo (which is false).
Tschugger (Movie)
Sexual harassment, sexual assault and paedophilia are frequently used as jokes throughout the show.
Tucked (Movie)
A character is revealed to be the product of rape (which is not shown, just discussed). Later, a character kisses and licks a woman who is restrained. A man kisses a woman and flirts with her, he gets mad when she asks him to stop. A man watches a woman undress into her bra and panties.
Tulsa King (TV Show)
S1E5: the main character's daughter tells him about a man who came to her home while she was alone. Nothing specific is said, but it is strongly implied that she was assaulted/threatened. The perpetrator is dealt with.
The male lead and female lead had met in high school, meaning they were both of the same age. It is not necessarily a sexual relationship, but the male lead's age and appearance had been stunted in the tunnel, so he was 17-18 mentally and physically. Time passes a lot faster outside of the tunnel, in this case, about 14 hours in the tunnel would be (maybe 8) 13 years in real time. The female lead, who had stayed out of the tunnel, is now ~25 years in age, and kisses the male lead—who is still 17-18 mentally and physically—at the end of the movie.
In the Turn (Movie)
Turning Red (Movie)
The 13-year-old lead has an unrequited crush on a 17-year-old boy. After her mother discovers her drawing pictures of herself with him, her mother confronts him and accuses him of grooming her, against her daughter's will. However, there is no actual grooming involved and her mother was worried for nothing. Multiple girls, including the lead, ogle the same 17-year-old boy and even catcall other boys at school, but the latter seems to be consensual.
A man crudely objectifies a woman in his head, but does not do anything.
The Tutor (Movie)
The tutor in the movie keep checking women out (sexually), which is the focus of the movie.
The Tuxedo (Movie)
The main protagonist is waiting outside for a woman who works at an art museum; he eventually goes to her workplace but stops. A guy says to the female protagonist: "nice rack". Two female agents are practise shooting in a room with mirror- and camera as two male collegues are staring at their rear ends and talking about them in sexual matter.
S1E4: a woman tries to sell two underage girls into prostitution. They find out on time and escape before anything happens. S1E23: a poor family sells their daughter as a maid to a richer family. Immediately after, a tragedy happens and the girl gets separated from the rich family.
S1E5: a sexual encounter between Thor and a fish woman is revealed to be a conspiracy by Loki (her father, therefore Thor's niece) to give another character an opportunity to condemn Thor and themselves to die in Ragnarok. It is implied to have been done against her will.
A woman repeatedly tells a man who is romantically interested in her that she does not feel the same and is in love with somebody else. In response, the man insists that she does not know what she wants and forces a kiss on her. She pushes him away and punches him in the face. The main character has a flashback to a time when she was almost assaulted by a group of men and was saved by another man (the main love interest). After this flashback, she walks toward another group of men with the intention of putting herself in danger so that she can see the ghost of her love interest.
Twin Spica (TV Show)
S1E2: a man tries to grab something out of a girl's arm as the girl is moving. The next scene is the girl being shocked and calling the guy a pervert. He explains how he was trying to get the paper from her hand. There is no sexual intent. S1E10: two boys ask a girl to hang out with them and grab her by the arm. She refuses but they will not leave her alone until another girl threatens to call the police. S1E13: three young boys take off the vest and sweater of a young girl. They want to see the scars on her arm. There is no sexual intent, but the scene can be triggering as she screams ‘no’ and ‘let me go.’ They let her go when they see the scar on her arm. She still has a shirt on. S1E19: a girl mentions how she has a sister who is also her mother. It is unclear if she sees her sister as a mother figure or if there was an incestual relationship between the father and her sister. There is a lot of secrecy around her birth and the father forces her to act like her sister.
Twisted Metal (TV Show)
S1E2: a man catcalls one of the main characters and she kills him right after. S1E5: this episode includes attempted necrophilia, but the victim ends up being alive. And then the guy is not interested.
Two Irenes (Movie)
S1E2: a woman spends most of the episode trying to find out whether or not she was date raped at a party. None of the other episodes have any sexual assault.
A man proudly claims that he has had sex with multiple women while they were unconscious. He also says that women do not actually mean “no” when they say “no”.
Ultrasound (Movie)
S1E1: a man touches the thighs of a teenage girl multiple times to feel her muscles. The girl kicks the man and calls him a pervert. She is visibly uncomfortable. He rubs her thighs, commenting on them. He is older than her. He is a trainer and a main side character.
About halfway through the movie, the protagonist sexually assaults his girlfriend by pinning her against a wall and mimicking a sexual act against her will, and in a very agressive/threatening tone. Before that, a man makes an inappropriate joke about the protagonist''s girlfriend's breast but he does not react.
Early in the film, three men approach two women at the beach and hit on them despite their clear disinterest. They do not seem distressed at all but the men eventually leave. Shortly after, a man jokingly tells that the male protagonist is a pedophile. Another man hits on a slightly drunk woman in a deserted street at night: he asks her to go to his place but she declines. She reluctantly lets him kiss her, but then rebuffs him: he is very pushy but finally lets her leave. At the end of the film, the protagonist awkwardly tries to kiss a young woman: she rebuffs him and he apologizes. She then asks him to sleep at his place and they have sex.
At the beginning, the main character goes out of his apartment and gropes a woman on the street. She does not seem to reject his advances, and it is unclear if the scene is taking place in a dream or reality. Later, as we are getting the history of the house, there is a lot of sexualization of a dead teenager, who is called a “slur” and “whore” multiple times. She is recalled as being 18 and having sexual partners over the age of 40.
The author references the following: rape allegations against Donald Trump, sexual assault allegations against fellow activist Malcolm London and the ensuing accountability process, patterns of white supremacist groups raping Black women, the kidnapping and rape of Recy Taylor, sexual violence in the abstract, and her own identity as a survivor of sexual violence. These references are all non-graphic.
Brief mention of rapes that took place during the Mau Mau uprising.
Unbroken (Movie)
One scene in which two soldiers are instructed to undress, and they do.
Uncaged (Movie)
A man grabs a woman's breast while at a party.
Uncle Frank (Movie)
A female character recounts that her father told her that if she was "prancing around" half naked in front of a town, it would be her fault if she was raped.
Uncut Gems (Movie)
The protagonist is stripped naked and shoved in the trunk of a car. A man insistently asks a woman to make out with him: she eventually agrees.
S1E1: a main character is 900+ years old and has an adult's mind and intellect, but has the form of a 14 year-old girl. A young man of unclear age kisses her at her behest, ostensibly because her saliva has healing properties. This will happen a few more times over the course of the show. S1E9 : a female vampire uses an aphrodisiac venom to subdue her victims. She is very sexually inappropriate and suggestive with a woman she intends to kill and eat, in a way that is intentionally reminiscent of a sexual assault. Imagery around this character will continue to involve violence with intense, aggressive sexual overtures going forward. S1E11: a woman who has been knocked unconscious wakes up to find she is in bed with a naked woman in a suggestive position; it is quickly revealed that the woman was simply using her body heat to prevent her from becoming hypothermic, and nothing sexual has happened. Scenes similar to this will happen once or twice more.
Under the Bridge (TV Show)
A girl is missing, and her underwear and pants are found while searching for her. It is implied she may have been sexually assaulted, however upon autopsy, it is revealed she was not. A father is arrested after being accused of incest by his daughter. This is a false accusation that the daughter was encouraged to make by her friends. A teenage character discusses that she was sexually assaulted by her mother’s boyfriend, and the mother took the boyfriend’s side afterwards.
A man that the protagonist is attracted to kisses her without her consent: she pushes him off and tells him to leave, but it is clear she likes him. A man who is interested in the protagonist makes her put her hands on top of his while he plays the harmonium.
Under Ninja (TV Show)
S1E1: a woman accuses her neighbor of stealing her underwear. S1E2: a teenage boy uses a drone to spy on a woman and also uses the drone to steal her underwear. The neighbor from S1E1is seen walking around in a bra that belongs to the woman. At the beginning of the episode a 'crazy' man walks around with a breast pump telling children that they can drink breast milk from it. The children are laughing and calling him mr. breast milk. He then tells them that they can drink it directly from the source.
A woman mistakes a man in her room as wanting to rape her.
Under Sandet (Movie)
A young german prisoner is beaten up and humiliated by a group of British soldiers: he is peed on and forced to kiss a man's naked butt.
Under Siege (Movie)
In the beginning main character spies on topless neighbour and a girl in a bathing suit. Other character uses a drone to spy on a woman.
While recording, a cameraman zooms in on the chests of the female members of a film crew. There is a joke about being kidnapped and sold into the sex trade.
S1E1: two characters are forced to have sex while another one (who gave the order) watches . There is no choice, since a "No" would lead to death or mutilation. It is a quick scene and handled rather sensitively. S1E5: a capturer tells a character that they will rape them. Later in the episode, the capturer tries to attack, but is hold back by an event. Throughout the series, sex is referred to as "breeding".
Undone (TV Show)
In season 1, the protagonist breaks up with her boyfriend at the end of the first episode, and then she gets into an accident that causes memory loss. In the next few episodes, her boyfriend, who had already moved out of their apartment, moves back in while she is in the hospital and then acts like they never broke up when she comes home. When the protagonist recovers her memory, she becomes angry at him for manipulating her and seems particularly disturbed that they had sex.
An antagonist character intentionally walks in on the protagonist whilst she is taking a bath in order to intimidate her. Worthy of note: There is passing mention of the British royal family being inbred.
Une Colonie (Movie)
The female protagonist (a teenage girl) is pressured by her friends to make out with a boy during a party. She asks him to go to the toilet with her, but when he starts kissing her and putting his hands in her pants, she is visibly uncomfortable, rebuffs him and makes him leave. Worty of note: earlier in the movie, the same protagonist ends up lying drunk and alone outside. We see someone approaching her, but it turns out that it is a friend of her bringing her home to protect her.
One witness at the trial mentions prison rape.
This whole film is about to young men trying to get a mother and adult daughter alone and away from their company so they can seduce them. There is a lot of implied threat towards the daughter and the man she is with touches and kisses her without her consent.
Plot point involves two men punished for disfiguring a sex worker who mocks the size of one man's penis.
One character accuses his friend of having raped a girl after slipping her rohypnol and then forcing her to have an abortion when she became pregnant. It's unclear if these accusations are true, but it's strongly implied that they are. It's implied that a character may have been molested by her uncle. The antagonist shows images of the main character performing a striptease without her consent in order to taunt her. The main character comes across a naked man on Chatroulette, much to her disgust.
The film contains internet videos about kidnappedd women being tortured. One of the protagonist (a woman) sees a video of herself sleeping, while a stranger enters through her window and stares at her. Nothing happens but it did had the intent of setting certain fear with sexual undertone.
Unfrosted (Movie)
One executive says that a deal “all depends on whether [the client] has sex with him tonight.” The client and her male aide briefly discuss whether either of them is willing to do it, all while in front of the executive. Nothing is shown, and itcuts back to main storyline. There is an implied affair between JFK and the Doublemint Twins. He confirms they are wearing their uniforms before agreeing to see them, then excuses himself to cash in on his “executive privilege.” Nothing is shown. A newscast later shares that the they are pregnant. All of these incidents are brief and extremely farcical.
Unicorn Store (Movie)
The main character's boss hits on her several times, for example by smelling her hair.
It is mentioned around 37:11 that the titular character was raped when she was 10. This is a brief remark that does not go into detail. A club owner who is paying off the cops not to arrest the titular character for performing without proper paperwork touches her rear end without her consent twice (53:30-53:50).
The Unknown (Movie)
A teenage boy drops a pen while in class so he can bend down and try to look up a girl's skirt. Later while camping. he films the girl he is with several times without her knowledge/consent, once while she is changing clothes.
A woman talks about being groped while performing a song.
Unnatural (Movie)
A man jokes about the women in the group possibly being assaulted.
Unpregnant (Movie)
A teenage girl mentioned how she was stalked by her boyfriend before they started going out. In response to this, another girl mentioned 'Times Up'. A main characters boyfriend did not tell her that the condom broke when they had sex (13 minutes into the movie).
Unrelated (Movie)
There is a flirtation between a teenager and an adult. The adult woman propositions the teenage boy and he rejects her. It never becomes explicitly sexual, though she does deliberately get naked in front of him and his friends.
Unseen (Movie)
Unsheltered (Movie)
A man kisses a woman despite her trying to push him away.
Until Then (Video Game)
A teenage boy makes a comment on a teenage girl being a 'flat tire.' This is implied to mean 'flat chested' and the girl becomes angry at the boy. It is later revealed the boy had no understanding whatsoever of the true meaning of his comment.
The romantic leads are a single father and a woman he employs as a nanny. There are several discussions between the two about the power dynamics in their relationship. For example, at one point, the male lead says, "I have feelings for you, and I've known that for a while. But I also know that as long as I pay your salary it'll never be right for me to pursue you." At the end of their discussion, he says, "I wouldn't feel guilty as long as you swear to me that you'll never put my feelings before yours. That you'll never be afraid to tell me the truth." When their relationship gets more serious toward the end of the book, a new nanny is hired, and the female lead pursues other work and starts using money from her trust fund. The female lead finds out that her own mother was in a similar situation, becoming romantically and sexually involved with an employer. The mother says that she thought in retrospect that the employer's behavior was wrong, especially since he was already married. Worthy of note: there are non-specific discussions of two characters' pasts with intimate partner abuse.
All mentions of rape, sexual abuse, or sexual harassment are handled extremely well. It is never detailed or explicit, and both hosts are sensitive about the survivors, their stories, and the sexual crimes themselves. There are content warnings given twice at the very beginning of every episode.
Unwelcome (Movie)
A woman sympathizes with a hurt man and he grabs her wrist. There is nothing obviously sexually implied, but he proceeds to attempt to strangle her while on top of her and she fights him off. A character spies on another while she is trying to take a bath. The same character, an abusive victim, later tells the character he likes her and throws her to the ground in a scene evocative of sexual assault. However he tries to kill her, and is in turn killed before he can.
(Un)Well (TV Show)
S1E2 (Tantric Sex): parts of this episode explore how 'tantric therapy' programmes have led to the sexual exploitation of some participants. This includes in-depth testimonies from victims of sexual assault and rape who have been abused by administrators of these therapies and teachings. S1E5 (Ayahuasca): a woman mentions in passing the fact that she was sexually abused during her childhood (47:30 - 47:50).
Up Here (TV Show)
Season 1 contains several jokes about a Hispanic mom.being creepily close to her son: nothing is actually incest and it is played for laughs. S1E4: a couple stages a cuckold situation without the consent of the third party. They stops when he asks though and have a wholesome conversation.
Uramichi Oniisan (TV Show)
S1E5: a male character who is presumably gay, hits another man in the groin and hugs him. He later on blows him a kiss. It is shown that this made the man uncomfortable. S1E6: the same character forces the man to hang out with him. He later on appears with kiss marks on his face. This was done without his consent. S1E12: the same character closes in on the man's face to the point of almost kissing. It is shown that this also made him uncomfortable.
Urban Legend (Movie)
A woman tells another woman that she plans to try out a few sexual practices from the "Kama Sutra" with her boyfriend. She responds "no" to the other woman's (joking) question "Does he have a choice?" A woman and a man are talking in a car in a remote location. The man kisses the woman against her will, causing her to punch him in the face.
In the opening movie scene, while at a school dance, teen boys drug their date's drinks and are later seen forcing them into their car. Later in the movie, one of the women that happened to says they were left outside of town and makes no mention of being assaulted. Parents make a passing comment about keeping teenage girls off the street and keeping them virgins In the current movie timeline three girls who go missing were found to have roofies in their system, but medics confirmed they were not assaulted. None of the girls remember what happened to them.
Urijib (Movie)
A group of girls prank call a woman and call her a tramp.
Us (2019) (Movie)
U.S. Go Home (Movie)
A teenage girl kisses an adult man. It is unclear whether anything more happens but nothing is shown on-screen. Worthy of note: a girl rejects advances from a boy who is very pushy, though nothing more comes of this.
Usagi Drop (TV Show)
Worthy of note: it is hinted that the female protagonist's mother was a teenager when she became pregnant from a 70+ years old man. In the anime, the relationship between the child and male protagonists (the child being the biological aunt of the older man) is not romantic. It is a father-daughter relationship as he starts taking care of her at the age of 6. In the manga, they end up having a romantic relationship with each other when she becomes older. It is not clear how old she is when they start dating. He starts taking care of her when he is in his thirties and they start dating when he is in his forties.
It is briefly mentioned that a male character is beaten, robbed and raped by a group of bandits. A frequently mentioned theme, concerns a brother walking in on his sister and step-brother having sex, and the trauma caused by this.
Used Cars (Movie)
Utopia (TV Show)
In season 1, a character is framed to have abused a minor. S1E3: in the last scene, a character is threatened with the brutal rape of his wife. Neither of these actions happen on screen or off screen and are simply brief mentionings. S1E4: a woman kisses a man without his consent while holding a gun to his head.
Uzumaki (TV Show)
S1E1: a girl stalks the male protagonist. Even paying someone who has a crush on her to lure him to a playground. S1E2: a boy confesses his feelings multiple times to different girls and they reject him. He is adament. However, the situation does nt escalate a lot. S1E4: a woman and the female protagonist get harassed by a few men. They are later on saved. Nothing else happens to them.
Vacation (Movie)
The purposed of the scene is purely comedic, but is capable of making viewers uncomfortable.
The women who are interviewed discuss their rapes in detail.
One character mentions that Indians rape white women. The main female character (16 year old) is said to be married. A male character (an older man) makes sexual advances to her while he is naked in a bathtub, and grabs her wrist before letting her go.
Vamp (Movie)
A boy vampire tries to forcibly bite a girl half-vampire. It is explained earlier that the act of biting someone is akin to sex.
In this series, vampires are instructed to breed with particular other vampires to preserve royal bloodlines. They are encouraged to have more babies even if they do not want to. The series opening sequence (every episode) mentions breeding/procreation protocols. S1E3: women who have been banished from the main society are brought in specifically to be bread. One of them is shown to be very unhappy about it.
There are sexual assault undertones throughout, sometimes involving children. The movie ranges from sexualizing and glorifying sexual assault, to using it for shock, to using it to explore themes of kink/violence in sex.
It is implied that a woman was born after her mother was raped by a burglar.
Vampire Hunter D (TV Show)
The main female character offers her body as payment to the leading man for his services "if he wants it", but she seems reluctant: he does not take her up on it. There are several scenes of unwanted advances on the leading woman: the entire story is revolved around her being forced into marriage with the vampire who bit her. A once-trusted man to the leading woman rips open her shirt.
Vampz (Movie)
One character bluntly asks another, who admits to abducting his wife, if he raped her.
Vanquish (Movie)
A woman who was being hit on by a mob boss later asks another woman to "get her out of there". The main character is drugged by a man but it seems the intention is to kill her not assault her.
The main character touches an orderly's groin area to distract him while she takes his keys to escape the hospital.
Veep (TV Show)
Even though the show is a comedy, the sexual harassment is not played for laughs. S1E1: when it is mentioned that a man died, a woman described him as "rapey". Another woman describes how he grabbed her "left tit" when she met him. Season 4 contains a long story arc where a male staffer is sexually harassed and groped by someone in the vice president's office. However, everyone who hears about it is shocked and appalled.
It is mentioned that a character was assaulted by a group of men, but whether this attack was sexual in nature is not specified.
Venom (2018) (Movie)
The protagonist is forcibly kissed by a woman who has been overtaken by the Venom symbiote. The kiss seems to be more intended to transfer the symbiote but it seems nonconsensual for both of them.
A man is pantsed to nudity while with a group of people.
The film portrays a romance between the protagonist (a woman) and a man, which begins with him stalking her and acting creepy (licking her hand during the first meeting for example). She ends up falling in love with him. At first, she accepts to have dinner and gets drunk in order to convince herself to sleep with him. At her apartment, she insists on engaging sex despite his refusal (because she is intoxicated): he ends up leaving. The opening scene starts with a discussion of the protagonist telling about how someone took off her pants when she was 6: it is not said if the person was also a child or not. At some point, the protagonist tells that her father killed her mother because he thought she was cheating on her. Later on, the protagonist and her love interest spy on one of her female colleagues (who is 20), who accepted to go to one of her client's home (an elderly man). It is ambiguously hinted that he may intend to hurt her, but it ends up not being the case. They have sex and the two spying character, aroused, do the same. The film takes place in a beauty institute: throughout, a female client keeps undressing and exposing herself. This is played for laughs and the other character do not seem particularly bothered.
Vera (TV Show)
S1E2: an older man has historically had a sexual relationship with a teenage girl, but this was in the past, before the episode starts, and the affair is not shown onscreen. Conversations about the affair are not sexually descriptive. S3E2: two teenage girls are kidnapped, and it is suggested in conversations that they may have been trafficked for the sex trade, but this turns out not to be the case. S4E1: two of the female characters, one of whom is a young teenage girl, have been raped prior to the events of the episode. The rapes are talked about, but not in explicit detail, only as something that has occurred and the psychological impact they have had. In one scene, the teenage girl is shown being harassed by her rapist and pushing him away (at the time, the audience is unaware that he is her rapist). Ultimately he faces no consequences. Two adult women characters are in the sex trade, and some of the male characters are described as having been their 'callers,' but none of these calls are shown onscreen. S9E4: there is some discussion about a teenage girl being "procured" by older men in the sex trade, but nothing is shown onscreen.
Vera Cruz (Movie)
Vertigo (Movie)
Protagonist has borderline sexual attraction to dead woman, may be perceived as necrophilia.
Vesper (Movie)
A teenage girl is chased by a group of teenage boys, who then pin her to the ground while one holds a hand over her mouth to stop her screams. A man forcibly bends a screaming woman over a table and then forces his thumb into a long, narrow, open wound on her back, moving it backwards and forwards in a sexually suggestive manner. The same man forcefully strokes the lips, face and hair of the teenage girl (his niece), in a suggestive manner which she clearly is uncomfortable with.
VHS 94 (Movie)
In one section, a woman is sexually assaulted by a monster disguised as her husband. She then kills her real husband thinking he was the one who assaulted her.
VHS 99 (Movie)
The segment 'The Gawkers' focuses on teens who spy on women and record them without their knowledge. They install spyware on a computer to spy on their neighbor undressing and showering.
VHS Beyond (Movie)
A man presumed to be the manager of a female idol caresses the young woman’s face and hair. She bursts into tears when he leaves but the context is not sexual. “Anal probes” are mentioned once. Women and men are kept in cages in their underwear for non-sexual reasons. There is an angle of a camera probe being forced down a man’s throat.
VHS Viral (Movie)
A girl's shirt is forcefully lifted.
Vicious Fun (Movie)
Acts of necrophilia are briefly mentioned.
A character has superpowers that force people to obey her every command, and even when she is not actively ordering them to do anything, people feel compelled to please her. Because of this, she avoids any sexual or romantic relationships, since no one can 100% freely consent to being with her. However, she later ends up in a toxic and destructive relationship with a man who wishes to kill her, and only does not hurt her because she orders him not to. Partially because of this, she makes an exception and starts a sexual relationship with him. This is never identified as rape by the narrative, but their dynamic is explicitly unhealthy and coercive to them both.
A woman is killed by being impaled.
Victorious (TV Show)
The film contains harassment portrayed as comedic (non consensual kissing). There is also the implication that one of the main male characters has sexually abused/harassed a main female character: it is also played as comedic.
Vida (TV Show)
A character is recorded during oral sex without her knowledge/consent. The video later is seen by her peers. Emotional manipulation around the event occurs.
The Vietnam War (TV Show)
Some episodes mention sexual abuses and rapes from American soldiers on Vietnamese women. They are testimonies from veterans or mentioned by the narrator, and are generally illustrated with archival footages of soldiers mistreating women.
Throughout the show, the protagonist sexually harasses a female character: they have a romantic interest in each other. He often gropes her in public, touches her inappropriately and at times looks up her skirt. This is treated as a running gag, and other characters berate him for his actions or restrain him. The woman repeatedly asks him to stop however he never does, repeatedly using her for his own pleasure. There is another character in this show who is upset that he does not harass her in the same way. None of the other characters see any problem with how he acts towards women in the show.
The author opens with a memory of being sexually assaulted. Sexual assault, sexual harassment, and other forms of sexual violence are discussed throughout the book.
There are two scenes towards the beginning of the movie where groups of men follow a woman walking alone, clearly with the intention to harass her. Another early scene shows the protagonist giving feedback on a book cover. He pantomimes with his pencil to indicate that the dresses on the women on the book cover should be lower cut. Then he does the same pantomime toward his secretary. The protagonist has several flights of fantasy in which women other than his wife force themselves on him. In reality, he attempts to force kisses on his neighbor (a woman). She acts as if she does not know what he is doing or why. He imagines that she will tell everyone, including his wife, that he was forcing her to do things she did not want to do.
Soldiers are supposed to execute enemy soldiers: one refuses because he cannot see properly after a gas attack. In order to motivate him to shot, a officer asks if he also could not see the rape of his sisters.
The 8 Show (TV Show)
A man takes advantage of a woman going through psychosis. Later, he ties her and kisses her against her will.
A number of women find themselves pregnant without their consent after passing out for several hours.
Villains (Movie)
A man is bound to a bed against his will while a woman attempts to have sex with him (he clearly isn't interested). She only stops when she grabs his crotch, realises he isn't aroused and gets angry. He later acts like he wants to have sex with her and forces himself to kiss her to get out of his restraints.
Worthy of note: a scene of a husband beating his wife ends with him laying on top of her.
Vinterbrodre (Movie)
The male protagonist steals a woman's panties: she tries to stop him (in vain) and seems amused by the situation. The protagonist's brother tries to initiate oral sex on his girlfriend: she is reluctant and repeatedly says no but he continues (about 54 minutes into the movie). She seems to eventually agree and enjoy it.
Violent Night (Movie)
It is mentioned that a teenage boy was the subject of a sexual harassment allegation: this is played for laughs. A heist leader tells his (female) subordinate to crush a man's testicles: she does not want to. Another guy pulls down the man's trousers and threatens to castrate him.
In the final sequence of the film, it is revealed that the antagonist (the mother), is mean and cruel to her sons because she was forced into marriage and into conceiving the three boys.
Virgin River (TV Show)
A female character talks about how her ex sexually assaulted her. S4E10+11: the rape is brought up again, and the rapist becomes a character on the show. S5E1: the rapist is being brought to trial. Worthy of note: a domestic abuser threatens his wife. She is later shown with bruising and wounds.
An adolescent girl is shown engaging in sexual acts with a group of adult men. Only kissing is shown.
Virus (Movie)
A woman mentions that she had shot someone who attempted to rape her in order to make her gun threat seem more legitimate.
A female character explains that she ended up in a relationship with her ex-teacher after high school graduation. It is not specified if they were romantically/sexually involved during her schooling or not, or how old she was when their relationship began. An old man takes off his trousers behind a kitchen counter while a young boy is frozen watching. We find out that the man is taking off an adult diaper, but it is possible to wrongfully interpret the scene as the beginning of an assault. The older man puts his soiled diaper into the face of the young boy. This is not consensual, but it is not sexual in nature.
Viva Maria (Movie)
About halfway into the movie, the two main female protagonists are locked in a room with a man. It is hinted by another character that they will be sexually abused and killed, but they joyfully trick the antagonist and escape. In the beginning of the film, a woman performs a trick in front of a crowd: she pretends to get money out of her nose. Some men go on stage and try to shake her to get some coins. They are rapidly rebuffed by the partners of the woman. Everything is played for laughs. Near the end of the movie, the two main female protagonists are caught and tied to be tortured. However, all the instruments break down. The scene is played for laughs.
Vivre Sa Vie (Movie)
A female sex worker is trafficked.
The protagonist is told in detail several times that he is going to be sent to prison and raped.
Volcano Princess (Video Game)
The game follows a young girl as she ages within the game. She can date and have romantic interactions with numerous villagers in the game starting from the age of thirteen, however it is left ambiguous how old some of them are. There are some events in the game, especially when working at the sauna where it describes the girl is harassed by adults and depending on your choice when asked what the player wants to do is touched without her consent.
A friend of the protagonist (an elderly man) invites him to a strip club and tells him about his paid relationship with a much younger prostitute (who calls him 'daddy'). The protagonist is not into it, visibly uncomfortable, and passively lets a prostitute cuddling and kissing him.
The Vow (Movie)
The documentary is about a cult leader who leads a sex cult where women brand themselves with his initials, refer to him as their master, recruit other women, have all of their calorie intakes "approved" by him before they can eat, etc. It is implied that he has drugged and raped at least two women.
Vox Lux (Movie)
Voyagers (Movie)
Mention of attempted rape. Repeated non-consensual touching, which is framed as though it is a result of humans' innate natures.
The Voyeurs (Movie)
Voyeurism is a major theme of this film. There is a scene where two people watch a man coerce a woman into sex. She is shown to eventually relent and enjoy the sex.
One of the protagonists experiences a psychic attack that she describes as "violating." This type of attack is known to "break" its victims, and one of the people responsible for this treatment says to bring the protagonist to his room after they have broken her, implying a plan to assault her.
There are repeated instances of sexual harassment towards the main character. The main character also non-consensually gropes a man, who slaps her. The main character's roommate has unsimulated sex with a man for an extended scene and at one point she appears to lose interest or become unwilling, at which point he continues to pull her back. The main character is also murdered after a consensual sexual character at the end.
Wacko (Movie)
At the beginning of the movie, a girl's father watches her in her underwear through her window then later pulls her blanket down and rips her pajamas off with a grabber tool.
Wakfu (TV Show)
A common running gag involves one of the male main characters constantly hitting on one of the female main character, who is repeatedly shown to have no interest in him. A female character is tied up, and makes suggestive sounds, while others look on. On a different occasion, the same female character has vines wrapped around her body and mouth while struggling. The monster that tied her up begins to stroke her face. Worthy of note: S2E14: teenage nudity.
Walk the Line (Movie)
In a section on Shenandoah National Park, the author discusses the unsolved murder of two women hikers. He does not mention sexual assault, but does discuss the circumstances of their murders in a way that loosely implies the possibility.
Walkabout (Movie)
There is a lot of sexualising of teenage girls (and also women in general). We see several naked shots of teenage girls, as well as weird angles up skirts and close-ups of the main character changing clothes etc. There is no sexual violence but the entire movie is filled with uncomfortable scenes and shots. At 01:20:00, the main male character, in a trance, surprises the female protagonist while she is changing clothes in an abandoned house. She tries to hide but it turns out that he is performing a courtship ritual, staying outside of the house. The girl is not interested but feels uncomfortable. Nothing further happens.
It is implied that one of the main character's wife was raped.
Between episode one and three, there is implications of sexual assault with one of the main cast, who is pregnant and was in an abusive relationship with a villain. The villain is a major part of episode two and episode three respectfully and is possessive of her. In episode three (In Harm's Way), an adult man asks 'Did everything come out alright girls?' to a child and young teenage girl when they come back from using the bathroom.
Walking Tall (Movie)
There is a prison rape joke at the very end of the movie.
Wall-E (Movie)
About 30 mins into the movie, the female-coded robot goes into hibernation. While she is hibernating, the male-coded robot ties her up with fairy lights, takes her to various romantic places, and tries to hold her robot hand (earlier in the movie she had strongly objected to this character holding her hand). In other words, male character ties female character up and takes her on unconsenting activities while female character is unconscious.
Walter (Movie)
A squalid male movie worker hits on the female movie worker and tells another guy all the things he wants to do to her sexually.
War & Peace (TV) (TV Show)
S1E1: incest is implied (adult brother and sister). S1E2: a male guest makes repeated inappropriate comments to his host's wife, who feels uncomfortable. They are eventually shown having (consensual) sex. S1E3: two cousins are in love. In S1E4, the man asks his mother to marry his cousin, which she refuses. S1E4: a man corners a woman in a room, grabs her and kisses her despite her fleeing him, asking him to stop and rebuffing him. She is seduced by him but is already engaged to another man. S1E5: a soldier explains that a man he saved offered his wife to him. Despite her wish to leave with him, he had sex with her and "returned" her to her husband. An enemy soldier abuses a woman (slapping her): a central character intervenes and stops him. A main female character drinks a potion in order to have an abortion: desperate, she takes too much of it and dies (off-screen). We see her lying dead on her bed with a lot of blood between her legs (dress and bed).
None of the characters in the book experience sexual violence, but it is implied that that might be happening elsewhere.
Warehouse 13 (TV Show)
S4E14: a main female character slaps a horse track club worker's rear on her way out of the club. He looks shocked by this and it is played off for laughs.
Warrior Nun (Movie)
S1E1: about 11 minutes into the episode, a group three men approach the protagonist (a woman) who seems drunk and they are very weird about it, (checking her out, saying her outfit looks nice and even asking "you're drunk").
A male soldier grabs a woman and is stopped by a general saying "there will be plenty of time for that later." A second general watches another male soldier drag a woman off and does nothing. A pair of male soldiers breaks into a home, detains the man, and one approaches the woman with her infant saying to give him "some motherly love." The implication is that this is happening across the fortress. A woman asks a man "who forced the soldiers to pillage and rape?" but the men do not care. A woman asks her friends to not allow the male soldiers to "tarnish her body", alluding to rape.
A character is catcalled by two men as she enters and exits a store. A character receives frequent texts from an ex-boyfriend, despite her telling him to leave her alone. He later shows up uninvited to her place of work, intent on seeing her until her friends threaten him into leaving. The exact nature of their relationship and breakup isn't explored in detail, but both she and her friends worry for her safety, with one recommending she get a restraining order.
There is background conversation about child sex abuse in one of the shorts, though it is unrelated to the plot.
Watcher (Movie)
The protagonist is stalked throughout the duration of the film. There is some victim-blaming language and she is not taken seriously when asking for help. One of the suspects in a local murder is mentioned to be a rapist very briefly.
There is a relationship between a 19 year old and a 16 year old, which is legal in the setting of the show. A father is overly concerned about his teenage daughter wearing makeup, dating, etc, and at one point the girl's mother criticises him for sexualizing her. This is not implied to be paedophilic and there is no implication of abuse, but may be an uncomfortable dynamic for some. A male stranger speaks to the above-mentioned father about his own daughter wearing too many low cut shirts, makeup, etc, and cryptically claims that he solved the issue. The father later believes the stranger may have murdered his own daughter and wife. Once again there is no implication of sexual violence but the theme of male control over female bodies/behaviour may be uncomfortable for some.
Watchmen (2019) (TV Show)
S1E4: during a car ride scene, a detective says that her mother was sexually assaulted by her father and it is implied that she is the product of the assault. S1E5: a teenage boy is shown being undressed by a girl while he repeatedly says no and tries to stop her. The event is referred to later in the episode.
The main character's love interest, who is a slave, is implied to be involved in a sexual relationship with a slave master. It is clear that she has no option to reject this relationship if she wants to.
Water Lillies (Movie)
Early in the film, a girl is surprised in the locker room by a boy (her love interest) while she is naked: both freeze during a few seconds before he leaves. Much later, they have sex because the boy could not sleep with another girl: she experiences it harshly since he is obviously not interested in her. One central character is a teenage girl who has the reputation of being promiscuous. An important part of the plot is about the pressure she endures to have sex with her "boyfriend", despite being in fact a virgin. In order to "lose her virginity" beforehand, she asks the female protagonist (another girl) to do it with her first (with her fingers): this is portrayed as an uncomfortable experience (she cries). At some point, an adult man (the girl's coach) insists to give her a massage in the locker room. She later explains that he is in love with her, and that she kissed him once, but has to deal with his behaviour. She also recounts how a man came near her in a swimming pool and showed his erect penis. An adult man makes out with a teenage girl, seemingly aware that she is underage. It is implied he intends to have sex with her, but is stopped.
A man pinches a woman's butt without her consent. Several allusions are made to false accusations of rape. A woman falsely accuses a man of rape.
S1E3: it is mentioned how the male owner of a restaurant touches other men’s butts without their consent. The male cook realizes this happens to him as well. Later on in the episode the female protagonist thinks her neighbor is trying to sexually assault her. She calls the police on him: it is revealed that is was a misunderstanding. S1E5: a woman explains how her brother is very overprotective to the point of locking her up inside the house. She is not allowed to leave and she is scared of him. S1E8: a boss mentions how a young male worker would not complain when he would touch his butt. S1E12: in a very short scene, a restaurant owner trries to touch the butt of another male character.
Waxwork (Movie)
A woman is tied up and beaten with a whip by several men with a sadism fetish (1:00:00-1:18:00). They keep suggesting that they will rape her after beating her and she will die in the process, but she is saved before this can happen. She is in an altered state and acts as though she enjoys this mistreatment. The men call her a "slut" and a "whore" as well as a "virgin" and other entrapped women seem to be bizarrely jealous of her situation.
The Way Down (TV Show)
S1E3: rape/sexual assault in mentioned about 30 minutes into the episode.
A woman who is about to be killed begs for her life and tells her captors they can rape her instead. A male character fondles her breasts. Worthy of note: a prostitute character is very young, though it is not stated whether or not she is a minor.
The protagonist remains very passive during sex, almost letting it happen to her rather than actively participating. There is a scene where a younger version of herself pushes a man off her, revealing that maybe she would have said no in hindsight.
A high school boy makes a deep fake revenge porn video about a girl who rejected him. He sends the video out to everyone in the school.
The titular character masturbates in front of his mother. It his suggested that he does this specifically to make her feel uncomfortable, rather than because he has any actual attraction to her.
We Never Learn (TV Show)
There are frequent mentions of sexual harassment, groping, catcalling, etc. Early on, an incident of flashing/nudity and public urination as a form of intimidation is described in some detail, with emphasis on its intense emotional impact on a female protagonist. Around the middle of the book, a female protagonist is subjected to restraint and medical abuse and is afraid of what those who control her will do to her. Toward the climax, a female protagonist is graphically described being molested and choked by a group of male friends in the press of a concert crowd. Unnamed female crowdsurfers are mentioned as being repeatedly molested.
The author discusses the rape of enslaved people by slaveholders and sexual assault committed by the police.
While no one is assaulted, the main character does describe rape at one point because since she has lost her memory and only knows that something bad happened, she believes that she may have been raped (even though she was not).
Rape, sexual assault, and intimate partner violence are discussed in abstract terms throughout the booklet.
A girl, who is later revealed to be a minor, is almost coerced into sex work but another character saves her.
A dog licks a blindolfded man's testicles (off-screen). Towards the end of the movie (when the wedding is being broken up), a guy runs up and hits a woman on the rear end and runs off.
A teenage boy fondles an adult woman whilst dancing. An adult man puts a teenage girl's hands on his buttocks whilst dancing. A woman reveals that she had sex with a man whilst he was very drunk.
Wednesday (TV Show)
This show contains multiple scenes where men or older boys are physically violent toward the titular character. An adult manipulates teenagers through supernatural means to seduce each other as a means of getting revenge against an entire group of people. The main female character kisses someone she thinks she loves but who is actually evil. S1E1: someone loses a testicle when the protagonist defends her brother from being bullied. An older boy asks the main character: "have you ever been with a normie," before attempting physical violence.
Weekend (Movie)
There are several mentions of the main characters possibly being drugged and/or sexually assaulted during a night out. No sexual assault actually occurs, but the movie leaves you wondering for an hour before revealing this. There is also a scene revealing that there are cameras set up in the private rooms of a hotel.
Welcome to Me (Movie)
This series deals with a lot of dark themes, including porn addiction and lolicon (animated child porn). Worthy of note: Chapter 5 of the novel is titled "Humbert Humbert", a reference to the main character of the novel Lolita.
The author depicts being sexually harassed by adult men and male classmates before transitioning.
There is passing mention of a man fearing that his genuine compliments of female coworkers might be taken as sexual harassment.
Season 4 involves a cult, and a peeping Tom is mentioned.
The teenage protagonist engages in multiple Skype calls with another player of an online horror game, who is shown to be a middle-aged man that never shows her his face during these calls. Nothing sexual occurs, though the man's motivations are ambiguous and could be interpreted as grooming. The relationship between the protagonist and her father, who we never see, is very ambiguous, and nothing is ever shown or addressed in the film itself, though there is grounds to interpret possible abuse here as well. This is a movie that leaves a great deal up to audience interpretation, so the degree to which sexual assault is present in the film is difficult to discern. There is an on going online friendship with an older man trying to make sure the protagonist is safe. Nothing inappropriate happens, but she does get angry and call him a pedophile one time out of anger.
A character who is a stripper quits her job when her boss wants the strippers to have sex for money. A policeman wants oral sex from one of the men as a bribe but ends up accepting money.
One of the protagonists, an escaped convict, is implied to have a history with crimes that are sexual in nature.
A drunk man grabs a few different women in the saloon before he is fought off by one of them, A man grabs a woman and kisses her neck before she stabs him and pushes him away.
One male character attempts to touch/hug a female character multiple times throughout the movie. While he is never successful it is very clear that his attempts are not welcome.
The West Wing (TV Show)
S4E14: it is mentioned throughout the episode that in a (fictional) country undergoing genocide and ethnic cleansing, neighbors swap homes for the night due to coerced sexual violence (family members being forced to rape each other). S4E23: during a press conference, a reporter asks the possibility that a kidnapping victim is being raped. In S5E2 it is confirmed that sexual assault did not occur.
Western (Movie)
Wetlands (Movie)
The Whale (Movie)
A television shows a brief movie scene during which a man grabs a female dancer on a stage.
The film involves 8 identical siblings. In one scene, one of the siblings has sex with a man, under the guise of one of the other siblings, unbeknownst to the man.
A woman pins down a man and is generally quite aggressively sexual towards him, despite his verbal and physical rebuttals. This dynamic stops after a minute or so.
This book contains discussion of the #MeToo movement and rape allegations against Donald Trump.
In a character-establishing scene, one of the main characters discusses his 'torture chamber'. In context, this is meant to be partially evocative of BDSM. However, it is also suggestive of sexual violence. The film features a pack of female vampires who look like young pre-teen or teenage girls and prey on the adult men who make passes at them. In deleted material, this character briefly describing sexual violence which he has committed, but these scenes did not make the final cut.
S1E1: a female vampire stalks a man to take pictures of him masturbating without his knowledge. S1E2: a character implies that her boyfriend coerces her into performing sex acts on webcam. S3E5: some characters are directed to watch a training video on sexual harassment. The character showing it says that 'anything goes' and describes some of the ways people fondle one another in the workplace. She jokes that they usually save the harassment for Thursdays, just to get it out of the way. S3E9: a main character pretends to be dead and his friends want to see how big his penis is. They play with his penis without his consent while he lies there. It is played for laugh. Through all of season 4, a man makes wishes to control his wife who has no choice in the matter. S5E1: a doll has legs installed that she does not want, and if you press a button on it, then she lifts up her skirt and dances. She does not want this. S6E7: this episode talks about a demon raping a human, this is used for humor. Worthy of note: sexual misconducts are recurring themes of the series, with main characters hinting at their previous experiences of necrophilia (S1E1), incest (S1E3) and bestiality (S1E4).
Wheelman (Movie)
The protagonist's ex-wife is kidnapped to pressure the him to commit a crime. On the phone the kidnapper threatens to rape his ex-wife, but later it is verified that that was only a threat; the ex-wife tells on the phone that nothing happened to her.
One of the main characters pretends to be a sex worker. There are scenes where she is grabbed and kidnapped by multiple men but she is never sexually assaulted. It is briefly mentioned that her mother was raped. There’s a scene where a woman’s breasts are accidentally grabbed.
Early in the film, a boss seemingly sexually harasses his female employee on her workplace. However, it is quickly revealed that the two are in fact lovers. Later, in a scene where a crowd panicks, several men are shown harassing women. The scene is played for laughs.
There are passing discussions of rape during the era of trans-Atlantic slavery and in the modern day, as well as of street harassment.
In the beginning of the movie, the protagonist (a young boy) is circumcised by a barber without anesthetia. About halfway through the movie, a scene of domestic violence ends up with the man lying on top of his wife. He is interrupted by his son who comes to help his mother. In one of the last scene of the movie, a man slaps his mistress before brutally undressing her and engaging in consensual sex.
The film centers around a man who repeatedly harasses a woman. A running theme is that men cannot be just friends with women, because they want sex. Someone mentions they dream of a faceless man ripping their clothes off.
There is mention of an adult male character who leers at teenage girls. There is also mention of a bodega employee "trying to holla" at the female protagonist when she goes there, and how she wanted to avoid that. The female protagonist recollects how her mother always kept a gun, even at a young age, in part to defend herself if the boys in her neighborhood "suddenly forgot what no means." Worthy of note: there is a conversation between the male protagonist and a neighbor character, both of whom are white, where the neighbor is very fetishizing toward the female protagonist, who is Black. The neighbor clearly operates on the assumption that the male protagonist will share his racist opinions. The neighbor insinuates that the male protagonist just wants to scratch an itch and is going through a phase because he is attracted to the female protagonist. The neighbor mentions that he and his wife periodically go to the Caribbean, implying that they do so to sexually exploit Black people there.
Two women perceive the main character to be a stalker and start fearfully screaming "rape" repeatedly at him. The main character also goes back in time repeatedly and forcefully kisses the woman he loves without consent because she does not know who he is.
A protagonist gets drunk very quickly at a Pride festival, and people touch him suggestively, including grabbing his butt, without asking first.
Two of the main characters casually mention a radio show they heard about children being raped in another country.
While We Wait Here (Video Game)
A character reflects in passing on how some crewmen would grope her under the guise of adjusting microphones or wiring.
Whip It (Movie)
The protagonist lies about being 22 so she can join a roller derby team, despite being 17. As a result of joining the team, she meets a man (who is presumably in his twenties) and enters into a relationship with him that is implied to be sexual.
There is moderate stalking. The main character transforms into a cat to spend the night with and to have intimate moments with her love interest.
White Cat Legend (TV Show)
S1E10: a man licks the ear of another man dressed as a woman. He holds him hostage and says that he must taste nice. The man is known to be a cannibal. This is played for comedic purposes. S2E5: a man is chased and he runs into a woman’s bathhouse. The women start screaming and go after him. He later on walks into an entertainment house and he falls on a woman resulting into their lips/face touching.
White Collar (TV Show)
S1E2: this episode features a man sort of groping a woman he took hostage. S4E7: a woman seduces a man at a bar so that she can blackmail him. S5E10: this episode reveals that a character seduced a character long term, just to get something out of him. Worthy of note: S3E2: Danny Masterson is featured in this episode.
White Noise (Movie)
In the last ~20 minutes of the movie, the main female character describes being coerced into sex by a medical professional in exchange for drugs. Her husband invalidates her experience and attempts to initiate sex while she is still crying during this recounting.
A character mentions the possibility that someone could get raped by squatters in nearby abandoned houses. There is an urban legend that a character used to touch little kids inappropriately, but that turns out not to be true.
The film contains several instances of misogynistic/sexist behavior like catcalling and insulting women.
The protagonist is an untrustworthy narrator in general, and he is casually misogynist and homophobic throughout. When the government or people of higher castes subjugate and oppress those below them in the hierarchy, he refers to that as rape or generally in sexual terms. He voices the belief that having sex with a virgin, particularly someone who is 17 or 18, cures men of sexually transmitted infections, but he doesn't explicitly admit to having tried this himself. Multiple characters throughout insult one another with the term "sister fucker."
There is a passing mention of multiple sexual harassment charges by same minor character-nothing ever shown/described.
Whiteout (Movie)
A man wearing only a towel asks a female police officer for a body search.
Whitewash (Movie)
A man spies on a couple through a window and masturbates.
The main female protagonist gets cornered by three female classmates. They rip open her blouse and it is implied that they rip open her bra to make photos of her breast with their phones so they can use this as blackmail. This all happens in their classroom, with every studens still in it: everyone explicitly ignoring what the bullies are doing to her.
A male cartoon baby smacks a woman on the bottom. A female character is pressured into playing patty-cake with her captor, and an investigator catches them and takes pictures. The intention of the scene is to be a tongue-in-cheek euphemism without being overtly disturbing. A female cartoon very aggressively chases after and tries to force a kiss on a man.
A teenage girl is video recorded in the shower without her knowledge or consent. The person who made the recording sends it to a male classmate who coerces the girl in the recording's brother to be friends in order to get closer to her. The classmate watches her get changed and does not leave when she catches him. He threatens the brother that he will share the video around the school if he cannot date the sister.
In the backstory, a man made unwanted advances on a married woman, including a forced kiss and groping. She punched him and left. A man claims to be the main character's cousin, and then makes several sexually harassing comments towards her. It is later revealed that they are not really related, and he knows it.
S1E3: a man and a woman are alone in a remote area and the man strokes the woman's face uninvited. When she smacks him, he lunges for her and she cries out in fear. He stops, and nothing further happens.
Why R U? (TV Show)
There are two scenes where a main character is harassed at the bakery he works at: once verbally and once when a customer is uncomfortably grabby. The harassment is quickly shut down by the character's boss in the first scene and by his boyfriend (to be) in the second.
Rape and sexual harassment are discussed in abstract terms a few times throughout.
Why Women Kill (TV Show)
A sexual relationship between an adult and a teenager (he is 18 but still in high school and living with his mom) is played as a problem only because it is a scandal as a consenting relationship between two adult men. When someone tries to get them to cut the relationship off, the person is shown as a manipulative shrew, instead of someone trying to protect a teen from an adult predator. At no point does the narrative present the relationship as abuse.
The film revolves around an anonymous person sending often very explicit letters to their neighbours.
Widows (2018) (Movie)
A woman becomes an escort out of financial desperation.
Wiener-Dog (Movie)
In the first 20 minutes, a woman tries to make her son feel better about their dog getting spayed by telling a story about how her old dog was assaulted by another dog and was forced to have puppies.
Wife of a Spy (Movie)
At some point, it is revealed that a woman whose murder is a part of the plot, was raped by a man who killed her when she resisted.
In his internal monologue, there are a couple of times where the main character mentions how his daughter looks like what his wife used to look like and talks about her appearance in a creepy way. A main plot point is that the daughter’s boyfriend repeatedly intentionally feels her up (consensually) in front of her father.
A man pushes a woman against the wall, speaking into her ear and kissing her face without her consent.
Wild Cards (TV Show)
Season 1 features an actor sleeping with a producer to get casted.
Wild Child (Movie)
When two female characters are fighting, a male character jokes that they should be wearing bikinis for it. A man attempts to grope a woman he is comforting.
A news report on rape is being heard.
Wildflower (Movie)
About one hour into the movie, there is a scene with sensual touch between a drunk minor and and adult.
Wildland (Movie)
A man makes an inappropriate sexual advance towards his teenage cousin, though nothing comes of this. A man bursts on his teenage cousin whilst sh i's in the bath, refusing to leave when she asks him to.
Willow (Movie)
A male character enters a female character's tent while she is asleep and gets close to her. He has had a love potion: when she wakes up, he tries to tell her that he loves her and refuses to leave despite her physical attempts to make jim leave the tent. One male character is dressed like a woman and an angry man grabs his clevage, makes lewd remarks which the disguised character attempts to refute. The angry man then asks the character if she "wants to breed" and continues with non consensual comments.
Wind Breaker (TV Show)
S1E1: a teenager is verbally harassed onscreen by a group of men. One grabs her arm to prevent her from leaving. The scene lasts about 30 seconds before someone intervenes. S1E2: a teenager is beaten by a group of men when he stops them from harassing a woman. S1E11: a teenager is harassed by a young man. It is shown in brief still frames lasting a few seconds.
In the first scene, soldiers order men to strip at gunpoint: most of them start to obey but they quickly stop because one of them refuses. About halfway throught the movie, a group of soldiers restrain a woman and violently cut off her hair while she screams and cries. Her lover watches the scene without being able to intervene. She is shown very distressed afterwards. Worthy of one: there is one scene of torture where a man gets his fingernails ripped off.
This 1908 novel includes some passing descriptions of men catcalling a male character who is disguised as a washer-woman. The same disguised-cross-dressing male character chats with a barge-woman, together bemoaning the promiscuity and laziness of working-class younger women.
The Windsors (TV Show)
Rape is mentioned. There are many instances of unconsensual grabbing.
Some of the plot involves a past heterosexual relationship between two secondary characters. The man is revealed to have been coerced into the relationship (magical compulsion). No relationship details are discussed, and the woman is competely absent from this narrative.
Chapter 27: brief non-graphic scene where the abusive partner is berating the other while having sex. The character is confused and being forced to relive some memories, but the scene is told from an outsider's perspective who is trying to pull him out of the memories.
A man touches one characters bottom: she gets upset and attacks him with magic.
The protagonist describes being sexually assaulted by a coworker at their office holiday party. She believes he would have raped her if he had not been stopped by another coworker.
S1E1: the female protagonist is stuck in a female body as her real male body is locked in a coffin. This curse can only be undone by kissing a witch. She kisses a witch to undo the curse. The witch is shocked by this. S1E12: a child kisses the female protagonist to undo the curse in an attempt to save their lives.
Multiple small incidents of sexual harassment or the mention of it are present throughout (characters being grabbed, someone trying to forcibly kiss them, smelling hair, etc.). Mention is made of a sorceress having used magic to seduce a character. An adult character has consensual sex with a 17-year-old medical student. When a group of monarchs are discussing what to do with a missing princess of a strategically important realm, one suggests forcing her to ingest drugs to the point that she will fall in love with an old, decrepit king.
The female author/narrator is physically grabbed at a gas station at night by a man with intent to harm (unclear exactly in what ways). A stranger intervenes before anything happens.
Within (2016) (Movie)
A character drugs the teenage protagonist and carries her to bed; while this is not sexual, it is clearly done to intimidate and discomfort her.
A group of men harass a woman, ripping off one of the legs of her trousers to expose her leg.
The Wizard (Movie)
In order to escape from a bad guy, a girl screams "He touched my breast!" The man in question did not actually do this, it is a tactic to save a friend.
Wobble Palace (Movie)
Wolf (2022) (Movie)
Sexual assault is implied at multiple points in the movie: nothing is ever shown.
A woman is threatened by her lover and told to remove her underwear but is not assaulted. A character says the word "rapist" in a list of kinds of criminals. A woman is drugged by a doctor; off-screen her pregnancy is terminated against her will.
The male lead takes advantage of the female lead' situation to make her into his slave and explicitly treats her as his "dog". He makes her do tons of unreasonable stuff, including humiliations. All of this is made for laughs and/or portrayed as "romantic". They are both underage.
A man spies on a woman from a telescope. He proceeds to repeatedly ask her on a date despite her saying no. Later, he forcefully kisses her on the mouth.
At least two naked women bodies are found during the film: it is told multiple times that one of the victims had her genitals removed.
Wolf's Rain (TV Show)
S1E12: a few men offer a woman a job, but she finds out they want her to entertain a man. This is not explicitly shown on screen. She runs away and they go after her. However, she gets away. S1E24: two guys flirt with women who reject them. They continue to flirt with them until one of the women gets upset.
The Wolverine (Movie)
There is a non consensual kiss that is used to deliver poison: it starts when the victim is asleep and they wake up visibly upset by it. A man is forcibly bathed by two women, though he does not allow them to touch his genitals. He later describes the experience as "violating". The scene is presented as comedic.
The main character, who is drunk was about to open the door to the room when an intoxicated man walks up to her and puts his hand down her dress, groping her breast. She managed to fight him off before he could do anything else.
S1E1: about 47 minutes in, some flashback scenes show a young woman/girl on a bed crying with her legs held up in stirrups (for childbirth). S1E5: one of the women who lost a baby in the convent is confronted by its father. During the argument it becomes clear that he got her pregnant while he was a married man and she was a 15 year old girl.
Womb (Movie)
The entire movie is about a woman giving birth to and raising a clone of her dead boyfriend. There is sexual tension between the mother and the child and they eventually have sex once the child is an adult. It is also unclear whether the woman fully consents to the sex.
S1E4: a white woman tells a twelve-year-old black boy that he is very sweet and "won't rape her daughter." Secretaries at work discuss sexual harassment by a boss.
A female perspective character grapples with her traumatizing memories of growing up with a controlling, physically and emotionally abusive father. Nothing explicitly points to off-screen sexual assault; however, one of his targets of abuse was his wife. The perspective character is not directly harmed, rather, he controls her through threats and violence against those around her.
Throughout, there is discussion of sexual harassment women experience at various jobs and of the #MeToo movement. There is also passing mention of sexual violence committed by slaveholders against enslaved women.
Workaholics (TV Show)
S1E3: a male character says that he carries a knife because he was sexually assaulted last spring and likes to feel safe. This statement is respected by the other characters present. S3E9: a van labeled "rape van" that a character lives in is shown throughout the episode. It is played for laughs. S3E10: a man describes a hypothetical situation where he would walk in on a rape but would not be able to stop it because "the other guy is bigger." S3E18: a woman tells a man that he is being "rapey". It is played for laughs. S3E12: in the end credits scene, a man enacts someone being raped to a woman and says that he is going to rape the rapist. It is played for laughs. S3E20: a man says that he is being "finger raped". S4E6: a woman says that a company is raping her about a price. S4E7: a man jokes that another man would be "popping out to rape people left and right". A man says that a business is "raping and murdering him left and right'. S6E1: several instances of a woman sexually harassing a man are shown throughout the episode. They are played for laughs, but are unsettling.
Workin' Moms (TV Show)
In the second season, a central plot point is Anne's ex-husband Brad, who uses his position as a hypnotherapist to manipulate patient's thoughts whilst they are under. There is also a retelling of the time he insisted that a patient wet themselves against their will, implied for sexual pleasure. Whilst a student is being hypnotised by him, he masturbates next to her without her knowledge or consent. S7E4: an emotional affair between an adult woman and an 18 year-old man is discussed and many jailbait jokes are made.
Working Girl (Movie)
Part of the plot revolves around the female protagonist often enduring sexual harassment from male bosses. At one point (38:00-45:00), she believes that she has been raped while passed-out,but it is later stated that it was not the case. A female character tries to seduce a male character and forces him to have sex with her, as she deceitfully tells him to "come play": she refuses to take no for an answer.
In the first scene of the movie, a woman who is a nurse (the protagonist's mother) explains that she got pregnant by having sex with a wounded soldier, completely unresponsive (unable to give consent) but having erections. She tells the same story to another character later on, who is digusted by the fact that she 'raped a dying man'. Still early in the movie, a young girl explains to a young boy that having a baby happens when a woman says that she has a headache, and when her husband undresses her anyway, impliying that she heard her father raping her mother. A girl watches a man and a woman having sex without their consent. In a women/feminist community, a man tries to help a woman who accidently fell on the ground: she immediately rebuffs him and has a panic attack, impliying that she was sexually abused by a man and suffers from PTSD. Other women come to help her and explain the situation to the man. Rape is mentioned several times at this occasion, and later on during the rest of the movie (with mentions of rape threats by men toward the community). The protagonist (a 30 year old man) has sex with a teenage babysitter who says that she is 18 (he asks her twice). After that, his wife (about the same age) engages in a sexual relationship with one of her male students (about 18).
The husband of one of the main characters eventually quotes passages of the Bible that says that a wife's body is a husband's possession. It is hinted that he might be an abusive husband, although it is not shown.
One of the main characters is kidnapped before the events of the movie occur, and seduces one of her kidnappers in order to escape. This is mentioned a few times throughout the movie. Towards the end, the titular character is captured by the villain. She kisses him without his consent, and has him tied up and strangled. It is implied that the strangulation is giving him an involuntary erection, which she mentions. She then sits down on his lap and kisses him again (01:42:40-01:46:35).
"You’ve Been Saved": two men think that a woman is being trafficked but later realize that she is not. "Unkindly Girls". the story is told from the perspective of a teenage girl whose father has killed many other teenage girls as punishment because he lusted after them. "In the Water": this part mentions of sex trafficking as part of a crime investigation.
While tripping on magic mushrooms, the main character hallucinates multiple disembodied hands touching her while naked. She seems to appreciate it. One of the side characters is a polemical comicbooks writer, who creates misogynistic and pervert characters. In one a scene, he is interviewed by a journalist who emphasizes that his comicbooks may have hurt rape and incest survivors.
After stabbing a woman, a murderer masturbates in another room. We then see that he has removed the woman's clothes down to her undergarments.
Wounds (Movie)
In the beginning of the movie, a woman in a bar is harassed off-screen by a group of men. Later in the movie (44:40-45:40), a man is pushed away twice by a woman to prevent him from continuing kissing her.
There is a passing mention in an early chapter of a song that references rape.
Woyzeck (Movie)
Wraith (Movie)
A man attempts to kidnap a child but is thwarted by a heart attack.
After getting stopped by a gang, one of the members reaches into the window and grabs a woman's chest. She is then restrained by two of the members while her boyfriend is forced to race, and he is taunted by what they will do with her if he drives off. A main plotline of the movie is that the gang leader is in love with a woman so he regularly harasses her and anyone who talks with her. Though he does not sexually assault her, it could be triggering to some as he is controlling of her, forces her to go places with him, and continuously tells her that he loves her and she's going to be with him forever.
The Wretched (Movie)
While at a party with a group of high schoolers, a girl takes off a guy's underwear while they are in a swimming pool together. Then her friends sneak over claiming it was a prank to get him naked. He has to leave the pool naked in order to get away from the party.
One main character comes on to the main female character and makes crude comments. Later, he grabs her butt non-consensually,: she immediately stands up for herself and calls him out. In another scene, he forces a kiss onto her.
A man forcibly plants a kiss on woman that she does not want. Another man doggedly pursues this same woman, not seeming to pick up that she is not interested.
The plot centers around an incestuous family of cannibals in rural West Virginia.
A man is contained in a cell and tells a girl that he is going to have sex with her. He also tells that his boys are going to have sex with her as well.
WtFOCK (Movie)
Wu Kong (Movie)
About one quarter into the movie, a man falls into a woman and another man comes in and scolds him for assaulting her. However, he did genuinely fall and has no intentions of doing anything at all. It is very brief.
One character threatens another one that other guys want "a piece" of his sister and that he will tell everyone they had slept together since she was a minor. It is unclear if this is true since they grew up together and appear to be around the same age. At a later point, a female character is sexually aggressive and does not stop despite the male character's protest: he eventually agrees and they sleep together. The male character aggressively kisses a different female character and she says: "you're hurting me".
Wynonna Earp (TV Show)
S1E3: a character grabs the hand of a woman and puts it on his private area, seemingly without consent. It is alluded the two go on to have sex, which is not shown. There is also a mention of rape Worthy of note: a woman is in a relationship with a character who abducted her as a child, although there was no sexual/romantic contact between the two before she was an adult. The actual abduction/this period of her childhood is not shown on-screen. In season 2, a man who is romantically interested in a female character consistently pursues her despite the fact that she has said she is not interested and in a relationship with another woman. His justifications for his continued interest and pursuit are sometimes homophobic in nature. At one point there is a short scene in which he kidnaps another woman and forces her to dress like the woman he is interested in. The same character is caught taking non-consensual up-skirt pictures of women and subsequently arrested.
Wyrm (Movie)
Characters reference using power of x-ray vision to see through women's clothes.
X-Men: Evolution (TV Show)
S1E8: a male character films a female character while she tries to choose an outfit to wear. While she is fully clothed during the whole scene, she is shown to be upset by the interaction and slams the door in the male characters face.
There is a discussion of Black men being lynched under suspicion that they raped or harassed white women. A white woman is harassed by a group of white men for being with the protagonist, who is a Black man.
X-Ray (Movie)
There is a prolonged scene of a doctor inspecting a woman's naked body, which feels invasive. A drunk man grabs a woman and attempts to kiss her.
A character who employs the female romantic lead alternately threatens to sell her to another family and propositions her.
S1E3: a man makes a comment that a woman (who is about to become unconscious) needs not fear him because he "is a gentlemen", implying that he will not molest her. S1E5: the plot of this episode revolves around a girl kidnapped for ransom. It is implied many times that she will be “taken” (i.e. raped): she threatens to kill herself to avoid it. It is mentioned that she will lose “value” in the ransom if she is raped. She is eventually rescued before anything further happens. S6E22: mention of raping and pillaging.
Xibalba (Movie)
While traveling to a cave, the protagonists are stopped by a gang and pulled out of their cars. Their leader holds one of the women at knife point and kisses her, saying that she will be the first to get raped. Another member of the team stops him before anything further happens.
The protagonist's boss plants drugs on her and threatens to fire her unless she participates in a particular project. When the boss first offers this ultimatum, the protagonist insists that she will not sleep with him, implying that he has harassed her or other workers before.
Two teenage boys embark on a sexual relationship with an older woman.
Yakamoz S-245 (TV Show)
S1E7: brief mention of rape as part of war.
Yakitate!! Japan (TV Show)
This whos contains a lot of perverted jokes that fall under sexual harassment. There is also a bit of fanservice involving underage boys and girls.
Yannick (Movie)
S1E4: the main protagonist is ambushed by several men who grab and touch her (35:45-37:00). She is visibly distressed and then rescued by a character before anything else happen.
The Yards (Movie)
The male protagonist is said to have had an incestuous relationship with his female cousin (a main female character) when they were teenagers. Worthy of note: near the end of the movie, another male character abuses his girlfriend who is leaving him (at some point, being on top of her in stairs). He ends up killing her.
A man tries to forcibly kiss a woman two times.
Year One (Movie)
Yella (Movie)
The first scenes of the movie show the protagonist's ex-husband following her in the streets and trying to talk to her despite her visible disinterest and fear. After that, he tries to kill her by jumping off a bridge with a car in which they are both sitted. Throughout the rest of the movie, the (assumed) 'ghost' of the ex- husband haunts her, (trying to kidnap her, slapping her, etc.). Early in the movie, the protagonist's boss makes advances to her in a cab and touches her hand: she leaves the car. Another character later implies that she slept with her boss to obtain her job.
Yes, God, Yes (Movie)
At the 5:00 minute mark, a teenage girl receives an unsolicited picture of a couple having sex.
Yes, Madam (Movie)
The opening scene involves a character attempting to flash the protagonist. Two characters start stripping and restraining a female character: it looks like they are going to assault her, but then they just take the platter of food she is carrying instead. An antagonist tries to take off some of the protagonist’s clothes, and then she beats him up.
S1E10: a girl thinks that the male protagonist is touching her bottom, but it is actually a snake. S1E17: a woman kisses the male protagonist when he is drunk and asleep. S1E20: multiple women chase the male protagonist and pull on his clothes. One of the women kisses him on the cheek and forehead. They all offer to marry him but he tells them he is still a kid: he ends op getting away. This is played for comedic purposes. S1E22: the male protagonist walks in on girl taking a bath. S1E28: a girl calls the male protagonist perverted. S1E34: the male protagonist looks at a woman and she calls him perverted. S1E36: an animal steals belly shirts from girls. The male protagonist is blamed but it is revealed that he did not do it. S1E39: a woman hugs the male protagonist really tight and mentions sleeping together. He does not want this and runs away. S1E45: the male protagonist thinks a woman is seducing him. He thinks this is weird and refers to himself as a child. S1E49: while being drunk, the male protagonist tries to catch something. This results into a woman being pushed against the wall. Others perceive this as him trying to do something to the woman but that is not the case: he gets punished anyway. In the manga and light novel, it is implied that the male protagonist is forced to have sex by two of his wives. He screams that it is his first time and to stop ripping his clothes and how it hurts. Although it is played for comedic purposes, his reaction to their actions show that it was rape and not something he wanted himself.
Yi Yi (Movie)
Chapter 13: the author explains how the #MeToo movement triggered her own memories of being sexually assaulted. She then tells of a time when a stranger groped her breast on a bus and a time when the doorman for the place she was staying forced a kiss on her. These experiences and her feelings about them are explained in a moderate amount of detail.
A man watches a woman shower, and men are constantly staring at women's breasts and making them uncomfortable.
S1E10: in order to win a contest, the male protagonist slides between the legs of the female protagonist. When he does that, he ends up caressing her private area with a plant he was holding in his hand. He is unaware of this happening.
The author discusses the belief that fat women are either too pitiful to ever have anyone be interested in them sexually or should be grateful if someone raped them, assuming that would be the only sexual attention they get otherwise. This comes up in a specific case where an adult man raped a teenager who happened to be fat. The judge told the teenager she should be flattered.
You Me Her (TV Show)
At some point, a Uber driver makes a light hearted comment when he is dropping a woman off near the woods, asking if she is okay because the place seems 'rapey'. S1E4: one character pretends that someone he is having sex with is his niece. She is not, he is covering because she is younger (she is in her 20s, and a consenting adult). S2E1: a woman lovingly jokes that she is going to sexually assault her best friend. S2E6: a husband and wife are giving advice on how to go on a platonic date and make a joke about how being a bit rapey is how they got together. S2E7: a woman makes a beastiality joke. A couple is dosed without their knowledge: nothing sexual happens. S4E3: someone uses #MeToo as a joke but recognizes it was problematic. He then pretends to be pansexual to impress a girl, thus leading a guy on.
You People (Movie)
An old man offers to "medically" check the protagonists private parts (06:15-08:00): his mother tells him that the old man is having legal problems due to his behavior, but she feels like it is okay since he is not convicted yet. The protagonist makes a comment about believing the victims, which the mother dismisses. The main character is sexually harassed by his boss: he then parallels his bosses comment, who says that he made it weird (12:39). It is played for laughs. Later, the boss yells on the phone with a client and references gang banging (44:53). Two characters discuss a peeping Tom charge (1:25:40): this is also played for laughs. Worthy of note: the singer Drake (known for his grooming behavior) is mentioned several times throughout the movie.
Young Guns (Movie)
A woman is taken from her family as payment for a ruined shirt. She is referred to as 'house entertainment' and chooses to stay with the man who took her because she feels that he made her necessary.
Young Justice (TV Show)
One character is extremely flirtatious during the first season, which may make some uncomfortable. There is also a scene where two teenagers kiss while one shapeshifted to appear like a woman in her 20s. There is another scene where a girl kisses her friend without consent, to the disapproval of the friend.
Young Royals (TV Show)
One of the biggest overarching plot points of this show is about two characters (both high school students) being filmed without their consent during a sexual encounter, and the video being spread publicly. They focus on punishing the perpetrator, and discuss the different charges he may face, including child pornography and revenge porn. A teacher mentions rape in a classrom setting, without going into detail (25:25).
Young Sheldon (TV Show)
Season 5: thie season contains a sexual relationship between a minor (male, 17 year old) and a 29 year old woman who is unaware of his age. He gets her pregnant and there is talk about forcing them to marry. The whole thing is played for laughs and continues throughout the entire season.
Younger (TV Show)
A male secondary character describes his youthful struggles with sexual addiction. As an adult, he rescues a refugee who had been drugged and blackmailed into becoming a sex worker. A female secondary character lovingly raised a child conceived when she was gang raped. Her rape is referred to with minimal detail.
The protagonist is a rideshare driver, and some of her clients hit on her, making her uncomfortable.
A young woman, forcefully kisses the protagonist after he rejects her sexual advances. Later, after he and another woman are captured aboard a boat, the camera moves down to her breasts and the villain cuts the outer layer of her clothing off with a knife, starting at her breasts.
A teen girl accuses a teen boy of taking an inappropriate picture of her and calls him a pervert.
Your Name. (Movie)
In several scenes, the main male character gropes the main female character's breasts without her consent while in her body. Several boys stare at a sexualized shot of the main female character's breasts bouncing. All of this is played for laughs, the main male character denying the responsibility of his actions, saying he "couldn't help himself."
A woman deliberately pokes holes in a condom with the intent of getting pregnant with the man she has sex with. He has no knowledge of this and this is only revealed to him later.
Your Turn (Movie)
In the last part of the film (between 1:15:00 and 1:24:00) two persons mention rape threats made by policemen.
Throughout the game, especially in chapter 1, an adult man makes comments about a 17 year old girl being cute. Though rather than this being sexual, it seems to be to deflect from the girl understanding him / getting information from him. In chapter 3, if you are in the Logic Route or the Sou lives route, a 17 year old boy who has a obvious crush on a 17 year old girl becomes possessive and tries to isolate her from her friends. The intention for doing this is not sexual but the underlying crush he has, along with his actions, present an unhealthy relationship that some people may be uncomfortable with. In that same chapter, there is heavy exploration on one of the main character's relationships with a villain throughout. The character talks about how when he was in high school the villain disguised himself as a student (his age unknown) and became his ' scary friend. ' This character describes the villain as someone who has 'fun' or receives a 'certain pleasure' from having control over others, which in flashbacks as well through how the character describes him seems to happened to him since high school until young adulthood. There is no explicit sexual abuse but how the relationship is described and shown in a flashback is suspect and may make players uncomfortable.
S4E7: A woman kisses an underage girl. The same woman almost gives a blowjob to an underage boy but the police come before this happens. S4E10: A woman gets blackout drunk then wakes up to find herself in a sexual situation with another woman. She seems startled.
This movie is about a man who wrote a novel inspired by his family. When they read it, his siblings react negatively, and one of his sisters even says that he 'raped' them by doing so. The editor of the protagonist (a woman), kisses him without asking his permission when they learn that he won an important award. During the party that follows, she gets drunk and becomes very touchy with him. He brings her home (without sexual intent) and despite her insistence on having sex, he declines and leaves. He then returns the day after, saying that he is willing to have sex after all, but she does not remember anything. It is then implied that they start a romantic relationship.
Youth (Movie)
A scene shows a young woman leaving a room, implying she had a sexual intercourse with a much older man. The context of consent in this brief scene is not made clear. Other scenes in the movie suggest that she is participating in the sex trade. Another scene shows two voyeurs watching a couple having sex in the forest.
Yowamushi Pedal (TV Show)
S1EP19: one of the male characters makes a comment about the breasts of a female character. She punches him. S2E5: a guy puts his arms around the shoulders of a female character. His hand is very close to her breast. She is shocked as she does not know him and pushes him away. In seasons 3 and 4, one character is extremely obsessed with muscles. While there is no sexual intent, he goes as far as crossing other people's boundaries in order to touch their muscles. The scenes portray him in a creepy and somewhat predatory way. His teammates and himself are aware that his behavior is inappropriate. S3E15: the protagonist falls over and the said character tries to stop him from falling. When he does, his hands are on the abs of the protagonist: he starts rubbing them. He later on wants to touch his abs again, but the protagonist looks shocked and his teammate ends up stopping it from happening. S3E17: the said character touches the thigh of another character and goes as far as putting his hand inside the bike shorts (around the thigh). It happens again in S4E3 with another character (who is very shocked by this behavior). S4E12: the said character slips his hands into the sleeve of another guy's shirt and grabs his chest muscles. While he was riding up to him, the teammate yells to watch out for him as he is 'creepy'. S4E14: a background story is shown of this character. He secretly watches other people's muscles while they cycle. The main antagonist ends up encouraging the inappropriate behavior by telling him to 'unleash his desires.' He becomes the masseuse of the team which could be a bit unsettling giving his obsession. S5E12: the character from S3 and S4 touches two men without their consent. He slips the tip of his fingers in their shorts. Although there is no sexual intent, he is portrayed as creepy and predatory. S5E13: the same character tries to touch a man, who escapes on time.
Yugo: Negotiator (TV Show)
A man asks the main protagonist to buy time with a woman. He then explains how the woman is forced to sell her body so they can keep feeding her.
Yuri!!! On Ice (TV Show)
S1E2: While asking a personal question about the main character's life, a male character strokes the underside of his chin and the side of his arm before taking his hand. The main character freezes for several seconds before scrambling away (5:39-6:02). S1E3: without warning, a male character runs a thumb over the main character's lips and holds their faces inches apart while urging the main character to explore his sexuality. Once again, the main character responds by freezing (4:28-4:47). Worthy of note: while there are no sexual relationships between adults and teenagers, between 13:48-14:07 a 25-year-old woman gets a nosebleed (used as shorthand for arousal) in response to a 15-year-old. S1E5: although not a sexual scene, a male character snaps at the main character to turn around and then wraps his arms around him from behind. The main character seems to be paralysed and does not know how to react (4:10-4:36). S1E6: a drunk man strips completely naked off-screen while hanging off of the main character. We hear the main character tell him not to do it, and then cry out to a nearby friend for help as the man's trousers and underwear get thrown into the frame. We later see a waist-up photo of the main character, looking surprised, with the naked man wrapped around him (4:47-4:53). S1E6: an as-yet unintroduced character sneaks up behind the main character and places a hand on his rear, inducing the same frozen response seen in earlier scenes (5:11-5:21). S1E7: SPOILERS: a male character launches himself at the main character and kisses him in front of a full audience on live television, with enough force to knock the main character onto his back. The main character's expression clearly indicates that he did not see this coming. The man then states that he did this in order to surprise the main character (the main character responds positively to this event, which occurs at the 20:48-20:59 mark). S1E8: while no overtly sexual relationships occur, one character introduced in this episode has an unhealthy and possessive obsessive with his sister, jealously driving off any man who interacts with her in order to keep her by his side forever. The narrative presents this obsession as a negative thing which he must overcome if he wants to keep his sister in his life. In this episode, the brother's internal monologue is an in-depth exploration of his obsession and sense of entitlement to his sister from his point of view; this occurs between 8:49-10:39. S1E9: the brother's internal monologue as he skates is about his sister. This time, however, it's a personal reflection on his feelings for her and what to do with the knowledge that they're unreciprocated (5:30-8:36). This scene has overtones of romantic heartbreak.
Yuu Yuu Hakusho (TV Show)
The male protagonist sexually harasses the female protagonist on multiple occasions. S1E24: the main protagonist gropes/assaults a transgender woman and makes transphobic comments and invalidates her identity.
Z (2019) (Movie)
A woman is held in a house against her will by an invisible entity. She is laying in bed at night, and the entity gets into bed beside her, and throws the covers over her (01:08:00). The entity then makes a single slow up and down motion, but it is not clear whether this is the entity breathing or something of a sexual nature. The scene only lasts a few seconds.
Z Nation (TV Show)
S1E3: a woman appears to do sex work, but she is trained to tazer the men. However, she gets overpowered. There are a lot of tapering as punishment, and a woman gets tazed to knock her out before being kidnapped.
A sister finds her brother from the future (time traveler) hot, although she is not aware of him being her brother: she does not try to pursue him further.
A man is harassed by a group of women and a woman forcefully kisses another man. In the beginning of the movie, a girl makes several jokes about pedophilia (wrongly accusing men of sexually harassing her). Near the end of the movie, a man makes a rape joke.
Zenshu (TV Show)
S1E3: a girl is engaged to a man she does not want to marry. She only agreed because he can help her. The entire episode she runs away from him. This episode contains a lot of fan service of a teenage girl. S1E5: a male character touches the female protagonist's hair and says he can play with her. There are sexual undertones and she looks uncomfortable. S1E7: a 20 year old describes a high school student as his first love while in the context of her being his biggest rival. It is unclear if he has actual romantic feelings for her.
A teacher suggestively touches a child's hand. He rebuffs him and tells him to go away.
About two hours into the movie, a male soldier jokes about being sexually assaulted in prison.
Zero Day (Movie)
Zhen Hun (TV Show)
S1E3: this episode centers around a woman who is being stalked by a male supernatural predator.
Zodiac (Movie)
A man is accused of and later charged with molesting children; this all happens off-screen, but child molestation is referenced several times throughout the second half of the film.
Zombeavers (Movie)
The main girls joke between them that one of them was sexually abused by her father.
Zombie Shark (Movie)
A man grabs a waitress' bottom while she istending their table and continues to hit on her after she rejects him.
Zorro (TV) (TV Show)
A woman is kept as a sex slave tied up in a bedroom. No sexual assault is shown and her situation is not dramatized. Her story spans a few episodes.
Zulu (1964) (Movie)
There is a scene where an injured soldier gropes and rips open the top buttons on the blouse of a nurse who is trying to help him. Other patients in the room laugh. She is upset by the incident but leaves the room and the movie moves on quickly (48:28-48:38).
Towards the end of the book, a boy flirts with the female romantic lead, and she does not like it.